Weekly review 16/6/13

CoymayThis story appeared in the local media on Friday during what was another very quiet week at Cardiff City. I’m not sure who the writer has been talking to, but the simple truth is that I’m not aware of much “exasperation” amongst City fans regarding the lack of signings so far – in fact, in a way, he ends up sounding a bit Corporal Jonesish with his urging of us not to panic when no one is!

On the other hand, I must admit that I thought this story had a ring of truth when I read it – I’m not talking about the link with Jonathan Williams there (why would Palace need to sell him now they’ve been promoted?), I mean the last paragraph where the writer says they we have, effectively, had to lower our sights on the transfer front after getting nowhere with our first choice targets. Although I had no evidence to back it up, I believed that there may have been something to this and, in a messageboard post, I used the example of our supposed link with Bafetimbi Gomis  to back up my thinking.

To me, Lyon might not be the power they once were, but they still finished third in Ligue 1 last season and I found it very hard to believe that the leading scorer of  a side which finished in that position in one of the strongest leagues in Europe would be interested in signing for a club which is about to spend it’s first season in top flight of their domestic league for more than half a century. However, I was reassured to a large extent when a messageboard poster. whose “inside info” record last season was so accurate that he has earned the right to be taken seriously, claimed that there was no truth in the Mirror’s allegations – most of the names mentioned as transfer targets so far by the media were well off the mark but, although no one is saying the signing is in the bag, it does appear that there may be some substance to the Gomis speculation.

So, it’s just a case of wait and see on the transfer front, but there was an announcement from the club on Friday of interest to non season ticket holders in particular. Apparently, such schemes are not uncommon in the Premier League, but it is still something of a kick in the teeth for supporters who are unable to, or decide not to, get a season ticket for all sorts of reasons. As an example of what I mean, my brother lives in Birmingham, but he and his son have come to one home game a season for a while now and I had agreed that I would pay for his ticket for the match they were going to come to in the new season as a birthday present.

Baefetimbi Gomes - maybe there is something to the speculation that has been around for about six weeks now?

Baefetimbi Gomes – maybe there is something to the speculation that has been around for about six weeks now?

Now, my brother’s support of the club can best be described as patchy even when he was living in Cardiff, but he saw his first game forty six years ago (Blackburn in January 1967) and there were certainly times in the eighties in particular when he rarely missed a home game. Likewise, I took my nephew to his first City game (Oxford in January 2000) when he was seven, so it’s hardly as if either of them have only discovered Cardiff City in the last few years when promotion to the Premiership was a realistic target and yet there is now every chance that they will not be able to watch us play in that league at Cardiff City Stadium.

Apparently, the cards issued to gold and silver category members will include a photo of that person. Does that mean that applicants will have to present themselves at Cardiff City Stadium to have that photo taken or will the club accept a picture or scanned image of the person concerned? If it’s the former, then a policy which could be seen to penalise exiled fans becomes that much worse for them. Of course, there are exiles who buy season tickets, but that’s not practical or affordable for many of them and I can see the imposition of these extra charges meaning that a lot of them will decide that they’ll not bother watching games from now on.

I’m not sure any of this will bother the club too much. When Vincent Tan talked about being able to replace supporters who stopped attending games because of the change of kit with others attracted by the prospect of top flight football, he revealed the mind set of so many in positions of power in modern day football – who cares about the type of person attending as long as the ground is full every week. That makes perfect sense from a business point of view of course, but it’s sad when, in many cases, Cardiff City means an awful lot to the people who no longer attend – a football club is not meant to be like your local supermarket, but, although Premiership football at Cardiff is fantastic in so many ways, it seems we are going into a league where it becomes harder to tell the difference.

Posted in Out on the pitch, Up in the Boardroom | Tagged | 2 Comments

Weekly review 9/6/13.

CoymayIf there is one week which traditionally sees very little transfer activity at Cardiff City (or most other clubs) during the summer break, I would say it’s the first week in  June when so many managers and players are on their holidays (Malky Mackay is in Crete currently), so it’s with no surprise whatsoever that I report that there have been no developments in terms of players arriving or leaving in the last seven days – none that has been released by the club for public consumption anyway.

Truth be told, there’s been little in the way of media gossip and speculation either – ex Everton centre back Joseph Yobo has been linked with City and earlier stories regarding Salomon Kalou and Albert Adomah have been revisited, while the names Dirk Kuyt and Bafetimbi Gomis also tend to crop up on regular basis. Who knows whether there’s any truth in any of these rumours, but, with the exception of Adomah, I’d say what they would all have in common if they came to Cardiff is very big wages (by our standards anyway) – there’s certainly not enough evidence yet to suggest we are going down the QPR route rather than the one favoured by, say, Swansea or Norwich, but, if we are, all I’d say is that the character checks for transfer targets that Malky Mackay has made pretty frequent reference to over the past two years become more important than ever.

There has been news of a new recruit to the backroom staff, with Exeter City announcing on their official site that their Under 18’s coach Kevin Nicholson has been recruited by the club. As can be seen from the article, Nicholson (who was an apprentice at Derby and played for Kidderminster after his release by the Rams) has been given what looks to be an important role at Cardiff and I presume he will work closely with Academy Manager Dick Bate.

Regular readers of this blog (there must be one or two of you out there surely!) will have realised by now that this is not the place to go to if you want “inside info” from Cardiff City (I may have referred to “my sources”once or twice in the past four years, but that would have been as a joke!). However, in my role as Cardiff City researcher for the Football Manager series of games I am, very occasionally, privy to some interesting snippets from within the Researcher community and the word is that Kevin Nicholson seems to be pretty highly regarded. At just 27 he certainly has youth on his side and it’s always struck me that, unless you were a good player whose reputation stays with you for decades, it’s probably best to have someone pretty close to the age of the teenagers they are coaching as opposed to some old codger in their late 30’s or 40’s!

While I’m on the subject of the Football Manager researcher community, there was something else I learned this week that, while hardly earth shattering, is pretty interesting in terms of the strides City are making off the pitch. Apparently, the scouting system at the club is in the process of being upgraded – seemingly we now have a full time scout in Argentina and we’ll soon have one who will work in France and Belgium.

Finally, the petition I mentioned last week asking for a return to a blue kit has got to the 5,000 signature mark and beyond – the group behind it, Bluebirds Unite will be holding their first public meeting at 7.00 on Tuesday evening at the Corporation Hotel on Cowbridge Road.

 

 

Posted in Down in the dugout, Out on the pitch | Tagged | Comments Off on Weekly review 9/6/13.