Has Fraizer Campbell already paid his transfer fee?

CoymayMy honest answer to the question posed above is “probably not”, but there can be little doubt that Fraizer Campbell has become one of, if not the most, important player we have in the month or so since he signed for us. It’s being reported that his two goals in the win at Wolves yesterday, which helped City hit the 70 point mark and kept the gap over Watford and Hull at eight points with a game in hand, were his fifth in five matches for us, but, in terms of actual playing time, Campbell has completed 283 minutes for us, which, when you add in time added on at the end of each half, amounts to something like three full matches.

When we signed Campbell I said on here that I honestly didn’t know what to expect from someone who, obviously, had a good pedigree, but had being having a tough time of it in recent years with injury problems – given the problems he had been having scoring at Sunderland, there had to be doubts as to whether he could do the business even in the second tier. Optimists talked in terms of Campbell scoring ten goals by the end of the season, I thought that was, almost certainly, wishful thinking and it will still take some doing, but the ability to find space in crowded penalty areas, which he showed in scoring yesterday and against the wurzels, says he can do it and, maybe, a bit more.

When you look at the five goals Campbell has scored so far and add up the total distance he has been from goal, it would probably come to less than half of the sixty eight yards that Mark Hudson netted from against Derby last season. Up until January, Cardiff were a team which lacked a consistent goalscorer – the goals were being shared around and we had a handy lead at the top of the table, but, if we could get someone to do the job the injured Nicky Maynard had been bought to do, then, surely, nothing could stop us?

Well, the signs are that we now have, to use the modern parlance, that “fox in the box” we wanted  – add Campbell’s goals to the ones the rest of the squad were coming up with and they may as well start carving our name on the Championship trophy already hadn’t they? Trouble is though, football is so weird – as soon as you start taking something for granted, it makes you look like an idiot. For example, after losing just four matches on our travels last season, I spent all of the summer taking it as read that we would be as consistent as before away from home (I wonder if Malky Mackay did as well) and what happens? We lose five out of our first eight, conceding eighteen goals in the process!

Fraizer Campbell opens the scoring with a simple looking header after Aron Gunnarsson's long throw was flicked on to him - if it was so simple mind, you would have thought that one of his team mates might have been able to do something similar lately!

Fraizer Campbell opens the scoring with a simple looking header after Aron Gunnarsson’s long throw was flicked on to him – if it was so simple mind, you would have thought that one of his team mates might have been able to do something similar lately!

As hinted at in my piece on the Brighton game, something similar is happening as far as our goalscoring is concerned. When I said ” the goals were being shared around” above, I should have qualified it with the words “from August to the end of the Christmas/New Year holiday period”. Joe Mason scored on New Year’s Day to secure the win at Birmingham, but, since then, the only league goals we have scored which did not come from Fraizer Campbell were the ones by Kim-Bo Kyung and Tommy Smith at Blackpool. By the time we play next at Middlesbrough in six days, it will be more than two months since anyone other than Campbell, Kimbo and Smith have scored for us in a league match (the last two named could well not be in the starting line up if Malky Mackay decides to go with the same eleven next week) – it’s not costing us at the moment, but we are certainly in danger of becoming over reliant on one player with a history of being out for long spells through injury.

If I had one wish for the next fortnight or so, it would be that Peter Whittingham scores from a free kick or we net from one of his corners. “Crisis of confidence” is, perhaps, putting it a bit strongly, but it seems incredible when you think back to the goals he scored against Wolves, Millwall and Blackpool and the way Matt Connolly barely had to move or jump for the headers he scored from Whittingham corners against Blackpool, Burnley and Middlesbrough, that our play maker would not score a goal for four months and that you would have to go back to the win at Barnsley for the last time we scored from a Whittingham corner or free kick.

Wolves players hold their inquests as Fraizer Campbell celebrates his second goal.

Wolves players hold their inquests as Fraizer Campbell celebrates his second goal.

As he showed yesterday, Craig Bellamy is ensuring that we still carry a threat from free kicks and corners, but, getting Whittingham back to something like his best from set pieces would have the effect of increasing the chances of players such as Hudson, Turner, Connolly, Helguson and Gunnarsson ending long spells without a goal by their previous standards – in theory, sides will be paying more attention to Campbell in the coming weeks and this could be lead to more space for others to cash in.

As for yesterday’s match, the first half saw more of the good football we played against Bristol City and Brighton (the points return from those matches might not have suggested it, but I thought they were the best performances we’d produced since the win at Blackburn) – indeed, Malky Mackay stated that it was the best we had played all season (he did qualify that by adding the words “in parts” mind). The only criticism that could be aimed at the team I suppose was that they had not got the second goal which their superiority deserved and, even though Campbell’s instinct for sniffing out chances ensured that it did eventually come, the second half was more reminiscent of the, grinding, winning “ugly” stuff we have become used to over the past four months or so.

Wolves really should have equalised when Sylvan Ebanks-Blake made a right mess of the sort of chance that his ex Man United colleague Campbell would put away in his sleep currently, but City’s dominance of the shots on and off target figures, as well as the corner count, suggests that the result was right over the ninety minutes – that ability to grind things out should not be under estimated, indeed, it might well be the main reason for that eight point lead.

City now face two sides low in confidence – Middlesbrough looked a shadow of the side which impressed me so much in their defeat at Cardiff City Stadium in November in losing their home televised match with Millwall on Saturday evening and Derby are without a win in five, with only Bristol City having less away points than them. Nobody should take anything for granted in this league, but it’s a fact that, on all bar one occasion, we have followed up a defeat with at least two consecutive wins and the opportunity is there for more of the same in the next eight days.

 

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Rampant Under 18’s too strong for Swansea.

CoymayOnce or twice a season the Academy Under 18 side gets the chance to lord it on the big stage which is Cardiff City Stadium instead of slumming it on what can often resemble windy wastelands at Leckwith Stadium or Treforest. Often in the past, our kids have not coped well with this step up, but they certainly did last night as they almost managed to raise the body temperatures of the watching spectators (the nearly full car park outside the main entrance suggested it might have reached four figures) to about 50 degrees Fahrenheit by coming up with was was probably the most noteworthy result for our youth team since they beat Manchester United 5-1 in 2007.

I suppose there’s been  a score of Cardiff 6 Swansea 1 at some level in the long history of matches between the two South Wales rivals before, but it’s certainly never happened at senior level and last night’s win came as a complete shock because the Under 18’s have hardly been racking up the wins lately (there had been only one of them since the end of October). Yet, the final score didn’t flatter them at all – in fact, you got the impression that they eased off somewhat after racing into a 5-0 lead after 47 minutes.

The game started with a bitterly cold wind blowing through the stadium (unusual for the new ground which is designed in a way which normally reduces the impact of the strongest of gales), but it never became too much of a factor because both sides tried, by and large, to keep the ball on the deck. In the first few minutes Swansea did a pretty passable impression of their first team as they dominated possession, but that spell was broken, and never returned, once visiting goalkeeper Oliver Davies’ weak kick out landed at the feet of Anthony Bell some thirty five yards out and he struck an immediate shot which forced Davies into a diving save.

City almost scored from the resultant corner, but they weren’t to be denied for long and took the lead after ten minutes when my Man of the Match Tommy O’Sullivan cleverly worked himself some space and placed a fine left foot shot from the edge of the penalty area high up into the net beyond Davies. Three minutes later the lead was doubled – new signing Rhys Healey had already shown that he possessed a decent long throw and his second one saw Josh Yorwerth, I think it was, glance a header home as Davies rued his decision to come off his line to deal with things.  It wasn’t all one way traffic, a fluent move down their left by Swansea ended with a close range shot which beat David Richards in the Cardiff goal, but flew inches wide and about ten minutes later, captain Kane Owen was grateful to Yorwerth for a great block of a goalbound shot after he had lost possession by the corner flag.

Tommy O'Sullivan - an excellent all round performance and a fine goal for the Under 18's last night.

Tommy O’Sullivan – an excellent all round performance and a fine goal for the Under 18’s last night.

City were 3-0 up by this time though, with Rhys Healey scoring his first goal for the club with a neat finish from six yards as he converted a cross from the right after Swansea appeals for offside were turned down. After their quickfire start, City found chances harder to come by in the second quarter, but they always seemed to be capable of stepping things up when they wanted to – an example of this was shown about five minutes before the break, when O’Sullivan received a short free kick on the edge of the penalty area and looked set to try and get a repeat of his fine goal, but, instead, he chose to drift a clever pass into the middle where Yorwerth arrived unmarked to stab in from about eight yards.

Four goals behind at the interval, Swansea might have entertained hopes of “winning” the second half, but even that consolation looked beyond them when Anthony Bell made it 5-0 with a crisp left foot shot from twenty yards after Healey had been dispossessed in the act of shooting. As mentioned earlier, the match tended to meander along after this – Healey probably should have scored when Bell put him through, but Davies made his best save of the night to foil him and Swansea cashed in on what appeared to be some confusion in the City ranks as to who was supposed to be playing where after Yorwerth and Wharton were replaced by Ben Watkins and Thomas James around the hour mark, when centre forward Alex Samuel  scored from point blank range following a corner.

Cramp became a factor for some City players as the effects of playing on such a big pitch for, perhaps, the first time in their lives were seen – Bell was replaced by Jay Bowen and right winger Dane Griffiths was switched to centre forward as he found the going tough. However, Healey, who had moved to the right to accommodate this change, then broke forward as the game went into it’s last ten minutes and put over a fine low cross which Griffiths swept home to complete the scoring.

I thought City’s dominance stemmed from their central midfield trio – Bradley Williams was strong, hard working and technically good, but it was Wharton and O’Sullivan, with their ability to beat their opponent in confined spaces and pass the ball effectively and accurately, who really took the eye. Both of these players are now used as much by the Under 21 side as they are by the Under 18’s and, at times, O’Sullivan in particular has found it hard to cope against bigger and stronger opponents, but they have shown before that they were both good players at this level and the benefits of performing regularly at the next step up were clear here – they were a class apart.

Finally, a word on our signing from Connahs Quay, Rhys Healey – based on this one showing, I think his former manager was being optimistic when he said he would be challenging for a first team place within a year of signing for us, but his clever movement, surprising strength for his size, neat control and lay off’s and appreciation of what was happening around him say he’s got a chance of making that step up one day.

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