Robinson hands Swansea the points with uncharacteristic moment of madness.

Cardiff City slumped to a third straight defeat this lunchtime as Swansea’s recent domination of the South Wales derby continued with another conclusive victory – this one was by 2-0, but it could and should have been more.

Last season, Swansea recorded the first league double in the long history of the fixture. That stat alone tells you that this has been a highly competitive and close fought rivalry down the years, so I daresay a non City or Swansea fan would have been shocked that the first double was by an aggregate score of 7-0 – that margin didn’t flatter Swansea in the slightest either.

Supporters of the two sides would tell that neutral fan though that Swansea’s double had been coming as they have generally been so dominant in games since we were relegated in 2019.

A common complaint among City fans has been that their players don’t “get” the rivalry. Time after time, Swansea players and management have looked like they have wanted it more than us and these criticisms rose to a crescendo when City fans had to watch their side go down with barely a whimper at Cardiff City Stadium in April to the tune of 4-0.

City acting manager Mark Hudson was a scorer for us in the derby in 2009 in a 3-2 defeat at the Liberty Stadium back in the days when, by and large, we gave as good as we got in the rivalry. Hudson was adamant in Friday’s media briefing that the current group of players had been made aware of what games with Swansea meant to the club’s support.

To emphasise the point further, club captain  and longest serving player Joe Ralls was also presented on Friday to represent the team and, basically, repeat what Hudson said.

The message was that, whatever else happened, the Cardiff attitude would be right. Well, I can confirm that, in the case of one player in particular, the attitude was definitely different from what supporters have become used to seeing when we play the jacks, but the right attitude? Absolutely no way!

Within about fifteen seconds of the kick off, Callum Robinson was challenged heavily out on the touchline and let referee Darren Bond know that he felt he’d been fouled (I did as well).

Maybe this was still playing on Robinson’s mind six minutes later when he gave away a cheap foul on Swansea captain and man of the match, Matt Grimes. Quite why Ben Cabango felt the need to give Robinson a shove after this I don’t know (well, I do actually), but there was no excuse for what happened next as Robinson threw the ball at the Swansea player’s face.

To be fair, “threw” probably makes what happened sound a bit worse than it was because Cabango was no more than a few inches away from Robinson and so the ball travelled no distance at all really.

 This makes Cabango’s reaction to being hit by the ball overly dramatic, but, in truth, what he did didn’t merit a yellow card in my opinion – he was out to wind Robinson up and then tried to influence the ref after he was hit by the ball. However, Robinson fell for that wind up hook, line and sinker and it’s hard to see how what he did can be deemed anything but violent conduct.

My reaction when Mr Bond produced the red card was like most City fans I’d guess, – anger and thoughts of “what an idiot”, but there was also a nagging feeling that it was unlike Robinson.

So, I did a little research and found that Robinson had played over three hundred times for his various clubs and his country since making his senior debut nearly nine years ago. In that time, he’s been booked on fifteen occasions and never been sent off until today. The highest number of cautions he’s had in a season is five, so there must have been sometimes when he’s gone through a whole campaign without a yellow card. Furthermore, today was Robinson’s sixteenth appearance in 22/23 and he’d not been shown a card at all in the previous fifteen.

None of this indicates that what we saw today was a typical reaction on Robinson’s part. Mark Hudson was very keen to emphasise after the game how his team kept on fighting after they went down to ten men today, so, I’m going to indulge in a spot of guesswork and say our newest signing fell victim to efforts from within the club in the days before the game to make certain that no charges of the team not caring could be laid against them this time – any other opposition and Robinson doesn’t do what he did..

In saying that, although there was some typical derby skirmishes from time to time, the rest of the City team kept their heads (one brainstorm from Cedric Kipre apart) throughout the ninety minutes  and I’m not going to criticise their attitude for the fixture this time. I would say that on the whole Hudson got the approach he wanted from the team, but the fact that there was that one exception to the rule means that the judgement has to be that, yet again, Cardiff’s attitude was wrong for a game against Swansea.  

I may be giving City a bit of a get out of jail free card there to some extent by not being too critical of what happened today because I’m very reluctant to have a go at the side for the one hundred and fifty five minutes in their last two matches where they had to play with ten men.

QPR, who beat us on Wednesday, are still top of the table and Swansea are probably the worst team in the Championship to go down to ten men inside the first ten minutes against -as the eighty three/seventeen split in the possession figures today indicates.

I was very critical of our defending in particular in the eighteen minutes before the penalty and red card (as it always was going to be, Jack Simpson’s suspension was overturned on appeal) against QPR. However, for the mere seven minutes when it was eleven against eleven today, there were some promising signs. City’s high pressing and eagerness to get forward gave the jacks some awkward moments before Robinson’s implosion, but, just as on Wednesday, it was no longer a meaningful contest after the red card.

Hudson reacted by switching to a 4-4-1 system with Sheyi Ojo given the thankless task of leading the line – he made little impression and made way for Mark Harris at half time.

For about twenty five minutes, City defended well after going down to ten apart that is from down their left where Neils N’Kounkou was struggling. Indeed, they even managed to put together a very good move which ended with Tom Sang (as good as anyone in blue I thought) showing his solid technique with a volley from twenty yards that goalkeeper Steven Benda turned aside for a corner. Harris also put a second half header not too far over, but that was the extent of our attacking play I’m afraid.

So, it’s two on target efforts in three, goalless, games now for City. Tat’s a woeful stat which I would hope and expect would read at least a little differently if we’d not spent more than half of those three games a man short.

In fact, in some ways, it mirrors the situation Mark Hudson now finds himself in. Rightly or wrongly, my opinion has always been that I would prefer it if we had immediately made looking outside the club for a replacement for Steve Morison a priority. I accept that’s harsh on Hudson, but I’m influenced by what happened the last time the club decided to sit on its hands after sacking a manager – they decided on the easy, and cheap, option and found themselves back at square one a year later.

Yet, you look at what’s happened in the last three matches and think that it would be very, very harsh to say thank you, but goodbye to Hudson. It’s hard to come up with a valid comparison with previous managers, but I’ll try – what would have been the reaction if Vincent Tan had sacked Malky Mackay after him taking seven points from nine had been followed by three defeats where they’d been robbed of a draw by a refereeing error and then two losses where they suffered an awful sending off (which was overturned because of refereeing error) and then a more justified one in the early stages of both matches- it just wouldn’t have been fair would it..

Footballs seldom a fair game though and there will be renewed pressure on Tan and co to act after another derby defeat (let’s not forget our limp loss at Bristol City as well) – reluctantly, because of the implications for Mark Hudson, I believe they need to act as well.

 Of course, the truth as I see it is that Tan and co are the real problem. You have to wonder if Messrs Tan, Choo and Dalman ever ponder what makes a successful modern day football club? If they do, how can they ever conclude anything other than “ours is nothing like that”?

As I mentioned in a messageboard post this week, the Tan “project” has become a huge opportunity wasted for a club like Cardiff City. There’s no point going over old ground again, so I’ll just leave it to comparing the hierarchy at our club to a bunch of inept DIY enthusiasts who cobble together their own furniture while everyone else is buying it from the best warehouses.

Anyway, let’s just quickly go through the further details of the game. It was never comfortable, but City we’re doing a decent job of frustrating Swansea until Kipre’s inexplicable punch out of a cross from inside the penalty area. Luckily for the centre half, the ref didn’t see it and a perfectly placed linesman didn’t flag.

However, the sense of injustice Swansea must have felt helped them to up their efforts and they soon scored a rather lucky goal following a poor clearance by N’Kounkou. I say lucky because Luke Cundle completely miscontrolled the ball only for it to roll into the path of Ollie Cooper who finished well via the underside of the bar from fifteen yards.

This was a particularly galling goal for us to concede when you consider that Cooper is the son of ex City winger Kevin who used to work for them as a youth coach. Furthermore, Ollie had several trials with us and was rejected on each occasion – something else then to add to what is a pretty lengthy charge list against a recent Academy employee.

Swansea didn’t really have many chances until City tired in the closing minutes, but the ones they did have tended to fall to Michael Obafemi who missed a great first half chance and a couple of others after the break. Obafemi finished well though midway through the second half when Grimes exploited a huge gap between centrebacks Kipre and Curtis Nelson to send the Irish international through.

AFC Porth and Treherbert Boys and Girls Club were in W John Owen Cup First Round action yesterday and they both made it through to the next round on penalties. The first named drew 2-2 at First Division Clwb Cymric, while Treherbert were level 3-3 at Second Division Llantwit Fardre before it went to penalties. In the Premier Division of the Highadmit South Wales Alliance, Ton Pentre were held 0-0 by Canton Liberals in midweek before consolidating their fourth placed spot with a 7-0 win over bottom of the table Merthyr Saints – both games were played at home.

Finally on the football front, at least one Cardiff City team won today, their women’s team maintained their one hundred per cent winning record this season with another hard fought victory. This one was by 3-2 against the New Saints with the goals coming from Zoe Atkins, Eliza Collie and Phoebe Poole.

Also, before I forget, apologies for referring to Merthyr Tydfil FC last weekend, it should, of course, have read Merthyr Town.

Finally, as has been the habit at the start of a new season in recent years, can I ask readers if they’re willing to make a donation towards the running costs of the blog. I say running costs towards the blog, but, that’s not really true this time because this year any donations will go towards costs incurred in the production and publication of the book I aim to have out for sale by October.

As mentioned this time last year, I decided to do another review of a season to follow on from Real Madrid and all that which was about 1970/71. This one is about the 1975/76 season and will be called Tony Evans walks on water. I finished writing the book over the weekend and now it’s a question of tidying it up, proof reading, inserting a few photos and designing a cover  before sending it off for printing.

As always, the blog will still be free to read for anyone who chooses not to make a donation towards its running costs and, apart from the one in the top right hand corner which is to do with Google Ads, you will never have to bother about installing an ad blocker to read this site because there will never be any.

Donations can be made through Patreon, PayPal, by bank transfer, cheque, Standing Order/Direct Debit and cash, e-mail me at paul.evans8153@hotmail.com for further payment details.

Can I end by thanking all of you who read and contribute towards the blog in the Feedback section, but, in particular, a big thank you to all who have donated in the past and continue to do so now

This entry was posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, Women's football and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

5 Responses to Robinson hands Swansea the points with uncharacteristic moment of madness.

  1. Mike Ellesmere says:

    Hi Paul and everyone who reads this blog.
    In my opinion this is best place to read about Cardiff City.
    Here is a link to the Championship form guide covering the period since Mark Hudson became interim manager of Cardiff City.
    https://www.sportsmole.co.uk/football/championship/form-guide.html
    We have played 5 of the top 6 and Wigan who are below us in the table.
    You can draw your own conclusions.
    I believe Cardiff’s season so far has been predictable in that if you clear out all your playing staff and replace them with loans and free transfers and on a significantly reduced overall wage bill the chance of being much improved in the short-term is slim. We did pay good money for Robinson but he is not what I would call an out and out goal scorer and it doesn’t look like there will be many coming from elsewhere.
    With regards to managers, I believe that there is clear evidence that the main factor by far as to whether a club is successful or not is the quality of players which is largely driven by money. In order to overachieve a club needs a sound methodology, very good analysis and recruitment such as employed at Brentford. You may think I am crazy, but in my book even Pep Guardiola is unproven. I would add that I believe bad football managers do of course influence playing styles and can easily ruin football teams.
    Mike

  2. Anthony O'Brienwere moving towardswere says:

    It strikes me that, even before the interim manager took over, we were moving towards last season’s cart-horses tactics on this season powderpuffs. At least we had six minutes of optimism yesterday, and no doubt they all had a jolly good laugh in the changing room after the match !!!!
    Which brings me to another striker. Kien Etete must surely be working towards a Ph.D called “Sitting On The bench”. Despite our anticipation when he first came to Cardiff City I’ve had the feeling that he’s even weaker in the air than poor old Kenneth Zohore. I hope I’m wrong and, if he’s given the chance in the next three games at least, he turns out to be a new John Charles.

  3. DJ says:

    I don’t enjoy the South Wales Derby. I don’t enjoy the midday kick-offs, the choice of songs each fans sing, or how our media and online fans react before and after to it.

    I had concerns regarding our starting line-up, but we started well and were in the game until second goal on 67 minutes, although this definitive separation could have easily come from second red and penalty in first half instead.

    It was however our 10 men who created first real shot on target following best bit of football in the game up to that point when Sang stung the hands of Benda. We are much more now than Mick’s team who scored from set-piece then hoofed out of our half without desire to set foot into Swansea’s territory or the Mick and Morison sides which conceded four goals by being so, so open, but small shoots of progress didn’t change the result or what type of season we’re likely to have now.

    I’ve seen suggestions that Cabango went down clutching his face dramatically which shows how biased some City fans are. Robinson shoulder barged Grimes(?), Cabango gave him some back (all normal derby behaviour) and Robinson lost his head, lost us the game and lost us our best striker over next three fixtures. I do wonder how much of this was result of Hudson going into this game without full quota of backroom staff though? If you’re one coach down some things are likely to be missed or underdeveloped and I wonder if assessing which players would react badly to the “we need to be fired up” message was part of that?

    Whichever path we end up taking to get there though, it’s really hard to have a good season when you’re giving up 12 points through poor performances in derby games. It’s even harder when you have relatively small squad and someone gets sent off so stupidly just when fixtures are coming thick and fast before World Cup break.

    Aftermath has seen criticism of the board again and calls for O’Dowda to move to LB/LWB. I think the former shows a lack of understanding of how tough a position we’re in financially (just like every other side without parachute payments, we’re under tight financial control and even tighter thanks to self-inflicted court case) and ignores that there are some good things going on: ground being broken on new youth teams center of excellence and how many City players were involved in Wales U17’s side recently. The latter, well so much of our possession play starts with Allsop choosing to pass out or chip to O’Dowda on the wing further upfield so if we drop O’Dowda back it becomes instantly easier to know where ball is going. Unless Etete comes in?

    That’s not to say there aren’t issues and haven’t been big, big mistakes made, just that I don’t see significant improvement now (as opposed to when we had premier league/parachute money to play with) by changing names on the doors. Are things better than last season? Yes, but we’re still in league where every point matters and Hudson’s bright 3 game spell at start of reign seems awfully far back now. Next 5 games are huge for us.

  4. DJ says:

    Just finished watching “The Cardiff City Phone In”…

    I think we’re missing a coach and a person on the board who is Cardiff City full-time, and agree that we’re drifting at the moment. Is it best to move Hudson back to coaching role, take Tom back to youth level and bring in new manager and allow them to hire a first team coach themselves? Or best to bring back James Rowberry as someone who is rated as a coach and really back Hudson as manager? I don’t know, but going into week upon week without full coaching staff really hurts when we’re so desperate for some of these project players to come off.

    I’m fairly sure last we heard of Choo was him on the bus last year at Swansea allegedly giving comment to Mick’s future and Dalman never impresses in interviews but even if we’re not changing the personal, because they’re trusted by Tan, there is a spot left open by that individual who was here for 5 minutes before leaving. It feels like we’re a man/woman down at board level too.

    Next season is going to be even harder than this as cost-of-living crisis hits home. Club needs to bring in some oomph to get people coming back.

  5. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Thanks for some excellent, thought provoking replies, Mike, great point about the current form chart – I think Coventry gained an awful lot from their win here and QPR and Swansea away are about as hard an assignment as you can get in the Championship currently (they both become well nigh impossible when you go down to ten men in the first quarter of the match). I agree with 99% of what you say, but I’d add that, increasingly, I believe the mark of a good manager is that they can improve the players already at the club and, off the top of my head, I’d say only Warnock has done that with one or two players (Zohore being the best example). I have no expectation that Mark Hudson will improve players already at the club, that’s no major criticism of him because I think ones that can are pretty rare. However, judging by what he did at Blackpool, I reckon Neil Critchley, who recently left Aston Villa is someone who can and I’d be trying to get him, but I don’t see it happening – first, because we don’t go for managers you can build a club around and second, I doubt it if he’d come here.
    Anthony, my earlier mention of Zohore takes me on to your reference to Etete. When we signed him, I visited a Cheltenham website where two or three posters agreed that he was poor in the air for his size and, based on what I’ve seen, I’d say they were right – he missed an absolute sitter of a headed chance against Birmingham. However, a video of him at Cheltenham I watched tended to emphasise the Zohore comparison because he looked pretty impressive when put clear of the last defender. I honestly don’t know how good or bad he’ll turn out to be, but I would say that his league appearances so far have tended to be as a substitute in a losing cause and it’s asking a lot for someone just out of their teens to come on and turn the game. I’d give him a start on Saturday in Robinson’s absence (I’d also play Harris and leave Ojo out).
    DJ, I still have some faith in this team – it’s just the shortage of goals which has me fearing relegation as we don’t punish sides enough when we are on top and, of course, the loss of our set piece threat is so telling because we’ve got nothing, so far, to replace it with. You make some great points about youth football and I agree that we need O’Dowda playing further forward (I’m afraid he’s the only one of our wingers I’ve any faith in), but, unless we have to play N’Kounkou as part of his loan deal, Bagan surely has to come in for him – N’Kounkou was instrumental in our win at Wigan, but he’s well into debit on his Cardiff City balance sheet I’m afraid.
    I think you’re so right about the coaching situation, but Tan, Dalman and Choo really need to make a decision as there seems little point in bringing in a coach who would be Hudson’s choice while the “caretaker” manager’s position is uncertain. Maybe someone like Rowberry would be a good choice because I don’t believe his reputation as a coach has been damaged by what happened at Newport and he’s someone who has worked under plenty of different managers at Cardiff, so he wouldn’t be seen so much as “Hudson’s man”.

Comments are closed.