Weekly review 28 July 2019

I’ll start the last weekly review of the summer by apologising for there not being one last week. About ten days ago, my old computer breathed its last and so, for the first time, I typed up a piece for the blog on my equally ancient IPad.

Three hours of work produced a piece that was just about ready for publishing, save for one or two last minute checks of some of the details, so I switched tabs to go to Wikipedia to satisfy myself that what I had written was correct. Having done that, I clicked on the tab with the blog piece only to find WordPress (the software which provides the “foundation” for the blog) in the middle of shutting down.

No problem I thought, there is an autosave function which would have captured what I had typed, but it appears that this is not part of the app used on an IPad because when I opened the piece I had typed up I was greeted by a blank page!

So it was that, for the first time in the blog’s life I lost a completed piece and, having just wasted three hours of my life, I was in no hurry to start again and risk losing a second attempt.

Therefore, I decided to wait until I had purchased a replacement computer before trying again, so welcome to the first Mauve and Yellow Army piece prepared on a laptop – I’ve finally made the change from a PC about ten years after most other people did!

My computing blues did not end there though. I had created a database of all my user names, passwords etc which I had backed up on to a memory stick for the sort of situation I found myself in this week, but when I plugged the stick into my new computer, I was told it was “corrupted” and the database, as well as many other important documents, was lost for ever.

It was only this morning that I began to see the woods from the trees so to speak and so I headed off to City’s last pre season match this afternoon against OGC Nice in a better mood content that there would be a blog piece for this weekend at least.

City headed into the game against a team managed by Patrick Vierra which had finished in seventh position in Ligue 1 last season on the back of their North American tour which had seen them record a 1-0 win over San Antonio, draw 1-1 with New Mexico United and then beat Real Valladolid on penalties following another 1-1 scoreline.

It’s not really possible to draw judgements on what the next nine months will hold on the back of three pre season games and the same applies when a fourth one results in a 1-0 win. However what I will say is that four games unbeaten with four scored and two conceded are suggestive of certain things and if you add that to what we know about the previous two and a half seasons under this manager, then the clues are there as to the strengths and weaknesses of the current squad.

In saying that, for a few minutes today City looked like they were going to turn on an attacking tour de force. It only took Joe Ralls twenty two seconds to better his goalscoring record from last season with a lovely, bending first time effort from twenty yards after he, Gary Madine and Nathaniel Mendez-Laing had combined effectively down the right.

A minute later, the winger who finished last season off with those two goals in the win at Old Trafford had forced visiting keeper Yannis Clementia into urgent action with a dangerous low cross, but, apart from a cross from Josh Murphy that only narrowly avoided Bobby Decordova-Reid a few minutes later, that was the end of City as an attacking force for almost an hour.

What followed that misleadingly enterprising start would have been so familiar to City watchers over the last two and half seasons under this manager. There was plenty of possession for the opposition, dogged defending from City and a feeling that ostensibly attacking players (i.e. our wingers and number ten) were in the team more for their work without the ball than with it.

That said, for all of their possession, Nice barely troubled Neil Etheridge or his replacement for the last quarter of the match, Joe Day, as they were reduced mostly to a series of long range pot shots which ranged from the speculative to the cringeworthy – I can only assume that the start of France’s equivalent of the Premier League is some way off yet because, to use the current parlance, Nice looked seriously under cooked this afternoon.

City should be credited for their part in blunting Nice mind. All of the back four did well, with new signing Aiden Flint overcoming some awkward early moments when it looked like his lack of pace would cost his team to turn in an increasingly authoritative showing, while Ralls and Leandro Bacuna, and then subs Will Vaulks and Loic Damour, formed an effective midfield screen in front of the back four.

Nevertheless, as I’ve mentioned before on here, I don’t think there is a single football fan on the planet who first got into the game as a youngster because they were thrilled by what someone did when they didn’t have the ball.

Although age and an increasing knowledge of the game leads to an appreciation of what has become known as the ugly side of the game, I maintain that the thrill of football, even for those in their dotage, comes from what their favourites do when they have the ball and for too long during this decade Cardiff fans have had too little of that “luxury” to enjoy – for this watcher at least this has led to long, long spells even during games that we win where the football is so dull and frustrating to watch.

Reluctantly, I’ve come to accept that you can have less than fifty per cent possession and still be a very effective team, but when the figure starts getting below forty per cent, then this argument becomes that much harder to maintain.

It’s not so much the lack of possession as the lack of what I would call controlled possession which bothers me. Between, say, the fifth and sixtieth minutes there was precious little of that commodity in City’s play as misplaced simple passes and poor first touches presented the opposition with opportunities to win the ball back that they shouldn’t have been given. What should have been assured and relatively simple phases of control instead became desperate lunges by men in blue ,which resulted in awkward situations for a team mate, even when possession was retained

Suddenly though, as the clock ticked past the sixty minute mark, City put together a neat move as they built from front to back with a mixture of short and long passing which ended with the forcing of the first of a series of corners and, from then on, they were on top to the extent that not only was their win deserved, it should have been by a larger margin.

The improvement started by those who began the game was continued and built on by those who replaced them, but, although Clementia especially and some desperate last ditch defending by his colleagues played a part in making sure the second goal didn’t arrive, the overall standard of finishing suggested that City cannot afford to go a second successive summer without signing the striker that was regarded as a priority when the transfer window opened.

Sean Morrison showed his finishing from last season, rather than the previous two, when he rose unmarked but headed wide when a goal looked certain, while Omar Bogle mixed some truly dynamic moments with substandard finishing and a lack of awareness. Lee Tomlin generally justified the positive noises that had been emanating from the City camp about him this summer and was unlucky when his free kick glanced off the defensive wall and onto the top of the net. but he probably tried to be too clever on one occasion when he should have tried to score himself and so another chance went a begging.

Clementina should have been given no chance when Flint headed down and the ball was diverted towards goal by a City player, but the keeper managed to cling on to the ball on the goal line. Danny Ward did little wrong though when his well struck shot was blocked on the line with the keeper beaten and so it remained 1-0 until the end.

After the match, Neil Warnock spoke of making two, maybe three, new signings in the coming week. He mentioned having two main targets – needless to say, one of those is a striker with it being likely that he will be coming from abroad or, failing that, a loan from the domestic game.

Warnock’s other main target is, presumably, a central midfielder, but our manager made it clear that neither of them could be regarded as certainties. From my perspective, while I think it is sometimes easy to under estimate what we have at the club already, it is also true to say that we have lost an important member of last season’s defence and the striker who would, surely, have been regarded as our number one in that position if he had stayed. Also our three first choice central midfielders from last season have all departed and yet we are a long way short of replacing the five who have left from the spine of the team – unless we do, I think we’re going to struggle to match the bookies’ faith in us.

Finally, one new signing that looks increasingly likely to happen is Oxford United’s twenty three year old Northern Ireland winger Gavin Whyte. Oxford have now admitted that Whyte is likely to be leaving them and Neil Warnock mentioned him by name after today’s match.

Whyte scored twenty three times for Crusaders two seasons ago and averaged nearly a goal a game in near fifty matches he played for the Belfast club. Such figures sealed a move to England for him for a reported fee of £150,000 and the fact that City are said to be paying more than ten times that for him shows how well Whyte adjusted well to the Football League in 18/19 when he scored ten goals in all competitions to go with his nine assists – my one doubt about this signing is that Whyte is at least three years too young for us!

Seriously, while having seen barely anything of the player in action yet, this looks like a good signing for us, because, just as Oxford have found, there is a great chance of a healthy profit on this investment if Whyte can maintain the progress he has made so far.

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6 Responses to Weekly review 28 July 2019

  1. Colin Phillips says:

    Thanks, Paul, pleased to hear you’ve got your Computer problems sorted.

    Pleased to report you saw the same game as me. such a positive start that I thought I had gone to the wrong ground. Then the game became much more recognisable.

    Etheridge had little to do, thought the back four looked very solid but we were outplayed in midfield. Not that I blame Ralls and Bacuna for that it was just that the Nice players were much more composed and accurate in their passing than we were. Mendez-Laing and Murphy both have their talents but they don’t seem to show them on a consistent basis or perhaps they are not receiving an accurate enough service. Our big problem is at the centre of the attack. Madine, except for that involvement in the goal, didn’t seem to want to be playing; Danny Ward didn’t win a lot in the air but put in a very decent shift, on one occasion tracking his man back all the way to our goal line, we saw the best and worst of Bogle. Of the three Ward looked the best on show. Don’t know what to make of Dorcova-Reid, he has shown for Bristol City that he can score goals at this level but he looked very lightweight yesterday, being removed from the ball with great ease.

    Probably didn’t see enough of Vaulks and Nelson to form any worthwhile opinions but I have to say I didn’t see our slimline Tomlin looking much different to our fat bastard Tomlin. There’s no doubt in my mind that he has the ability to do a decent job for us in the coming season but I feel the boss may see him as a bit of a luxury player.

    A couple of parting thoughts; for a friendly there were a lot of handbags on show and I didn’t think Nice were very nice, please, please can someone find the switch to turn off the echo effect on our PA system – I hardly understood a word.

  2. Anthony O'Brien says:

    Paul’s assessment is spot-on as always, and I empathise with his computer frustrations. In terms of football, the best player on the pitch for me was a central defender — and sadly he doesn’t play for Cardiff. I don’t know his name but he had number 31 on his shirt, and apart from one communication mix-up with his goalkeeper his positional play, use of the ball, heading and tackling, as well as being in the right place at the right time were all first rate.
    In spite of the object lesson we received in immediate ball control and accurate short-range passing from the Nice team it was basically the same old “Warnockian approach” from Cardiff which, nevertheless, ended in a victory, even if many of the hoofball and aimless clearances from our defenders as the game progressed suggested an element of panic.
    Despite everything, however, I look forward to the coming season with eager anticipation and a degree of optimism.

  3. Richard Holt says:

    Thanks Paul and like others, it’s nice to know that the MAYA is up and running again. It seems that yesterday’s performance was also very much back to ‘business as usual’ in terms of Warnock’s City – the same strengths and same failings that we have all become used to.
    As far as our summer’s transfer activity is concerned, I can’t help feel that the purse-strings are in reality shut pretty tight. I know many fans are expecting or hoping that at least a couple of ‘big’ signings in the form of a striker and midfield player are going to appear in the next ten days. I’m not so sure. Warnock himself said some weeks ago that there would have to be departures before there can be new arrivals which suggests a cash neutral approach in terms of transfer spending. For a side that has just come down from the Premier League having spent considerably less that the norm for that division, and with two seasons of parachute money to look forward to, that seems a little surprising – unless of course VT wants to show any prospective buyer of the club the healthiest possible balance sheet. Of course if this week we pay £10-20 million on a 20-goal striker then my theory goes out of the window. If Gavin Whyte signs from Oxford then that could be a useful addition but again I wonder if this is a sign that Murphy or Mendez-Laing or Hoilett will soon be on their way.
    This time last year a friend asked me what I thought City’s chances were of staying up and I said 50/50. To be honest, given that we were only one win short of doing so, I don’t think that was far out and I still would have given those odds up until the Fulham game in April. I have to say that at the moment I think our chances of a top six finish this season are a bit less than that.

  4. BJA says:

    Hello Paul and others – Thank you for your report and I am so glad to learn that you are back in “business”. It was a bad week-end last week without your thoughts. Once again nothing really with which to disagree, but I did not feel that Flint performed as capably as you reported, far,far too slow. Just hope that Bamba regains his fitness soon.
    I am not sure why I read Wales on Line as much as I do, or why I think am persuaded that their views have much credence. So this morning, apparently, NW is quite happy with his three goalkeepers and if one departs, then so be it. Hmm. A manager seeking to regain his side’s Premiership status “happy” to see their number one ‘keeper depart, surely not. But this is Cardiff City and money is money. so if Villa, or anyone else for the matter, makes an reasonable offer for Etheridge, will it be accepted? Of course,
    And so our team that just failed to retain its Premiership position will be decimated further. Four gone will become five, and watching yesterday’s hotchpot of a team, and their style of play, notwithstanding the comings and goings, will, sadly, be no better than a mid-table Championship outfit at best.
    The talk of signing a striker continues to rumble on. Why? We have known that for some time. The tragedy of Sala for all concerned was immense, for family more than any football club. But still some six days before the start of a new season there is no sign of the marquee striker that we so desperately need and it looks as though a £2m youngster from Oxford is going to have to provide the 20 plus goals a season. I just hope his shoulders are broad enough to carry that load.
    Finally, I thought the pitch looked somewhat bare. I appreciate recent weather conditions have caused problems to many areas, but I really was not expecting such a poor covering of grass. I shall be interested to see its condition in a fortnight.

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  5. The other Bob Wilson says:

    Thank you to you all for your replies. Sadly, my computing problems are still dominating in that I cannot give your comments that attention I normally do in that my reply is going to have to be much shorter. Suffice it to say that I broadly agree with them all – the best way I could quickly sum it up is that a win for a team relegated to the Championship against a side that finished seventh in Ligue 1 should be a way to send you into the new season in a confident framed of mind, but a combination of our performance for about two thirds of the game and our manager’s post match comments means that it isn’t the case this time.
    One other thing, the pitch did look poor didn’t it BJA – initially I thought the concert held on it during the summer might be behind it, but this has happened in previous years without any noticeable effect on the pitch, so, I agree, it must be down to the recent weather.

  6. Colin Phillips says:

    Conor Wickham anyone?

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