Seven decades of Cardiff City v Southampton matches.

Cardiff City will face Southampton in their penultimate home game of the season with a side missing as many as twelve first team squad members tomorrow. A combination of illness and injuries had Erol Bulut fearing that Jamilu Collins, Josh Bowler and Callum Robinson could join those ruled out for the final weeks of the season in missing the match against a team which must be quite fancying its chances of making the top two after all, given the mess Leicester, Leeds and Ipswich are making of things lately.

Bulut confirmed that Perry Ng, who has been carrying some sort of niggle for weeks, has played his last game of the season and went on to make it sound like he’s also played his last game for the club, As I’ve seen Ng named as the best right back in the Championship by people who aren’t City fans on a couple of podcasts this season, it’s no surprise that he has been coming to the attention of other clubs and it wouldn’t surprise me in the slightest if we received bids for him in the coming months – he’s our current Player of the Year and would be my nomination for that award this time around as well.

A couple of midweek age group games to mention – the Under 18s trailed QPR at Leckwith by 1-0 at half time, but then turned things around completely after the interval to emerge 5-2 winners. Jack Davies and Louis Phillips scored two apiece and Osian Rees got the other one. The Under 21’s became the third City side not to suffer defeat in a game at St. Andrews Birmingham this season on Monday night when they came back from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 with Cian Ashford, who looks likely to make his first league start for City tomorrow scoring both of our goals, the second one from the penalty spot.

One thing I should have done more of this season is report how the club’s women’s team have been doing. Having wrapped up another league title in a campaign where they were only beaten once, City faced Swansea in the Final of the Adran Trophy (which I think is the equivalent of the League Cup) on Sunday and fell behind after about twenty minutes. They were still trailing at half time, but, in a second half showing to rival that of the Under 18s, Megan Bowen, Molly Kehoe, Rhianne Oakley and Eliza Collie (2) all scored unanswered goals to record a 5-1 victory- the team now have the chance to make it a domestic treble when they take on Wrexham at Rodney Parade in the Welsh Cup Final on 5 May.

On to the quiz, here are seven Southampton related questions, the answers to which I’ll put on here on Sunday.

60s. With a surname which sounds like a bit of a pointless exercise to me, this Londoner played his first football on loan for a place which I only know of as a training venue for the team he was contracted to. Upon returning from his loan, he spent the next dozen years playing over three hundred and fifty games for the club’s second and third teams. It’s no surprise therefore that he only made sixty seven league appearances in that time. He played even less first team football in his two years with Southampton, but this time a knee injury which eventually forced him into retirement was responsible for his lack of game time. His one encounter with City as a Southampton player ended with honours even, but who is he?

70s. Gareth Bale played for Southampton at Ninian Park as a seventeen year old, which international footballer did the same for the Saints during this decade – the score in both games was the same.

80s. Was he a squatter I wonder?

90s. Ex Saint, he smiles on request. (4,4)

00s. Saints address maybe.

10s. He once scored a hat trick for Southampton in a game against Portsmouth and, having gained three caps for Scotland Under 19s, he switched his allegiance to England (he was born in Devon) when his Scottish born father died – he then went on to play three times for England under 19s and four times for their under 20s. His one Southampton appearance against us ended in defeat and, currently, he’s playing in the Championship for a team of nomads, but can you name him?

20s. Name the fifty five times capped international who scored a hat trick in the biggest away win in Southampton’s history?

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Jekyll and Hyde like Cardiff City succumb meekly at Millwall.

It must have been during one of City’s relegation fighting seasons in the early to mid seventies that I formed one of the beliefs which I have carried through my football supporting life. If your team is in a promotion or relegation battle, the best sort of sides you can face in the closing games of the season are ones that are in mid table with nothing to play for as they will not have the same stomach for the fight as you.

That’s a view I have held for half a century or more, an awful lot of football has been played in that time and I wonder if it proves my theory right? It needs some student somewhere to do a dissertation on the subject to do that – that’s not too much to ask is it?

Mind you, if that student chose the Championship in 2023/24 as the basis for his or her essay, Lord knows what conclusions they would draw! Using Blackburn Rovers as an example, the struggling Lancashire club travelled to Bristol City in midweek to face a team with no chance of going up or down and got trounced 5-0. This looked like a really significant result at the time because Blackburn now faced three matches against promotion chasing sides and one against a fellow struggler to close their season. In the first of those matches today, Blackburn travelled to third placed Leeds, who were defending an unbeaten home record, and won 1-0!

However, you can look much closer to home to find another team that are doing their best to make it so hard to come to any conclusions as to the accuracy of my theory. Cardiff City are another club whose season is over to all intents and purposes – while a top ten or top half finish would be nice, is anyone, bar Erol Bulut and Vincent Tan perhaps, really too bothered about where in the middle third of the table we finish?

Yet, City went to relegation haunted Birmingham on Wednesday and really put in a shift as they had to absorb a lot of pressure at times and battle hard to secure a 1-0 win which was probably just about deserved in the end. It was not a Bristol City v Blackburn type romp, but I would argue that it was more merit worthy in a way because of the sort of challenges City faced in what was a typically tight modern day Championship encounter.

So, you would have thought that it would be more of the same today from the team for the trip to the New Den to face a Millwall team that has been down near the bottom all season and had looked to be in real trouble before beating Leicester in midweek because they’d lost successive games at Huddersfield and Rotherham.

However, the Cardiff team that rubbished my theory on Wednesday did their best to confirm it today. This was classic on the beach already stuff as they performed in a way which was the epitome of couldn’t care less football.

In the first half of today’s match it was a decent watch, City aren’t a long ball team anymore and they’ve spent most of this season proving that, while also showing that they do not possess the requisite skills to have made the transition a wholly successful one. Therefore, with the creativity from open play needed for a truly effective passing side to prosper largely absent, the advance up the table under Erol Bulut has been achieved in attritional fashion with a large reliance on set piece goals – I believe that a passing approach is intrinsically an attractive way of playing the game, City’s passing football in 23/24 has proved that belief to be questionable at best.

Today though, on a bright sunny day of the type we should see quite often as the season comes to an end, but hadn’t this time around until now, City and Millwall played some decent stuff and it seemed to me that we had an edge when we moved the ball with the same purpose we showed at times on Wednesday.

It’s as if City have been able to show that, when the pressure is off somewhat, they aren’t quite as bad passers of the ball as people like me say they are. The one change made from Wednesday saw Rubin Colwill taking over from Aaron Ramsey whose season is presumably over after his hamstring injury in midweek – if it is, then, sadly, the gamble we took on him (and it was a gamble) failed in the first of the two seasons he’s contracted for and, as of now, there must be some doubt as to whether he’ll see out them both.

Colwill was very good on Wednesday, he was the game changer for me and for a while he threatened to do something similar today, but in the end, he was a barometer for his team as he faded from the picture in the second half and it was no surprise to see him substituted.

Millwall made a bright start and took the lead through Michael Obafemi when the on loan from Burnley striker was played through a square looking defence and shot powerfully past Ethan Horvarth who was beaten too easily on his near post.

City spent the next quarter of an hour looking like they could get back in the game and they duly did when Colwill’s free kick was headed in at the far post by Yakou Meite for only his second goal for the club – once again, I felt the goalkeeper, in this case Matija Sarkic, could have done better.

City looked like the team with more poise, but a big turning point in the game came when Nat Phillips was given time to take aim from twelve yards, but dragged his shot wide. Millwall turned the screw after that and four minutes added time helped them force City on to the back foot. Ironically, it looked like we may have the chance to break out and counter attack effectively at one time, but Colwill gave the ball away cheaply. It was a careless mistake, but he deserved better than to be left as the only defender we had out on the left as Millwall broke down that side and the unmarked Jake Cooper half volleyed in from beyond the far post from the resultant cross.

Although no one realised it at the time, the game had now changed. For years Millwall and City were challengers for the title of most physical side in the Championship, on today’s evidence both sides have changed somewhat since then, but Millwall definitely won the physical battle today.

Particularly after the break, City didn’t fancy the physical side of things – they were enjoying the weather which had them thinking about their holidays too much.

Joe Ralls forced Sarkic into a diving save with a well struck shot from thirty yards and it was encouraging to see Cian Ashford, being used on the left after his league debut as a right sided attacker on Wednesday, go on the outside and cross with his left foot only for the ball to be hacked away before another sub, Ollie Tanner could shoot – mind you, given the slipshod way Tanner performed while he was on today, he would have found a way to miss what would have been a simple chance anyway.

However, these were isolated eceptions to a trend which saw Millwall firmly in the ascendancy fo the second forty five minutes. Horvarth made a couple of good saves to keep his team in it, but he was beaten again in added time when sub Duncan Whatmore, looking so offside that he must have been onside, scored an easy third.

This seems a good place to mention that while there have clearly been areas where City have improved (you don’t go from bottom third to middle third in the Championship without doing that), defending isn’t one of them in my opinion – Cedric Kipre’s replacement Dimi Goutas is finishing the season in erratic fashion.

A last word on the attitudes of sides at either end of the table In the closing weeks of a season – Bimingham, who looked on their way down after losing to mid table City three days ago, today gave Play Off chasing Coventry their heaviest defeat of the campaign as the FA Cup Semi Finalists went down 3-0

Another win for the under 18s today at Leckwith when a late goal by Dan Ola helped them to a 2-1 win over Peterborough after Trey George had given them a first half lead.

Treherbert Boys and Girls club can still win the Highadmit South Wales Alliance Premier Division, but it must be a long shot now following their 1-0 loss at Aber Valley this afternoon.

Posted in Football in the Rhondda valleys., Out on the pitch, The kids. | Tagged , , | 4 Comments