Cardiff 2 - 1 Sheff Weds. Comment

Last updated : 27 August 2023 By Paul Evans

When a striker is going through a bad patch in front of goal or a team is looking for a long over due win, you sometimes hear something like “I don’t mind if it’s a 1-0 with a last minute goal scored of my/someone’s backside”,

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Well, it was 2-1, not 1-0 and the very late winner didn’t come via someone’s bum, but in winning their first home game in just short of six months (okay,I know we weren’t playing for three of them!), Cardiff City’s victory today did resemble that kind of it doesn’t matter how it comes as long as it comes mindset – rather than a centre forward’s posterior, the match defining moment came via Will Vaulks’ arm.

I’ll come back to our former player’s contribution later, but, having talked so much about our abysmal home record since 2020 after the very disappointing loss to QPR a fortnight ago, I want to try and put our last gasp win today into some sort of context when it comes to our long term struggles on our own ground.

The first thing to say is that sixty nine games worth of woe at home are not going to be put right by onevictory – we have won twenty one out of those sixty nine despite me sometimes making it sound like we’ve lost every game on our own patch since 2020! Included in those twenty one are four 4-0s and a couple of 3-0s.

In other words, we’ve won while playing a lot better and more convincingly than we did today and it’s not been enough to stir us into going on the sort of concerted sequence of results which would have shut up someone like me who needs no prompting to revisit our horror home run every time we lose in front of our own fans.

Given what tends to happen when the jacks come calling these days, there has to be a fair chance that I’ll be bemoaning both our serial failure to rise to the Swansea challenge and our home travails again in our first game back after the international break which follows next week’s game at Ipswich.

However, trying to highlight the positives from today’s game, I would say that despite what is now a four from four losing record, Sheffield Wednesday were a better team than the QPR one we lost to in our first home match, so that’s a sign of some progress.

In fact, around the hour mark I was beginning to think that we might be on our way to another one of those three or four nil wins, because, after a first half which didn’t feature a single effort on target from either side, we’d made a fast start after the break, scored early on and were looking good for further goals.

Certainly by recent home standards, it’s a very rare thing to be ahead and in command for a while, yet the inability to get to the 2-0 score line that we only managed to reach once in the whole of the home 22/23 season threatened to cost us in the half an hour or more which remained. Wednesday were the dominant team in what remained of the game for me and , were worth a draw in a match which, while not high on true quality, was more watchable than most of the fare on offer at Cardiff City Stadium in the last two seasons especially.

To no one’s surprise, Erol Bulut decided to give Manolis Siopis a first start in midfield, but, rather than Joe Ralls, who I thought was the man most likely to make way to accommodate the Greek international, it was Ryan Wintle who was among the substitutes. At the back, Perry Ng, over last week’s illness and having signed a three year contract extension on Thursday, returned in place of the suspended Mahlon Romeo, Yakou Meite came in for the injured Josh Bowler. but it was Ike Ugbo who moved out to the wide area as Meite became the main striker.

Conspicuous by his absence today was Callum Robinson who was not even on the bench, I’m presuming he was injured, but his season has just not got going yet and, speaking for myself, he’d be my first choice in the forward positions.

Even at such an early stage of the season, the first half had the feel of a tight bottom of the table clash to it with both teams seemingly more focussed on the avoidance of potentially costly mistakes, rather than trying to dictate and attack the game.

There were only four times in the first half where it felt like a goal might be coming. As far as the visitors were concerned, centreback Momo Diaby and last season’s Play Off Final hero Josh Windass both got higher off the ground than the City defence when jumping for a corner, it was hard to see who got the final touch, but between them they sent the ball quite high over the bar. Callum Paterson, being used in one off the few positions (left wing back) he never filled while with us, was seen more in forward areas than defensive ones in the first period and he sent a volleyed, angled effort across the face of goal as he got free beyond the far post.

Sandwiched between these two efforts were a couple from City which put the Wednesday goal under a more severe threat than ours had been. For the first, only a great piece of defending by ex Swansea midfielder George Byers prevented Mark McGuinness being presented with a tap in from a fine corner taken by Ralls and then, about ten minutes later, a lovely Ng cross from the right saw Meite rise to connect with his head on the far post, it looked like a certain goal when he made contact, but his effort flew across goal and wide of the far post.

There was nothing else to write home about during the first period, but, having yet again looked like the away side while playing on their own pitch, Bulut looked to force the issue by pushing Ralls into a more advanced area where he had the freedom to remind a  few people that, before he became a Neil Warnock “bread and butter” midfielder, Ralls was a talented playmaker type. There were some lovely touches and passes from City’s longest serving player who did not suffer in comparison to the more illustrious Ramsey, but he played no part in the opening goal when it arrived on forty eight minutes.

Siopis popped up on the right to supply Ugbo, Ramsey then got involved to set up Ng coming into the sort of area he tends to supply good crosses from and from here, the second home league goal of 23/24 became very like the first one as O’Dowda arrived beyond the far post to head down towards Ugbo who, faced with a tougher chance than the one he scored from against QPR took a touch on his thigh before confidently volleying high into the net from eight yards – Ugbo is looking Kabaesque at the moment as his three goals in four matches have come against a backdrop of him not contributing a great deal in ordinary play, but where would the goals come from without him?

Minutes later, it should have been two when Ralls sent O’Dowda through on goal, but the winger saw his effort blocked by goalkeeper Devis Vasquez’s leg.

The miss had the feel of a defining moment in the game and Bulut was, seemingly, reluctant to change his side while they were playing well, by contrast, his opposite number Xisco Munoz looked to steal a tactical march on him by introducing striker Ashley Fletcher and ex City midfielder Vaulks.

There were a few Vaulks type fouls early on after his introduction, but he also pushed forward more than Byers, the man who he’d replaced and he showed some of the attributes which made him a hard player to judge when he was with us – good passing at times mixed with moments of poor discipline and decision making.

Slowly, but perceptibly, the game was changing and it was Vaulks’ neat chipped cross which enabled Windass to get in a header which looked bound for the net only for Alnwick to make another one of the saves which have persuaded Bulut that he can let Ryan Allsop leave for Hull – although the manager made it sound like Allsop’s agent had indicated to him that his client had wanted to leave in his post game remarks.

City were now under intense pressure with many of their players suddenly looking out on their feet . At this stage, Bulut had only made one change, Ollie Tanner for Ugbo, and it seemed like more were needed. However, our manager kept things as they were and I found myself wondering if the late goals conceded at Leeds and Leicester were a sign of a reaction to the unusual pre season we had where games were played a lot earlier than usual to give our manager a chance to see the players he’d inherited in action early in his tenure in charge?

That is very much a question asked with the benefit of hindsight and so, having not thought of this before now, I can’t claim any great credit for perception and insight, but did all of the game preparation in late June/early July mean that the normal fitness training you’d expect at that time of the pre season schedule take something of a back seat?

Im probably wrong in thinking that, but City collectively looked like their legs had given up on them until a flurry of substitutions gave them some much needed impetus.

Before that though, the City lead was being put under considerable threat – Ramsey did really well to get the ball out for a corner when he found himself in a situation something like the one Byers faced in the first half, but he was at fault when he gave the ball away in a dangerous area and it took a desperate tackle Jamilu Collins to stop Windass from scoring as he appealed unsuccessfully for a penalty.

City were taking an awful long time to get the three players they were intending to release into the fray on to the pitch and, after Meite had ignored the unmarked Tanner to his right and opted to instead shoot feebly wife from twenty yards, the equaliser that had begun to look inevitable duly arrived as too much time was given to Barry Bannan of all people to give Alnwick no chance with a precisely placed effort from twenty yards.

Wednesday were looking likely winners now, but it still took another five minutes to get Karlan Grant, Ryan Wintle and Rubin Colwill on for Ramsey, Ralls and Collins and there was one further alteration on 88 minutes when Kion Etete replaced Meite.

Although the winning goal when it came was a pleasant surprise because City weren’t really threatening much, Grant, Colwill and Etete all helped to add some pep to the attack, while, for the second home game on the trot, Tanner showed that he has to be a serious contender for the role of an impact sub, or even more than that, for the rest of the season.

Right from the first time he got the ball, Tanner showed he had the beating of his marker and, if there was a slight criticism I’d make of his contribution it was that, having done so well to get into a good position to cross the ball, his delivery wasn’t quite on the mark.

Clearly though, Tanner was worrying Wednesday and this may have played a part in what looked a mad decision by Vaulks some six minutes into nine minutes of added time. Again Tanner had found himself in a good crossing position, but there was no City player with a real chance of reaching his pass when Vaulks put his arm out and conceded what was a clear, and needless, penalty.

Of course, you only have to think back to last season for a reminder that the days when you could be pretty confident about us scoring from the spot are long gone. With so many contenders to take it off the pitch, I favoured Grant to try to win the game, he’s scored plenty of penalties at his previous clubs, but the replacement captain Wintle took on the responsibility and must have had everyone wondering why he’d never been tried from the spot during last season as he nervelessly put the ball right in the corner – Vasquez guessed the right way, but Wintle’s accuracy was too much for him.