I took it that our manager meant that Bellamy could give us something that we did not have a great deal of in 2011/12 – that is the ability to win or turn games through doing something out of the ordinary or showing brilliant skill. If I was right in my thinking, then Bellamy has definitely increased the X Factor quota available to Malky Mackay and players such as Craig Noone, Kim Bo-Kyung, Jordon Mutch, Tommy Smith and the injured Nicky Maynard all added to it to varying degrees as well.
So, it seems to me that our manager recognised that we needed to have more game changers in his side and, generally, his team selections have contained a fair proportion of these players. However, last night’s disappointing 1-1 draw with Barnsley was another of those occasions when you came away thinking that there is something in Malky Mackay’s make up that is not comfortable with giving gifted individuals full, or sometimes even semi, licence to show the skills they are capable of – to use a not very good analogy, it’s like someone driving hundreds of miles in a high performance car with the handbrake on.
Now, it’s only right that I say a few things in mitigation in favour of our manager here. Firstly, although I daresay a few of his critics will maintain that the amount spent on the team in the last year means that we should be top of the league, our position with five matches of the grueling marathon that is the Championship left is proof that Malky Mackay has done a fine job overall this season. Secondly, he might well have thought that going into last night’s match with a starting line up which included only four players who have scored in 2013 (and they had only managed six between them) hardly suggested we were going to see City going on a goal spree and so, I suppose, that might have led to an attitude of mind that said we had to protect any lead we had rather than look to increase it. Thirdly, I can understand a desire to give players who might be very important to us in the games to come a rest once we had taken the lead (I think that applied to Kimbo) to some extent, but, even when you take all of this into account, I have to say that I find our attitude last night (especially after Ben Turner’s goal) disappointing, but also,and maybe more importantly, a little worrying when I think of what the future might hold.
Last night represented a completely different challenge though and it was a concern to see Joe Mason cross a ball to the far post from the byeline in the first minute or two and there not be a single Cardiff player within fifteen to twenty yards of where the pass was aimed. Now, you could say that Mason should have waited longer before crossing, but this wasn’t in the last minute of a grueling game, it was within seconds of the kick off and you would have liked to think at least one of the midfield five would have been busting a gut to try and make something of the cross.
This rather presumptuous piece from this morning’s press which gives the impression that it was finished after seventy minutes of last night’s match and then had to have a few more sentences and a new headline added to it, maintains that we played 4-3-3. Sorry, but I saw no evidence of that – I’m struggling to remember if we have ever played a 4-5-1 which can effortlessly convert to 4-3-3 when we are attacking – when we play the extra man in midfield, it tends to be more rigid than the best versions of that system are.
Barnsley offered very little going forward in a one sided first half as they sat back with two banks of four and conceded territory and possession, yet Mason was left to fend for himself with hardly any examples of the runs beyond the lone striker him by midfielders which I swear I saw plenty of times in the excellent 4-1 win over Newcastle in our final pre-season match but have barely seen since. Perhaps it was too congested to get midfield runners into space, but, given the way the game was going, we could have switched to 4-4-2 to give Mason a hand by having Bellamy join him or put someone like Kimbo in the hole behind him – as it was, the visitors were able to go in level at half time with few serious threats on their goal despite it being virtually one way traffic for forty five minutes.
The second half saw more of what I would term muddled thinking – we fell asleep completely early in the second half to allow Barnsley to play a short corner where we didn’t even have one player closing them down and Hassell missed a chance which was better than anything we could come up with in the first half, but recovered to work up a bit of a head of steam which culminated in our goal. Once we had scored, that should have been the signal for us to play slightly more conservatively and wait for the opportunities to utilise our X Factor players to pick Barnsley off as they pushed men forward in search of an equaliser and visiting keeper Luke Steele enjoyed the sort of luck David Marshall had on Saturday when a close range header (not sure who it was from) from another corner hit him a few minutes later. However, from then on, it was as if the shutters went up as the word went out that 1-0 was enough.
After that, we did play some neat stuff to get in down the left once or twice but nothing came from it and Heidar Helguson maybe should have done more with a good cross from the other flank by Tommy Smith, but that was it until the veteran striker’s one on one miss in added time. Without a goal in nearly five months, Helguson hardly inspired confidence as he bore down on Steele and his tame finish offered a further reminder that our squad last night had very few, if any, players who are used to scoring goals lately. Worse was to follow though, as City didn’t seem to do one thing or another from the corner that followed and Barnsley were able to work their way clear from a throw in near their own corner flag far too easily as we, yet again, seemed happy to sit back and give them the freedom of two thirds of the pitch.
We continued to boot the ball up the pitch for the next few minutes and wait for it to come back at us (forget about blaming the ref for the time played past the five minutes added time, Kevin McNaughton needed treatment which explained why there was time for Barnsley to equalise) and we ended up getting what I feel we deserved for our approach to the whole game, but, in particular, the last twenty five minutes. Would Foster’s late deflection have gone in if our back four had not dropped so deep that he was stood virtually on the penalty spot when the ball hit him and he had been about five or ten yards further from goal like he should have been forced to be? I think it probably would, but we should have ensured that there was never any need for such a question.
It’s only fair mind to give some credit to Barnsley, they defended resolutely for about an hour and then, when they had to come out and play, they showed why they have done so well in recent months after looking certs for the drop around Christmas. They were able to hit incisive, low twenty or thirty yard passes to players in advanced positions which we weren’t able to match and the introduction of hate figure Jason Scotland (I wish our fans would just ignore him because he’s always struck me as someone who feeds off the abuse he gets when he plays against us) and Chris Dagnall caused us problems as they dropped into the positions where confusion is caused as to whether they should be picked up by defenders or midfielders (i.e. the sort of area we failed to exploit in the first half).
So, Barnsley weren’t mugs by any means, but, when all’s said and done, they were thirty one points behind us and nineteen places below us in the table – should an outfit that we are constantly told are Champions elect really spend almost the last third of a game on their own pitch sitting back and trying to protect a 1-0 lead in such circumstances? The positives our method of playing have brought should never be ignored or taken for granted, we are better than anyone else in certain “ugly” areas of the game, our defensive record is excellent with only one team letting in less than us and fifteen clean sheets show that one goal is often all we need to get the three points. That said, we let in one a game on average so, more often than not, 1-0 isn’t enough – roundhead football has taken us so far, but nights like last night makes you cry out for a bit of the cavalier as well.