Vincent Tan has antagonised fans, but Cardiff City just weren’t good enough

5 05 2014

When Swansea City were promoted to the Premier League in May 2011, I remember some Cardiff City fans joking that they thought their South Wales rivals would be there for four seasons – summer, autumn, winter and spring.

Three years later, Swansea have again secured their Premier League status, with Cardiff’s own top-flight experience lasting just four seasons (one year) since cruising to the Championship title last year.

cardiff city stadium

Cardiff City lose 2-1 at home to Newcastle United in October 2013

It’s easy to feel sorry for Cardiff fans. Not just because I know so many of them, but also because of the way a campaign which started so gloriously against Manchester City is ending with such a whimper.

On the field, City have taken 13 points from the 19 Premier League games since Malky Mackay was sacked on December 27. It’s a miserable return, but it wasn’t as if all was rosy with the Scot in charge. During his tenure, Cardiff picked up 17 points from 18 matches, so on course to miss the traditional safety target of 40 points.

Mackay, who guided Cardiff to the Premier League for the first time, was treated pretty poorly. But although Fulham and (probably) Norwich, the other relegated teams, have also ridden on the managerial merry-go-round this season to little or no avail, the job done by Gus Poyet at Sunderland, Tony Pulis at Crystal Palace, and even Garry Monk at Swansea, shows a managerial sacking is often worth the risk for a team mired at the bottom.

But the Mackay affair was another stick with which fans could beat the Vincent Tan regime. If Ole Gunnar Solskjaer had kept the Bluebirds up, the appointment would have been a masterstroke. As it is, the whole episode has become another entry on the ever-growing list of shoddy decisions.

Tan – an enigma in driving gloves, a moustachioed cartoon villain – might not have been entirely responsible for Cardiff’s relegation, which was sealed by a 3-0 capitulation at Newcastle. But he has robbed the club of much of its identity since his red makeover of the Bluebirds at the start of the 2012-13 season.

I’m not a Cardiff City fan – although I want to see them do well for the sake of football in Wales, and because I’ve enjoyed watching two versions of El Llasico this season – so I can’t say whether the majority would prefer to play in blue but perpetually stuck in the Championship, or in red as an established Premier League side. Obviously that debate has been rendered academic for at least a couple more seasons – Cardiff will be back in the second tier next year, and probably still in red.

I’ve had a similar issue as a Newcastle United fan. Mike Ashley has never been popular, although he hasn’t (yet?) demanded a change away from the black and white kit. His rebranding of St James’ Park was generally ignored – it’s easier to do so with that than with kit colour – but criticism usually only flares up properly when the club is doing badly (i.e. since Christmas. It’s tough for Cardiff that Newcastle’s first win in seven condemned them to relegation).

And so it is with relegated Cardiff. Tan’s first season at the club saw promotion, now he has overseen relegation. Where will Cardiff be this time next year? If there is an immediate return to the top flight, the grumbling will be more muted. Mid-table mediocrity, or worse, could see things come to a head.

But justifiable though criticism of Tan may be, at least Cardiff haven’t been swallowed by debt. In any case, this season ended in relegation not because of red strips but because Cardiff simply have not been good enough. On the pitch, the season hasn’t been an abject humiliation – they picked up famous wins against Manchester City and Swansea – but it did prove that the Bluebirds just didn’t have a squad of sufficient strength to compete in the Premier League.

Someone has to be relegated, and at least Cardiff haven’t “done a Derby”. The challenge for Cardiff City is for bounce back without the club’s owners further antagonising the fans, the lifeblood of any club and without commercial interests riding roughshod over the club’s history.





Cardiff City are promoted to the Premier League

16 04 2013

Finally we get to see a Welsh Premier League derby. Congratulations to Cardiff City.





FA Trophy final: Wrexham 1-1 Grimsby (4-1 on penalties)

25 03 2013

It’s getting hard to keep up with an almost unprecedented level of success for Welsh sport, with football, rugby and cycling in Wales all competing to trump the others.

wrexhamBut, after yesterday’s FA Trophy win at Wembley for Wrexham, football could have the upper hand again.

Andy Morrell’s side currently sit third in the Football Conference (one place ahead of Welsh rivals Newport County), but yesterday’s shoot-out win over Grimsby in front of more than 35,000 people at the home of English football ensures that, following Swansea City’s 5-0 win over Bradford City in the League Cup final last month, every English trophy won so far this season has gone to a Welsh club.

With Newport and Wrexham challenging at the top of the Conference, and Swansea City settling into the top half of the Premier League – and with their sights set on a European campaign next season – this season would already be a success for Welsh football even without the national side’s 2-1 win in Scotland.

Oh, and Cardiff City, who sit on top of the Championship, with a nine-point automatic promotion cushion. Barring a spectacular (though, for Cardiff, hardly atypical) late-season collapse – if Cardiff were to reach the play-off final and make it a hat-trick of Welsh teams at Wembley this season, it would be very disappointing from their point of view – it could turn into just about the perfect season for Welsh football.





Swansea City 5-0 Bradford City

24 02 2013

Congratulations to the Swans, who are the first Welsh side to win a major trophy in the English system since 1927.

Five nil against a side ranked three tiers below them might not seem like a particularly noteworthy result, but don’t forget the calibre of teams, including three in the Premier League, which Bradford have sent packing on the way to the final.

Swansea have now won their last two visits to Wembley, going one better than bitter rivals Cardiff City managed last year.

They’ll be in Europe next season, which will be fun. It’s great to see both Brian Laudrup picking up where Brendan Rodgers left off at the Liberty Stadium, and Swansea avoiding an outbreak of “second season syndrome”, which often hits promoted teams 12 months into their time in a higher tier than they are used to.

I remember some Cardiff fans predicting Swansea would, after their success in the Championship play-off final in 2011, be in the top flight for four seasons – summer, autumn, winter and spring.

Those jokes ring hollow now Swansea are League Cup champions and firmly established in the Premier League – although Cardiff’s 2-1 win at Wolves today only extends the Bluebirds’ lead at the top of the Championship, and heightening the prospect of a couple of spicy Welsh derbies next season.





Cardiff City close in on Championship play-offs

17 04 2012

The Bluebirds’ 2-0 win over Derby County at Cardiff City Stadium moves them, effectively, to within two points of a play-off spot.

Malky Mackay’s men were grateful for a goal in each half, with Joe Mason’s first half strike doubled in the second period by a audacious lob by Mark Hudson from inside his own half.

Middlesbrough, realistically the only side who can deny Cardiff a play-off finish, were held to a disappointing 0-0 draw at the Riverside Stadium to already-relegated Doncaster Rovers. Read the rest of this entry »