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Cardiff City 1-0 Town - Match Report
Saturday, 12th Mar 2016 17:08

Bruno Ecuele Manga’s 18th minute goal saw Cardiff City to a 1-0 victory over the Blues at the Cardiff City Stadium. The defender nodded home Peter Whittingham’s corner at the near post with Town rarely seriously threatening to find a reply.

Daryl Murphy, Cole Skuse and Luke Hyam returned to the Town side with Brett Pitman and Jonathan Douglas dropping to the bench, while Kevin Foley, who was suffering with bruised ribs after the Bolton game, wasn’t in the 18.

Michael Crowe, who was called back from his loan spell at Braintree earlier in the week, was also amongst the subs with second-choice keeper Dean Gerken unwell.

Cardiff were without their first-choice keeper David Marshall due to a virus and Simon Moore started in his place. Former Blues academy schoolboy Stuart O’Keefe was named in the Bluebirds’ midfield.

The Blues started with Murphy and Sears as a front two with Kevin Bru and Ben Pringle in narrow roles on the right and left respectively of a four-man midfield.

Town were again in their orange third kit, while keeper Bartosz Bialkowski was asked by the referee to change from his green shirt to a yellow one before kick-off - leaving him in the unfortunate combination of a yellow shirt and green shorts - with Cardiff stand-in keeper Moore also wearing green.

Sears struck the game’s first shot in the fifth minute after he battled for a Murphy flick-on. Moore blocked the strike not overly confidently but claimed the loose ball.

On eight Skuse blocked from O’Keefe on the edge of the box but it was the Blues who had made the better start to the game.

There was a scare for Cardiff keeper Moore in the 16th minute when he failed to hold on to Pringle’s corner from the left. The ball was stabbed out to Bru but the Mauritius international was unable to get to it and committed a foul as he looked to do so.

Two minutes later the home side went in front via their first significant attempt of the game.

Whittingham sent over a corner from the left and the unmarked Manga met it at the near post and directed his header past Bialkowski.

After the goal the game returned to its previous pattern of the Blues taking the game to Cardiff. On 23 Christophe Berra headed Pringle’s right-sided corner wide at the far post when the Scotland international clearly thought he might have hit the target.


Soon after, Cardiff had a spell of pressure after Town were unable to clear from a corner, but Murphy then won a flag-kick at the other end, which was returned to Pringle, who sent over a dangerous cross just beyond his team-mates in the area.

Following a spell of Town possession on the right, Murphy headed a Luke Chambers cross wide in the 35th minute.

A minute later, Whittingham whipped in a dangerous freekick from deep on the left which Murphy just managed to divert away from Matthew Connolly in space behind him.

The Blues continued to press and on 40 Moore was forced to punch when under pressure after the home defence had repeatedly failed to clear following a Pringle freekick deep on the left. Soon after, the keeper claimed from Murphy from a Pringle corner on the right.

The Blues were unable to threaten in one minute of added on time and went in at the break rather harshly 1-0 down.

Town had been on top for much of a not hugely enthralling half, however, without overly testing Cardiff deputy keeper Moore, aside from Sears’s early strike and one or two crosses.

While the Blues hadn’t made enough of their set pieces - they had won six corners as well as a couple of freekicks in dangerous areas - the home side had only really presented any threat from theirs, most notably Whittingham’s corner which led to the goal.

Town switched Bru for Brett Pitman ahead of the start of the second half with Sears moving to right midfield.

Neither side created anything of note until the 56th minute when Bialkowski sent the Blues away on a counter-attack following a Cardiff corner.

Pitman flicked on Hyam’s cross from the right to Pringle, who screwed his shot into the side-netting from a decent position on the left of the area.

Town weren’t too far away from an equaliser in the 59th minute when Sears was allowed to reach a long ball from the left. The striker steered the ball past the advancing Moore, but Scott Malone cleared from inside the six-yard box.

The Blues were starting to look more threatening and a minute later Pitman struck a shot from distance which deflected wide.

Town kept the ball for long spells but without creating a further opening, then on 66 Malone broke away for Cardiff after exchanging passes with Lex Immers and hit a shot which flew not too far over Bialkowski’s crossbar.

Three minutes later, Whittingham curled a low 20-yard freekick to Bialkowski’s right, which the keeper claimed comfortably.

Luke Varney replaced Pringle in the 72nd minute, while Whittingham limped off for the home side and Aron Gunnarsson took over.

Sears, now on the left, saw a shot blocked after he cut into the area after exchanging passes with Jonas Knudsen following a corner then Bialkowski tipped Anthony Pilkington’s looping header over from Joe Ralls’s corner on the right.

From the subsequent flag-kick the former Canary went close again, Tommy Smith perhaps getting a touch on the ball just prior to the Irish international connecting with a volley which flew well into the stand behind the goal.

Moore allowed a Sears freekick from the left to slip through his hands and out of play on 79, then five minutes later Murphy shot over from the right with the Blues still unable to create a clear-cut opening.

Ainsley Maitland-Niles took over from Smith for the final two and a half minutes as the Blues continued to look in vain for the equaliser.

Town continued to push during four minutes of injury time - Sears saw an effort blocked during a goalmouth scramble - but, as for most of the rest of the half, rather unconvincingly and referee Andrew Madley’s whistle confirmed the Blues’ defeat.

Having gone in behind after the first half, Town had a lot of the ball after the break but largely huffed and puffed and were unable find a way through a solid Cardiff defence.

The Blues probably deserved something from the game on the balance of play but created too few clear-cut opportunities, while the home side took their one real chance, which from a Town perspective was very preventable.

The defeat and results elsewhere see the Blues stay eighth but now four points behind Sheffield Wednesday - who won 3-0 at Nottingham Forest - in sixth, although still with a game in hand.

That match is Blackburn’s visit to Portman Road on Tuesday with Rotherham - who came from 3-0 down to draw 3-3 with Derby today - in Suffolk next Saturday.

Cardiff: Moore, Peltier, Connolly, Manga, Malone, Noone, O’Keefe, Ralls, Whittingham (Gunnarsson 73), Pilkington (c) (Dikgacoi 83), Immers. Unused: Wilson, Morrison, Ameobi, Zahore.

Town: Bialkowski, Chambers (c), Smith (Maitland-Niles 88), Berra, Knudsen, Skuse, Hyam, Bru (Pitman 46), Pringle (Varney 72), Sears, Murphy. Unused: Crowe, Digby, Tabb, Douglas. Referee: Andrew Madley (West Yorkshire). Att: 15,175.


Photo: Action Images



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Seasider added 17:11 - Mar 13
Horrible scruffy turgid game says Mick McCarthy,but then so are a lot of games I have endured under your management Mick.

Ipswich are a direct side who are best in the league at grinding out results says Russell Slade.The Cardiff Manager is correct;but the only result the Dinosaurs team managed to grind out today was an insipid loss.

McCarthy was asked recently after conceding yet another goal from a corner why he doesn't put men on the post.His curt reply was along the lines of I have got Sunderland and Wolves promoted by not having players on the post,so am not about to start now.Well you arrogant Yorky,if you allowed your players on the post yesterday,we wouldn't have conceded.Just look at the replay,yes it was bad marking;but with players on the posts Bart would have smaller area of the goal to cover,and Magna's header would have hit the defender even without him jumping.

Look forward to Tuesday if only for the pre match drink and company in Legends.
5

dirtydingusmagee added 17:52 - Mar 13
in one paper Mick said he thought we could grind out a 0-0 draw or nick it from a corner. THATS THE SPIRIT Mick !. I guess those that traveled all that way to support their play off hopefuls deserved no more !ve.really given up on season now, My interest for rest of season now is watching the outcome in the ''promised land'' Leicester finishing top ,and Delia Smith and the budgies in tears .A season that started so well [for a change] has just slipped into the usual mundane mid table non event.
5

Pip50 added 18:18 - Mar 13
With Wolves Sheffield Boro and Derby away our season is effectively over. Six at home we can win but not with this manager in charge. How many game results have been by the odd goal how many games have we been spanked on possession and goal efforts on target how many games have we listened to the dross of excuses. Yes no money but a bit of technique ball to feet and building with some youth costs nothing. But hey he got up with the Wolfes and I forget who else.
Please someone (Fulham?) take him absolutely no clue and let's invest our time with someone who knows how to play football.
4

wayway added 21:03 - Mar 13
As long as we have fans like Essex57 who think everything in the garden is rosy, there is no better manager in the universe than boring billy, we must not criticise the owners as they might cut their investment from nil, we must not aspire to anything better than mid table championship then we will always be a third rate club. Is it not time for the REAL fans to show some dissent at the way things are going? Take a leaf out of the Charlton fans book. There must be an alternative to this malaise. As someone who watched us win the league in 62, the cup in 78 and the Euro in 81 all I can say this is by far the worst state the club has been in in my lifetime. Yes I remember the Jackie Milburn disaster and the John Duncan dross, but I now hate to think what will happen if the Evans PLC to not sell the club or, God forbid, we have to suffer another the years of 'McCarthy Magic'. The time to act is NOW and I don't care how many points we are off the playoffs, that didn't stop us being outplayed by Bolton did it
7

essex57 added 22:37 - Mar 13
Dream on way way
-2

wayway added 22:45 - Mar 13
As long as you are happy, all well and good
0

essex57 added 05:29 - Mar 14
Ask Bolton Charlton Portsmouth leeds the list goes on i am happy because it could be alot worse.
-3

Hegansheroes added 10:01 - Mar 14
Bye bye ITFC. Won't be going to another game whilst this imbecile is manager, can't take any more
4

dirtydingusmagee added 20:50 - Mar 14
it would be a bit more acceptable IF we had made genuine attempt s in Cups, we didnt,and it was all in name of'' saving it for league'' we get that crap every season too.iF the fans have to put up with league mediocrity at least give them hope in a cup, We used to fight for everything and were proud to do so .
1


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