Cardiff prove too strong for depleted Bristol City
Cardiff City 3 Bristol City 0: If Bristol City believed the passing of Ninian Park would in any way render rivals Cardiff less effective, they were made to think again as they slumped to emphatic defeat in the Welsh capital.
True, the Bluebirds' new stadium may lack some of the vitriolic atmosphere which made playing at their former headquarters such a hazardous business, but its advent shows no sign of making a trip to the Principality any less daunting for visiting teams and their supporters.
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Bristol City's Jamie McCombe scored an own goal at Cardiff
Eager to put on a good show in front of the Sky TV cameras, the proud hosts set about their Severnside rivals with a relish which suggests Dave Jones' side has what it takes to maintain their impressive start to the Championship campaign.
City held their own until unfortunate captain Jamie McCombe turned the ball into his own net nine minutes before the interval. Goal machine Michael Chopra then made it 2-0 in first-half injury-time and Gavin Rae skipped through to add a third midway through the second period, confirming the Welsh club's superiority on this occasion and affording his team parity with early pace-setters Middlesbrough, Newcastle United and West Bromwich Albion.
Injury and illness offered partial mitigation for a City side forced to negotiate arguably their toughest assignment of the season to date without several influential players.
Defenders Bradley Orr and Lewin Nyatanga succumbed to a virus and mumps respectively, Cole Skuse failed to recover from a calf strain in time to feature and skipper Louis Carey was considered only just fit enough to make the bench.
Absenteeism on such a scale forced manager Gary Johnson to change formation, forsaking the 3-5-2 system which had served City so well in previous games for a more orthodox 4-3-3.
It worked up to a point, but goals change games and Cardiff's pre-eminence was seldom challenged after Chopra afforded the home side crucial breathing space.
Johnson introduced big John Akinde at the start of the second half in an attempt to give his team more of an attacking presence, only to see the Bluebirds further extend their lead and put the outcome beyond reasonable doubt.
Billed as a shoot-out between in-form strikers Chopra and Nicky Maynard, this contest proved both sides possess alternative match-winners.
Determined not to be outdone by his strike partner, Danny Haynes set Welsh alarm bells ringing when showing two defenders a clean pair of heels, surging into the penalty area and dragging the ball back for Maynard, who was denied a shooting opportunity by Anthony Gerrard's last-ditch intervention.
If Bristol City expected Bluebirds' £4 million signing Chopra to provide the main threat to their unbeaten record, they were quickly disabused of the idea, Chris Burke skipping past two defenders and rounding keeper Dean Gerken, only to see his goal-bound effort clip Liam Fontaine's heel and rebound to safety.
Welsh international Joe Ledley was the next to breach Bristol lines, letting fly with a shot which Gerken deflected behind for a corner.
English pride obliged City to give as good as they got and Marvin Elliott's lofted cross invited David Clarkson to rise at the far post for a glancing header which required teenage defender Adam Matthews to make a crucial clearance close to his own goal.
Burke's pace was proving a thorn in the side for the visitors and a punt upfield from Mark Hudson forced Gerken to rush from his line and clear under duress from the hard-running winger.
Gerken again came to his side's rescue on the half-hour, scampering across goal and diving full-length to keep out a speculative long-range effort from left-back Paul Quinn which threatened to embarrass him.
Pressure was building and it came as little surprise when the Cardiff breakthrough materialised nine minutes before the interval. A well-worked throw-in routine on the right engineered sufficient room for Matthews to deliver a telling cross and, the unlucky McCombe inadvertently turned the ball past his own goalkeeper.
In need of a response, the Robins almost conjured an equaliser from the restart. Paul Hartley floated a free-kick into the mix and McCombe's header was deflected to Elliott, whose rising shot from six yards out thumped against an upright.
How the visitors must have wished that effort had gone in when Cardiff doubled their lead in first-half injury-time. Once again, Burke's quick feet and speed off the mark caused panic in City's defence and his deft pass invited Chopra to come alive for the first time.
The Geordie needed no second invitation; his first touch carried him clear of the covering defence and his finish, delivered with the outside of his boot, proved too good for Gerken, who was powerless to prevent the impish striker's seventh goal of the campaign.
Bristol City urgently needed to score the next goal and the game was effectively over as a contest when Rae latched on to Ledley's pass and raced clear to beat Gerken with an angled shot on 66 minutes.
Cardiff City (4-4-2): Marshall; Matthews, Hudson, Gerrard, Quinn; Whittingham, Rae, Ledley, Burke; Chopra (Etuhu 80), Bothroyd (Magennis 89). Subs Not Used: Enckelman, Gyepes, McPhail, Blake, Comminges.
Bristol City (4-3-3): Gerken; Wilson, McCombe, Fontaine, McAllister; Elliott, Hartley (Sproule 75), Johnson (Williams 75); Haynes, Clarkson (Akinde 46), Maynard. Subs Not Used: Basso, Carey, Ribeiro, Blackman.











24 Comments
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by Paul, Whitchurch
Monday, August 24 2009, 5:39PM
“Citypete:
With regards to Vincent Pericard; when news he was training with us filtered through I have not felt this doomed since Gary Johnson snapped up Stern John last season and confidently told us he was the missing golf club.
As for the other fella, I've not seen enough of him to fully comment, but he struggled to make a name for himself at Cardiff last year, and reportedly has attitude problems, so I wouldn't hold out much hope.”
by Citypete, bristol
Monday, August 24 2009, 4:55PM
“oh god i feel trampled all over. waving white flag but i still think GJ will get us as high as we can go. what do you think of the 2 training with us this week both could do a good job and give you what you all want a big forward and a winger with speed and skill”
by john james, Pembrokeshire
Monday, August 24 2009, 4:28PM
“Too many changes Gary!
The average Championship players cannot adept that easily to changes - 5 3 2; 4 4 2 or 4 3 3 and sometimes twice in a game!”
by John, Pembrokeshire
Monday, August 24 2009, 4:07PM
“Marc, you right in every paragraph. I suspect Gary Johnson can not spell 'width' let alone set up a team to provide such a service for strikers. For years he has been buying striker after striker who subsequently have been starved of a decent service due to lack of width. Without McIndoe (who did not play as consistently wide as I would have liked) City now look narrower than ever. At Cardiff our ponderous 'pretty' football got nowhere and eventually broke down. Whilst I hate picking out individual players, there is a limit - when I saw the team come up on TV my eye was immediately drawn to B Wilson and I knew in that instant we were doomed. If Ribeiro is a poorer player that Brian Wilson (who is playing in at least one division above his ability) then he, Ribeiro, should find a job outside football. Why Blackman and Ribeiro were left on the bench is a mystery; either one could have added some width. Bringing on Williams did nothing, except perhaps saving the manager's son from a second yellow card.”
by Lawrence, Nanaimo Van isl B/C Canada
Monday, August 24 2009, 4:06PM
“Wow !! just got up , Out here on the best/west Coast, Great comments !! re the game in Cardiff, l totally agree with 90% of them , thanks to Marc Wilt`s gives us [out here] good insite to the game , but [CITY PETE] l smell [envy] in your writing , sounds like your tungue is in gear WAY before your mind is !!, but you did [Apologise] Again thanks for the comments on here this Morn Keep it up , now for my 2nd Coffee,,,,”