By dennisdcfc | Published: Thursday 1 October, 2009
Cardiff City 6 – Derby County 1
The outlook for Derby’s first visit to the Cardiff City stadium seemed bright. The victory against Bristol City on Saturday brought a welcoming halt to Derby’s concerning run of defeats. Whilst the Rams looked wasteful in the final third, the centre half pairing of Shaun Barker and Dean Leacock seemed solid, bringing a defensive confidence so evidently absent in the previous two seasons. Add to that Cardiff City’s recent poor form and lack of goals from striker Michael Chopra and Derby fans would have been forgiven for perhaps expecting a rare haul of 3 points on the road.
It wasn’t long before the newfound optimism was cruelly brought back to reality, as Derby began poorly. The Derby back four played a poorly timed offside trap and Peter Whittingham took advantage, stroking the ball home from just a few yards out. Things soon went from bad to worse, as Derby’s promising central defensive partnership was broken as Dean Leacock was replaced on the 30th minute with a tight hamstring. Jay McEveley, Leacock’s replacement, suffered a baptism of fire as Michael Chopra put the Bluebirds up by 2 soon after, slotting in after a sumptuous ball from wide left.
As the second half began Derby looked set to mount a come back; Rob Hulse pulling one back against the run of play. The Rams striker beat Mark Hudson to a cross and toe-poked the ball past Cardiff keeper Marshall. The comeback was quickly quashed as Derby capitulated under the constant pressure of Cardiff striker Michael Chopra. Chopra made it 3-1 soon after, dashing through a gaping hole in Derby’s defence to squeeze the ball home. Cardiff fans were still celebrating when Chopra completed his hatrick, benefitting off some woeful marking from Shaun Barker and exquisitely chipping the ball over Bywater. Dean Moxey was to blame for the fifth; the promising youngster looked completely out of sorts throughout the entire match and his poor marking lead to Chris Burke inflicting further embarrassment. Chopra still hadn’t finished though, he added his fourth late on. Jay McEveley was at fault this time, Chopra turning the Derby defender unchallenged and finishing with utmost poise.
Nigel Clough recently appeared on Radio Derby on the back of Derby’s run of 4 defeats. Press and fans alike were quick to lavish Clough with praise, highlighting his defiant approach and bravery in answering the calls of his critics, an attribute many managers notably lack. The Bristol City result seemed to finally signal that Derby had turned the proverbial corner and all seemed rosy in the Derby camp. This proved to be short lived and both the embarrassing score line and appalling performance left Derby fans humiliated. Whilst perhaps the Middlesbrough defeat at home to West Brom stands to be spare Derby’s blushes for the worst defeat in this championship season so far, fans may feel increasingly apprehensive as Derby hang precariously above the gaping jaws of the relegation zone. Many level headed fans will be keen to stress composure and perspective, but that is a difficult skill sect to possess given the similarity of manner of this defeat and the painful memories of our last ill fated Premier League season. Whilst fans calling for Nigel’s head will remain firmly in the minority for the time being, Nigel’s injury ravaged Derby side need to put on a resolute display at home on Saturday, against high fliers Sheffield Wednesday, to silence the ever-growing doubters.
Bluebirds hit Rams for six
Cardiff City 6 – Derby County 1
The outlook for Derby’s first visit to the Cardiff City stadium seemed bright. The victory against Bristol City on Saturday brought a welcoming halt to Derby’s concerning run of defeats. Whilst the Rams looked wasteful in the final third, the centre half pairing of Shaun Barker and Dean Leacock seemed solid, bringing a defensive confidence so evidently absent in the previous two seasons. Add to that Cardiff City’s recent poor form and lack of goals from striker Michael Chopra and Derby fans would have been forgiven for perhaps expecting a rare haul of 3 points on the road.
It wasn’t long before the newfound optimism was cruelly brought back to reality, as Derby began poorly. The Derby back four played a poorly timed offside trap and Peter Whittingham took advantage, stroking the ball home from just a few yards out. Things soon went from bad to worse, as Derby’s promising central defensive partnership was broken as Dean Leacock was replaced on the 30th minute with a tight hamstring. Jay McEveley, Leacock’s replacement, suffered a baptism of fire as Michael Chopra put the Bluebirds up by 2 soon after, slotting in after a sumptuous ball from wide left.
As the second half began Derby looked set to mount a come back; Rob Hulse pulling one back against the run of play. The Rams striker beat Mark Hudson to a cross and toe-poked the ball past Cardiff keeper Marshall. The comeback was quickly quashed as Derby capitulated under the constant pressure of Cardiff striker Michael Chopra. Chopra made it 3-1 soon after, dashing through a gaping hole in Derby’s defence to squeeze the ball home. Cardiff fans were still celebrating when Chopra completed his hatrick, benefitting off some woeful marking from Shaun Barker and exquisitely chipping the ball over Bywater. Dean Moxey was to blame for the fifth; the promising youngster looked completely out of sorts throughout the entire match and his poor marking lead to Chris Burke inflicting further embarrassment. Chopra still hadn’t finished though, he added his fourth late on. Jay McEveley was at fault this time, Chopra turning the Derby defender unchallenged and finishing with utmost poise.
Nigel Clough recently appeared on Radio Derby on the back of Derby’s run of 4 defeats. Press and fans alike were quick to lavish Clough with praise, highlighting his defiant approach and bravery in answering the calls of his critics, an attribute many managers notably lack. The Bristol City result seemed to finally signal that Derby had turned the proverbial corner and all seemed rosy in the Derby camp. This proved to be short lived and both the embarrassing score line and appalling performance left Derby fans humiliated. Whilst perhaps the Middlesbrough defeat at home to West Brom stands to be spare Derby’s blushes for the worst defeat in this championship season so far, fans may feel increasingly apprehensive as Derby hang precariously above the gaping jaws of the relegation zone. Many level headed fans will be keen to stress composure and perspective, but that is a difficult skill sect to possess given the similarity of manner of this defeat and the painful memories of our last ill fated Premier League season. Whilst fans calling for Nigel’s head will remain firmly in the minority for the time being, Nigel’s injury ravaged Derby side need to put on a resolute display at home on Saturday, against high fliers Sheffield Wednesday, to silence the ever-growing doubters.