Welsh Football

  • Home
  • Football
  • Cardiff City . . . The Doom Loop Club Stuck On Groundhog Day

Cardiff City . . . The Doom Loop Club Stuck On Groundhog Day

Rodney Parade Stadium Established 1877 Credit: Andrew Orchard/Alamy

Rodney Parade Stadium Established 1877 Credit: Andrew Orchard/Alamy

According to some business theories, there are three types of management crisis: responsive, proactive and recovery. There’s a fourth, though – Cardiff City. This is a state of permacrisis where the management is changed, the faces alter, the name plates in the car parking spaces are updated, but the crisis goes on

By Graham Thomas

According to some business theories, there are three types of management crisis: responsive, proactive and recovery.

There’s a fourth, though – Cardiff City.

This is a state of permacrisis where the management is changed, the faces alter, the name plates in the car parking spaces are updated, but the crisis goes on.

It matters little whether the manager is Erol Bulut, Sabri Lamouchi, Mark Hudson, Steve Morison, Mick McCarthy or Neil Harris – that’s six in less than four years for those counting – the crisis endures, and the incumbent does not.

Cardiff Tipped To Pick Rowberry After Firing Bulut

Erol knew he was in peril long before the axe fell last weekend following a lifeless 2-0 home defeat to Leeds United.

He knew it because he had seen the failure of all those who had gone before him and still he took the job in the belief he could buck the trend.

Similarly, such is the nature of football management that there will be plenty of managers willing to step into Bulut’s shoes.

They will know their life expectancy in the job is probably around 12 months, 18 if they’re lucky.

But they will take it in the knowledge that whatever happens, judgement on their tenure will be viewed, and tempered, through the lens of working for owner Vincent Tan.

They will move on – usually downwards or at best, sideways – but there will usually be another place to park the leased club Range Rover.

Vincent Tan Turns Up The Volume After Silence For A Month Over Erol Bulut’s Cardiff City Future

The people who remain are Tan, chairman Mehmet Dalman, chief executive Ken Choo, and the long-suffering Cardiff supporters.

In a normal business world, there would be a shareholders’ revolt. They would look at the poor performance of the trio in charge – or at least the two salaried employees – and get rid of them.

But that is not how football ownership works. All three not only remain in position, but they will be the brains trust who will decide on who comes next.

It’s long been pointed out by columnists, pundits, ex-players, podcasters, YouTubers and not least the Cardiff City Supporters Trust, that the Bluebirds have no strategy, no established identity, and no football expertise in the role of a football or sporting director.

Instead, they rely on the whim of Tan, combined with the hunch of Dalman, followed by the administration of Choo.

To be frank, it’s not proved a winning combination.

Vincent Tan Turns Up The Volume After Silence For A Month Over Erol Bulut’s Cardiff City Future

Aside from two brief seasons of uplift under Malky Mackay and then Neil Warnock, Cardiff have generally gone around in circles, like a runway aircraft with one wing.

As Trust board member Phil Nifield – a man used to dealing with crisis as a former local government editor of the South Wales Echo – put it: “We must be one of the few clubs who don’t have a director of football or some similar decision maker at board level.

“Unfortunately, the owner doesn’t want to go down that road and in the end that has cost him a lot of money.

“We hope the owner now will finally get the message that doing the same thing, as he has done over the last few years, results in the same thing, which is having to change managers so often.”

Down the road at Swansea City, the club have a sporting director and a clearly defined playing strategy.

When they moved away from it, they had their fingers – and a lot more – burnt with Michael Duff, but in general it has worked well enough to have provided seven seasons in the Premier League, two Championship play-off appearances, and they currently sit seventh in the table, compared to Cardiff, who are rock bottom.

For the moment, Cardiff are unlikely to move away from their tried method, however untrusted.

That means the likes of early bookmakers’ frontrunners James Rowberry, Mark Hughes, Nathan Jones and Freyr Alexandersson must ask themselves if the risks outweigh the reward.

Cardiff City Owner Vicent Tan: I Had No Choice But To Sack Neil Harris

Do they think the doom loop is breakable?

Rowberry – the 11/4 favourite with DragonBet – already has a job with the FAW as head of coach education and a new role as one of Wales manager Craig Bellamy’s assistants.

Would he really want to give up on those and risk a repeat of his brief and difficult experience in charge of Newport County?

Jones is doing a good job in charge of League One Charlton, following turbulent times at firstly Stoke City, then Southampton.

Alexandersson has declared he will stay in charge of Belgian club KV Kortrijk, which also happens to be owned by Tan.

That leaves Hughes, who offers the less complicated option since he is out of work after being sacked by Bradford City last year.

Hughes has already managed seven clubs, so he knows the drill.

There would be an unveiling, talk of how the Cardiff “project” excited him, perhaps a modest signing or two.

After that, who knows? The only thing you can say with much confidence is that he will eventually depart much sooner than those who make the appointment.

Cardiff City Have No Wins In 11, No Manager, No New Players And Not Much To Convince Angry Fans They Aren’t Going Down

Related News

Abdul Fatawu of Leicester City shoots from range and he scores his teams second goal. Pic: Alamy

"I Don't Want us to be a Nearly Team" Says Alan Sheehan After Swansea Lose to Leicester City

Alan Sheehan claimed he doesn’t want Swansea City to be known as a “nearly side” but the truth is they didn’t have nearly enough to stop Leicester City, as Jake Maddaford reports.

Jake Maddaford | Oct 04, 2025
Wrexham v Birmingham City. Pic. Alamy

Phil Parkinson Insists Wrexham are “Growing” Despite Birmingham City Stalemate

Wrexham boss Phil Parkinson says his side are adapting well to life in the Championship, despite being held to a third successive 1-1 draw – this time at home to Birmingham City.

Gareth James | Oct 04, 2025
Craig Bellamy of Wales. Pic. Alamy

Craig Bellamy Points the Way Ahead for Wales . . . to the World Cup and Beyond

Wales are preparing to face England in a friendly next week before their crunch World Cup qualifier at home to Belgium, as Ian Mitchelmore reports.

Ian Mitchelmore | Oct 03, 2025
Airbus UK Broughton

Immovable Airbus Face Unstoppable Holywell . . . and Something Has to Give

Two unbeaten sides will clash head on in a huge top-of-the-table six-pointer on Friday night in the JD Cymru North.

Dave Jones | Oct 03, 2025
Action from last season's Wrexham v Birmingham City fixture. Pic. Alamy

Phil Parkinson Plays Down Hollywood Hype as Wrexham Face Birmingham City in Championship Clash

Phil Parkinson insists Wrexham’s focus must remain firmly on performance rather than film scripts when they face Birmingham City in Friday night’s so-called “Hollywood derby”.

Seb Kennedy | Oct 03, 2025
Brian Barry-Murphy alongside Bartley Bluebird. Pic. Alamy

Cardiff City are Flapping . . . and Must Find a Way Back up the Pecking Order

Following a rip-roaring start to their League One campaign, Cardiff City have stuttered of late, having won just one of their last four league matches, reports Ian Mitchelmore.

Ian Mitchelmore | Oct 02, 2025