Tuesday, February 25, 2014

L1 W1-0 (h) MKD Saturday February 22, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Signings, Loans and Injuries


Injuries
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/defensive-duo-fine-after-bump-1372395.aspx

===========================


Preview
http://bbc.in/1hBjTZZ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z--N1i-lbJk

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11030136.FT__City_1_MK_Dons_0/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=368443&action=stats&lang=EN
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/26202095

Highlight/ Goal
http://youtu.be/Nnj-lrh9Qxw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=saVxFMoISOU

Post Game Interview
http://youtu.be/ZCUKkI15vzI


===========================

Final whistle - match report

League One:
Bradford C (0) 1 Hanson 72
MK Dons (0) 0
Att: 13,501

Report by Simon Parker (T&A)

James Hanson made it back-to-back home wins for City this afternoon - with a
helping hand from blundering Dons keeper David Martin.

The targetman claimed his tenth goal of the season after an air-shot from
the Milton Keynes stopper.

Both sides went close to breaking the deadlock in an open first half.

MK Dons, who only brought four subs because of injuries, were first to
threaten when Jon McLaughlin beat away a Ben Reeves drive.

When the keeper was beaten by Izale McLeod, Stephen Darby was in the right
place at the right time to clear off the line.

Hanson and Aaron Mclean were linking well up front for City and the
targetman nearly had his tenth goal of the season two minutes before the
break.

Latching on to Andrew Davies' header, Hanson met it with a volley which
crashed back off the bar.

But the big man got his rewards after 71 minutes thanks to a massive blunder
from Martin. The keeper swung and missed at a backpass, allowing Hanson in
to tap into the empty net from a tight angle.


===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Happy days are here again for Bradford City supporters

6:50am Monday 24th February 2014

By Simon Parker

Bradford City 1 MK Dons 0

Happy anniversary Phil Parkinson. Happy anniversary Bradford City, one and all.

A year on from the Capital One Cup final and Valley Parade is entitled to smile again at the memories.

For Parkinson, today also marks 11 years as a manager. He too can look back and reminisce without any sense of guilt at City’s current scenario.

It’s gone, get over it. That has been the nay-sayers’ motto when anyone offered last season’s heroics as a defence against all out panic during City’s barren stretch.

Well couldn’t the same be said about that three-month winless run now?

It’s time for less of the Private Frazer “we’re doomed” mentality and more of a Pharrell Williams vibe. Happiness is the truth.

While nobody is lighting a cigar just yet, you sense that equilibrium has been restored.

Just imagine where City would have been if these last two results had not dropped in their favour? Don’t underplay the significance of the week’s six points.

Neither winning margin was emphatic – one secured three minutes over the 90, the other with an air kick from the opposing keeper. But both games reinforced the belief that this team have been programmed never to quit.

Whatever the doubters might have thought, the Parkinson ethos remains strong within his team. Don’t pull up, don’t stop running, don’t think for a minute that the result is beyond you.

That was apparent in Carl McHugh’s thumping header that finally broke down Port Vale’s back door. And it was evident again on Saturday with the hassling, harrying Hanson forcing the panic which presented him with the goal to hit double figures.

Of course it came from a howler which Dons goalkeeper David Martin will not want to relive in a hurry. But without Hanson bearing down on him, would he have rushed and ultimately swished at Stephen Gleeson’s well-struck back pass?

MK Dons will analyse it as an embarrassing defensive gaffe; City as an example of chasing every cause. Different views but same result.

Valley Parade has seen many similar; Nahki Wells almost made them his trademark. This time it was Hanson but the thinking and work ethic was the same.

It is something that Parkinson has drilled into the City psyche. Don’t give anything up easily.

Opposite number Karl Robinson had said before the game that Valley Parade will always have a “special place” in his thoughts.

When he was number two to Paul Ince in 2008, it was the stage for the club’s first promotion since hot-footing it out of London for a new identity 11 years ago.

That feeling of nostalgia will have dipped after City completed their first League One double.

Like the meeting at stadium:mk in November, Robinson could offer a strong case for his own team at least sharing the points.

Phrases like “out of sight” and “dominated” were sprinkled throughout their post-match debrief. It sounded reminiscent of similar home inquisitions during that run that we don’t need to mention again.

Nobody is pretending that this was a comfortable City win. Vale, despite the lateness of the goal, had been fully deserved.

This one had to be scrapped for against a team technically far superior to the previous visitors, even with crippling injuries reducing them to only four fit subs.

Their Premier League style set-up with the extra midfielder meant City needed patience to get the ball. The floating Ben Reeves was always a predatory threat and moved Parkinson to “thicken”, in his words, his own middle line with Chris Atkinson’s addition midway through the second half.

He came on for Aaron Mclean, who had just taken a whack, but it was no slight on the striker’s performance.

Unfortunately, until he gets off the mark, it is easy to point the finger at January’s highly-paid acquisition. But there were plenty of good signs about his display.

Most impressive was his anticipation of Hanson’s headers.

That almost telepathic understanding that the big man enjoyed with Wells is not going to come overnight but the evidence was promising.

Mclean’s attitude summed up the general performance. It was never particularly fluid but you could not fault the application.

Not everything went to plan. Passes went astray on a sticky, unpredictable surface; left winger Adam Reach had his least effective outing on the day that his loan extension was confirmed and Kyle Bennett underwhelmed once again.

But the work-rate never slackened. From the back four, who claimed successive clean sheets for the first time this season, to the dominant Hanson, City were prepared to dig in and do whatever it took.

For the first half hour, it was the Dons who really probed and pushed for an opener.

Jon McLaughlin needed a strong right wrist to beat out a drive from Reeves. Then Izale McLeod left Carl McHugh on the floor and angled a shot past the keeper – only for Stephen Darby to clear off the line.

As half-time approached, City suddenly threatened. Andrew Davies nodded across the box and Hanson’s thumping volley crashed back off the bar.

Milton Keynes continued to have the upper hand after the break, without offering a genuine threat on the home goal.

Concerned about the extra room they were enjoying, Parkinson went like-for-like 20 minutes in as Atkinson got his first taste of Valley Parade action.

And within six minutes, he was on the winning side.

Gleeson’s ball back to his keeper was rushed and carried a bit too much pace, Martin was spooked by Hanson’s menacing advances and the striker showed the wherewithal to calmly steer into the empty net from a tight angle.

Hanson could have had another late on but Martin saved from his downward header and the rebound was scrambled into the side-netting.

It did not matter as City negotiated the generous portion of eight added minutes tacked on by referee Gary Sutton and three more points were in the bag. It’s becoming a habit again.
===========================

City's postponed away game against Coventry has been rearranged for Tuesday, April 1 at Northampton's Sixfields - the current home of the Sky Blues.

Rotherham United ticket details - http://t.co/4O9HkSkkj0 http://t.co/4O9HkSkkj0

@BrentfordFC away ticket details: http://t.co/dU0wLxh9Md


===========================

Friday, February 21, 2014

L1 W1-0 (h) Port Vale Tuesday February 18, 2014. K.O. 7:45PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Signings, Loans and Injuries


Injuries

===========================


Preview
http://bbc.in/1bIlsTj

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11019426.FT__City_1_Port_Vale_0/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=386744&action=stats&lang=EN

Highlight/ Goal
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pcxgTpDxgs
http://youtu.be/qvH9-mehjfs


Post Game Interview
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=CoMS4NUEIyo


===========================

Final whistle - match report


Stadium erupts into Valley of cheers as McHugh's stoppage-time header gives Bantams first home win since September

7:30am Wednesday 19th February 2014

By Simon Parker

Bradford City 1 Port Vale 0

It’s been a long, long wait – for City and for goal hero Carl McHugh.

The Bantams had waited 14 games for that victory and nearly five months for one at Valley Parade.

For McHugh, it had been 13 months since he last hit the net. But the young Irishman doesn’t do small goals. His last one was that never-to-be-forgotten header past childhood idol Shay Given against Aston Villa.

Last night’s first of the season wasn’t far behind that in terms of significance.

Eighty seven days on from beating MK Dons 3-2, City have finally added to the wins column. For the first time all season, they won a game after being level at half-time.

And Phil Parkinson, his players, the board, the fans and everyone within the vicinity of Valley Parade can take a deep breath.

The feelings at the final whistle after McHugh’s stoppage-time winner were as much relief as joy.

McHugh wouldn’t have even played if it wasn’t for Matthew Bates being ruled out with a hip problem. That meant a return to the left-back role where he had struggled last time at Sheffield United a month ago.

Nathan Doyle took over from Matty Dolan in central midfield after replacing him at half-time in the Carlisle defeat.

And Kyle Bennett got the nod over Garry Thompson on the right wing, with the brief to take on Vale at every opportunity.

There were no defenders on the City bench, which included Mark Yeates for the first time since Bramall Lane.

While City’s recent home woes were well chronicled, Valley Parade had been a happy hunting ground for Vale, who were unbeaten in their previous five league visits.

Last season’s win had been a smash-and-grab in a game that City dominated and the home side started this one on the front foot. James Hanson almost nipped in ahead of keeper Chris Neal and Bennett and Adam Reach had efforts charged down within the opening two minutes.

Reach then clipped an inviting long ball for Hanson to chase and he fired first time across goal from the corner of the box.

But City survived a huge scare in the tenth minute when McLaughlin shanked his clearance. Suddenly he was marooned out of goal as Chris Lines claimed the ball 35 yards out towards the touchline.

The midfielder took aim at the unguarded net but Rory McArdle saved his keeper’s bacon by heading off the line.

Reach restored home confidence with one of those driving runs that is fast becoming his trademark. He forced the first corner and from it, City were so close to an opener.

McHugh flicked Jones’s low kick across goal, where Hanson was blocked by Neal at the far post. The rebound came out to Reach, who had two stabs at it, the second a curler that the keeper tipped over the bar.

As City looked to build up a head of steam, they were almost caught cold on the break by Ben Williamson. But McArdle made another big defensive play, tracking back 50 yards with him to make the block.

Vale skipper Doug Loft took advantage of a poor back header from Doyle and nipped the bouncing ball away from McHugh to burst into the box but McLaughlin made amends for his earlier lapse to make a strong block.

But Loft blotted his own copybook with a cynical body-check on Reach to follow Anthony Griffith into the book. Once again, the on-loan winger was really looking the part on City’s left flank as the Kop modified the Kyle Reid song in tribute.

Gary Jones was also throwing himself forward and swapped passes with Andrew Davies before firing past the post from 20 yards. As half-time approached, City continued to press and McHugh nodded wide from a Jones free-kick.

It had been a hugely encouraging half from the home side and the crowd appreciated their efforts. But – with shades of last season – the scoreline remained goalless.

Mclean made an immediate nuisance of himself from the resumption, his overhead kick from close range causing panic in the Vale ranks as Loft almost cleared into his own net.

City had restarted in the same vein and Griffith was lucky not to see red when he caught Bennett after the winger had crossed the ball. Davies headed over from the free-kick and Reach drove across goal as the charge continued.

The one-way traffic was briefly interrupted as McLaughlin beat out a snap-shot from Loft but it was a rare excursion up the other end.

Vale were generally content to shut down City at every turn and Mclean seemed a regular victim for some strong-arm treatment. Not that referee Mark Brown seemed over-concerned with their approach.

Garry Thompson replaced Bennett with just under 20 minutes left but all eyes were once again on the other wing as another Reach raid ended with an unanswered shout for hand ball against Adam Yates.

Hanson’s cross to the near post was taken off Reach’s toe by the diving Neal before the Middlesbrough man struck the Vale woodwork, meeting Stephen Darby’s centre with a half-volley against the foot of the post.

Try as they might, it just wouldn’t go in and Vale fired another warning from a sporadic counter-attack through substitute Jordan Hugill.

For all the incessant City pressure, the away team had the bulk of the shots on target – a fact backed up when Jones drove into the Kop.

They huffed and puffed but the elusive breakthrough just would not materialise – until stoppage time.

Then Jones swung over corner number eight and McHugh rose above the pack to steer the ball back in the direction it came from into the top corner.

It felt like a cup winner; it probably meant more in the grand scheme of things.

City can now relax and look forward to the next two home games with renewed vigour.


===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Mc-Phew! Parky admits he is a relieved man as he heaps praise on Bantams match-winner

8:00am Wednesday 19th February 2014

By Simon Parker

Phil Parkinson hailed Carl McHugh’s “extra half yard of desire” as City finally celebrated their first win since November.

The defender’s header in stoppage time sunk Port Vale and ended a 14-game wait for a victory.

The 1-0 win at Valley Parade, their first at home in 11 attempts, removed the pressure that was building on Parkinson and his team as they risked being sucked into the relegation battle.

A delighted Bantams boss said: “You need big moments in games of football and in seasons. That header was a big moment for us and so similar to the one he scored against Aston Villa last year.

“We always talk to the lads about having that extra half a yard in desire, whether it’s sliding in to score a goal or defending at the other end. That’s what wins games and Carl showed it.

“I’m so relieved because it’s been a long time coming. We’ve had so many close calls to getting those three points – the point-blank save against Crewe being the most recent.

“I felt we played well right across the game. We can bemoan our luck but we needed to put in a performance from the first minute until the last.

“We did that to a man and I don’t think anyone could deny us that victory.”

McHugh was only recalled to the side at left back after Matthew Bates was ruled out with hip trouble. A scan on Monday revealed that there is a muscle problem.

Parkinson added: “I’ve said it about Carl McHugh before. He’s probably got the biggest heart of a player I’ve ever worked with and the goal typified what he’s all about.

“He did it for us last year and he’s a massive threat in those situations.

“We’ve asked him to play slightly out of position but he stuck to his job and did well.”

City had battered away at Vale but it looked to be heading for a fifth straight home draw when they could not convert the constant pressure into a breakthrough. Adam Reach hit the post and there were several goal-mouth scrambles.

“Last time we played Port Vale here was a very similar scenario,” said Parkinson. “We had chances and they nicked it but I just felt that it couldn’t happen again.

“There was a determination to get the win and the lads were absolutely buoyant in the dressing room.

“Rightly so because they’ve given everything and some of the football we played on a very difficult pitch was top draw.

“I found it a tortuous day waiting for the game to come. We were waiting around for the kick-off but I felt we came out of the traps really quickly.

“That’s what we’re all about. Bradford City is all about getting the opposition on the back foot and making them defend. That’s got to be for 90 minutes and you could see how tired the Port Vale players were on the pitch. They were really at full stretch to contain our attacking players.”

Joint-chairman Julian Rhodes had called on the home crowd to help lift Parkinson and City at the start of a run of three successive home games.

He said: “The fans were magnificent and I want to thank them. They never stopped singing and the team fed off that.”
===========================

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

L1 D3-3 (H) Crewe Saturday Febuary 8, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Signings, Loans and Injuries

Bradford City agree a deal to sign Middlesbrough midfielder Matthew Dolan on loan until the end of the season.
BBC http://bbc.in/1iCbkun

Injuries

===========================



Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10997398.FT__City_3_Crewe_3/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=368419&action=stats&lang=EN

Goals
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OujbTy8zGYI




===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Bantams golden oldie Jones still refusing to act his age

7:30am Monday 10th February 2014

By Simon Parker

Bradford City 3 Crewe 3

Here’s an idea for a new line in the Valley Parade club shop. Start flogging the Gary Jones elixir of life and City will make a fortune.

Phil Parkinson regrets that Prozone don’t stoop as low as League One with their records of how far players run in each game.

But in the case of the Peter Pan skipper, you don’t need statistics as proof.

The evidence is there for all to see as the 36 years young midfield general continues to drag his team through this stickiest of mid-seasons.

Two second-half missiles, struck with either foot, hauled City back to parity twice. Just as he had done at Bramall Lane three weeks earlier, the oldest player on the pitch gave old Father Time a bloodied nose with an ageless individual effort.

If only you could bottle that eternal youthfulness...

It has become a running joke among fans that Jones gets the man of the match award from the Valley Parade sponsors no matter what.

The good-natured ribbing even extends to the captain’s car-share back to the Wirral with Stephen Darby, the player many feel should be City’s player of the season.

But nobody was disputing Saturday’s annou-ncement, although Jones was still game for a laugh afterwards.

He smiled: “Darbs and I have a bit of banter. I always say ‘this should be yours’ on the way home.

“He’s been amazing this season and deserves all the plaudits he gets. He never has a bad game and hopefully he’ll be here for a long time.”

Darby, like the rest of the back four, had a tough afternoon in foul conditions. But he is one player City will be desperate to nail down on a new contract.

But what about Jones? Age is just a number, as he has always said, and the way he is performing right now the skipper remains one of the team’s biggest figures.

Maybe playing week in, week out was catching up with him a bit before Christmas. But those two blank Saturdays in January seem to have done the trick with a new lease of life since.

It wasn’t just the goals. There was the constant running and harrying, like the track-back in the first half to bail out Andrew Davies by his own penalty area after the defender was done for pace.

“The captain deserves all the accolades,” said an admiring Phil Parkinson. “He was inspirational to play like that at 36 on a heavy pitch.

“But you reap what you sow. He trains like that all the time, he lives his life properly and he’s a great example to our young players.

“It’s called desire and he’s got it in abundance. Ever since he’s been here, he’s typified what we’ve wanted at the club.

“I wish we had the Prozone stats in terms of distance covered.

“We did get them when we played Aston Villa at Villa Park and he covered more ground than the top Premier League athletic midfield players and at high intensity as well.

“His ability to do that is extraordinary for his age and I don’t see any sign of that decreasing because of the way he trains.”

So the country’s draw specialists did it again with their eighth stalemate from the dozen games since that last victory against MK Dons in November.

But that was a distinct improvement on the likelihood of a hugely-damaging home defeat that would have brought the spectre of the bottom four into sharper focus.

As it stands, City remain in 13th, although their advantage on the drop zone has been shaved by a point to six. Carlisle away tomorrow night is one where they cannot afford to slip up.

City’s first-half display had been as grim as the weather. Playing into the foul conditions, they didn’t look like they wanted to be there.

There was no intensity or energy about the home play and it was no surprise that Crewe took advantage on the break.

Carl McHugh had been a warrior at Wolves but would have lost his place if Rory McArdle hadn’t damaged his eye in a clash of heads the day before.

That meant McHugh and Davies were paired together in the middle for the first time. A difficult day for them both got off to the worst possible start when the Irishman lost the flight of Anthony Grant’s lofted pass.

McHugh tried to head back to his keeper but only connected with thin air and Uche Ikpeazu took advantage with a measured lob.

But like a wallflower transformed into the life and soul of the party after a couple of glasses of punch, it was a completely different ball game after the break.

City rediscovered their mojo. James Hanson threw himself about and Aaron Mclean finally got some service.

The midfield got on the ball and the wingers had room to stretch their legs.

But then Crewe struck again on another counter-attack, Ikpeazu converting from a tight angle after Jon McLaughlin parried from Chuks Aneke.

City refused to buckle and the crowd stayed with them. They sensed the momentum had shifted despite the scoreline.

That faith was rewarded within four minutes with Hanson taking advantage of Mclean’s square pass for his ninth goal of the season – and third since his previous strike partner’s departure.

Ninety seconds later and Mclean created a screen to set up Jones for the right-foot version of his long-range one-two.

Valley Parade, so flat and depressed in the first half, became a cauldron of noise.

There should have been more goals – especially for Hanson, who saw two point-blank headers brilliantly kept out by young keeper Ben Garratt and spooned another close-range shot over the bar.

When Matthias Pogba drilled Crewe back in front at 3-2, Parkinson saw a few Bantams heads start to drop.

With all the effort involved in dragging themselves off the floor previously, surely it was too big an ask for City to do it once again?

But Mclean again fed a pass back into the path of his captain and this time the trusty left foot sent an equaliser arrowing into the bottom corner.

Jones ran to the Kop to celebrate alone. It was fitting that he did so.

Others had done their bit but Valley Parade knew the fightback was down to one individual.

===========================

From the 1911 Memorial Club:
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/1911-memorial-dinner-1340456.aspx?#Z5KCR8oop4wqQcYc.99

The dinner takes place on Saturday 26 April, 7.30pm for 8:00pm at the 1911
Club, Valley Parade. There are only sixty places available, so the event is
expected to sell out. Tickets are available from the 1911 Reception.

---

http://bantamsbanter.com/latest-news/we-made-history-the-fans-premiere/

===========================

From the Official BCFC Website:

STEWART CASE DECISION DELAYED AGAIN

The Court of Arbitration for Sport have been in contact with the football
club to confirm that the outcome of the case centering around Mark Stewart's
transfer to Bradford City in July 2011 has been delayed until the end of
this month.

A decision was due tomorrow - Friday 7 February 2014 - but it has now been
put back to Friday 28 February 2014.

===========================

Thursday, February 06, 2014

L1 L0-2(a) Wolves Saturday Febuary 3, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Signings, Loans and Injuries

Luke Oliver has left City after agreeing to cancel his contract early. More below...

Bradford extend the loan of goalkeeper Arron Jameson until the end of the season, while defender Luke Oliver is released.
http://bbc.in/1jUc55q

Injuries

===========================


Preview


Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10981043.FT__Wolves_2_Bradford_City_0/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=368418&action=stats&lang=EN

Highlights
http://youtu.be/bbAqMJJoQoo

Post Game Interview
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJNH9knY1fQ

Tunnel cam (Preston game)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_ckbyP1p6Y

===========================

Final whistle - match report

Nathan Doyle dismissal could step up Bradford City changes
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10981464.Doyle_dismissal_could_step_up_Bradford_City_changes/


Doyle dismissal could step up Bradford City changes

6:20am Monday 3rd February 2014

By Simon Parker

Wolves 2, City 0

Nathan Doyle got his timing completely wrong.

The timing of the tackle that made his early exit inevitable was well off; already on a booking, lunging in late on Kevin McDonald gave referee Scott Duncan no choice but to dust off his red card for the first time this season.

The timing in the match itself was awful; not quite half an hour in and at a stage when City seemed to have snuffed out the expected early old-gold storm.

A team shorn of big characters James Hanson and Andrew Davies lost another significant chunk of its spine over a needless challenge on the halfway line.

And the timing regarding Doyle’s own future was pretty wonky too; his early bath came barely hours after City had tried to rush through a deadline-day move for a younger player in the same position.

The clock ultimately beat their attempts to snatch Matty Dolan after Middlesbrough played hard ball on the sell-on percentage they demanded in any permanent deal.

But the 20-year-old will arrive later this week on an emergency loan through to the end of the season. That’s when his contract is up – and so is Doyle’s.

It is obvious that these young loanees arriving at Valley Parade are almost here on an audition basis. Play well now and there could be the strong prospect of something more permanent come the summer.

The clear-out of the class of 2012-13 has started. With so many contracts up in June, more will inevitably follow Ricky Ravenhill, Alan Connell and Luke Oliver out of the door.

Phil Parkinson has said that talks will soon begin with “one or two” individuals. Doyle will currently do well to be among them.

For a player who can make midfield play look so easy, Doyle has been a frustrating figure this season. His form has spiralled away as City have dropped down the table.

Taking the step up a division in his stride, he bossed it for the first couple of months and did as good a containing job on McDonald at Valley Parade when the sides first met in late October as anyone.

But that input has tailed off over the winter – and Saturday’s red-mist slide into the Scot left his side in the deepest of holes.

It was hard enough for them anyway, given the absence of Hanson and Davies against a side currently marrying ominously powerful form on the pitch with unmatchable financial muscle off it.

Wolves had let three big-hitters go the day before – but that hardly left them in ‘bare bones’ status with a new £1million-plus strike force on display. A £16million parachute payment certainly cushions the blow in these difficult times.

Parkinson had opted for caution with Davies after his supremely confident return to arms against Preston in midweek. He wants his defensive talisman fully fit and firing and felt two games in four days from the off would be too much.

In hindsight, that was probably the right decision as City once again had to play an hour with ten men. And on this occasion, the opposition did have the extra advantage.

No wonder that Doyle’s post-match apology in the dressing room met with a grudging response from his shattered team-mates.

Their efforts should be acknowledged as Wolves looked to make the pitch as big as possible to make the battered Bantams run, run and run some more.

Defensively, they threw bodies in the way; blocking and smothering with anything they could put in the route of the ball.

Nobody summed that up better than Carl McHugh. With no Davies, he had the chance to bury his Bramall Lane demons – and how the young Irishman took it with a bravery and willingness to hurl himself into every challenge.

The man of the match nod for the visitors probably came down to a photo finish. As impressive as McHugh’s recall had been, Stephen Darby was simply Stephen Darby.

The right back, who should get presented with the player of the year award right now, was magnificent once more. But it almost goes without saying.

His fast feet in stopping Leon Clarke’s dinking shot crossing the line would have impressed Michael Flatley. Then there was the thunderbolt drive that smacked against Aaron McCarey’s left post.

That was one of two occasions when City were thwarted by the woodwork. Adam Reach had earlier enhanced his growing reputation by catching the angle of post and bar.

Reach was another plus for the travelling fans getting soaked and frozen along the side of the pitch. Just imagine how good he might be if his team can manage to keep full numbers out there.

The winger’s cracking effort on the break had been the closest either side had come in a first half of attack against defence.

But with the half-time whistle tantalisingly close, City’s resistance was broken up in the final minute of added time.

Bakary Sako squared to McDonald on the edge of the box and he almost stroked the ball past Jon McLaughlin.

It was a dagger to the heart for travelling morale – and the ten men were further frustrated when Darby surged forward, exchanged passes with Garry Thompson and pinged the upright.

Two minutes later the defender did get a decisive touch on a goal – but at the other end. Sako drilled a fierce low cross into the goalmouth, where Darby appeared to get the final contact in the bundle which saw Nouha Dicko claiming his third in as many appearances since signing from Wigan.

That was the contest done and dusted and Wolves were content to play keep-ball. There were further chances, including Darby’s hot-shoe shuffle on the goalline, but Parkinson also decided for discretion over valour to make sure City were not on the end of a hiding.

The Bantams manager said: “The spirit and the effort from the lads left on the pitch was outstanding. That was a tough afternoon for them.

“The sending off was poor. We’ve gone ten v ten on Tuesday and it was a big ask to go ten v 11. Nathan apologised to everybody but he’s an experienced player and that’s a costly decision.”

Attendance: 19,498

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OLIVER LEAVES CITY
By Simon Parker (T&A)

Luke Oliver has left City after agreeing to cancel his contract early.

The decision allows the big defender to become a free agent - and he is
expected to link up with Conference side Forest Green.

The popular Oliver, 29, first joined City on loan from Wycombe in March 2010
under Peter Taylor. After a difficult start, he won over the supporters to
such an extent that he swept the board at the player of the year awards in
2012.

But he suffered a shattering blow the following October, rupturing an
Achilles tendon which ruled him out for the rest of the campaign - missing
both of City's trips to Wembley.

He returned in time for pre-season but has made just four appearances since
the club were promoted. He played 119 games in total, scoring three goals.

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Bradford City urged to keep calm and carry on
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10981396.Bradford_City_urged_to_keep_calm_and_carry_on/

Bantams boss will be handed ample war chest for next season’s campaign, reveals Julian Rhodes...but...
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10985676.Bantams_boss_will_be_handed_ample_war_chest_for_next_season___s_campaign__reveals_Rhodes/

Bradford City feel sense of Kyle Bennett injustice
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10980568.Bradford_City_feel_sense_of_Bennett_injustice/


Alan Connell: ‘I wouldn’t swap my time at Bradford City for anything'
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10979216.Connell_____I_wouldn___t_swap_my_time_at_Bradford_City_for_anything_/

Same again for Bradford City season-ticket prices
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/10980336.Same_again_for_Bradford_City_season_ticket_prices/




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