No 1 Don Murray was sent off in a Welsh cup final (65/66 I think) we were playing the Jacks and were 3-0 at the time. We went on to lose 5-3 in extra time ,I was there and not very happy.
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No 1 Don Murray was sent off in a Welsh cup final (65/66 I think) we were playing the Jacks and were 3-0 at the time. We went on to lose 5-3 in extra time ,I was there and not very happy.
The Murray sending off against Swansea in 65/66 was in a 5th round match but we are talking Welsh Cup Finals for number 1. For a second Paul, I thought you had the answer to no 7 but it wasn't Ron Howells. The consecutive own goals came a few years after Alf Sherwood's time.
That's my fill of City goalkeepers from the 50s Richard - don't know any others. I see from the way the question is worded, that he may well not have been playing for City when he saved the penalty, so I'll guess again at Jon Hallworth.
Graham Coldrick used to score a few own goals.
Well done Loramski - it was indeed Alf Sherwood who went in goal when Ron Howells went off injured in our match at Anfield in April 1954 and saved a Billy Liddell penalty in our 1-0 win. Our win relegated Liverpool. Just the Cup Final sending off and consecutive own goals to get now (not Coldrick by the way).
Dick Scott was sent off in the first leg of the 1964 final at Bangor.
I'll have one more guess at the double own goal scorer and then retire as gracefully as someone who got the right answer to the wrong question can do :hehe: - Bobby Ferguson.
Not Ferguson Paul but someone who left the club just before you started watching them.
Time I think to put a few people out of their misery regarding question 5. Frank Rankmore was the player who scored own goals in consecutive league games. The first came in a 2-2 draw with Aston Villa in the last match of the 1961/62 season and he then repeated his feat in the first match of the 1962/63 season - a 4-4 draw with Newcastle. Those were the only own goals Rankmore scored while with City.
It threw me a bit too (and question 7) but then I realised most of the questions were worded like that. I'm guessing he was going to ask "which Cardiff City player was sent off in a Cup Final?" but thought it would look like he was asking about the current squad so stuck 'former' in there. Now it looks like he's asking 'who left Cardiff City then got sent off in a Cup Final?', as you say. "Who got sent off in a Cup Final playing for Cardiff City?" would have read better, you can probably come up with something better.
Ambiguity in any of the questions was fully intentional.
Blimey !! This quiz was supposed to be a bit of fun. If it does indeed transpire that some other former City player was sent off in a cup final I will respectfully declare question 1 to be null and void !
Alternatively, I could rephrase the question along the lines of - Which former City player who shares his surname with a famous ill-fated Antartic explorer, got sent off in the first leg of a Welsh Cup Final in 1964 ?
Wasn't he the one who got injured and took himself off ?