Blake points finger at Cardiff board after Bulut exit
- Published
Former Cardiff City striker Nathan Blake believes the sacking of manager Erol Bulut has highlighted the failings of the club's hierarchy.
Bulut departed on Sunday, six winless games into the 2024-25 season with one goal and one point at the foot of the Championship table in their worst league start for 94 years.
Blake told 大象传媒 Radio Wales: 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just a problem that鈥檚 come around now, I鈥檝e been saying it for six or seven years, maybe longer. I don鈥檛 look at the hierarchy at Cardiff and think really they know what they鈥檙e doing.
"They鈥檝e been in charge 10, 11 maybe 12 seasons now so it鈥檚 a massive gamble, you鈥檙e gambling with a lot of money, but it seems to be, at the end of the day, one singer, one song, one person makes decisions and those decisions aren鈥檛 always to the benefit of the club.鈥
The search is now on for a fifth new manager in the space of three years, prompting Blake to say: "Whoever takes the job is a brave person."
In December 2020 during a slump under Neil Harris, Blake was "almost sick of his own voice" in urging the club to adopt a philosophy that players, fans and staff could support.
In September 2021 as the end of Mick McCarthy's reign was on the horizon, Blake said: "The decision-making at the top has been pretty woeful."
The sense of a Bluebirds permacrisis remained in early 2023.
Bulut was initially in charge on a one-year deal completed in June 2023. He signed a new two-year contract after protracted negotiations in June this year.
鈥淚t seems to be a bit of a merry-go-round for Cardiff when managers do come in," said Blake.
"There seems to be a lot of toing and froing whether he was going to get a new contract and then a few players signed and then it seemed to just fall off the edge of a cliff.
"Why? I don鈥檛 know, but once you start the season poorly and you can鈥檛 pick up a result and you鈥檙e conceding so many goals, that was, I think, a major problem for them, confidence gets knocked."
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Blake says the hunt for a 12th permanent manager in Tan's 14-year reign is a "minefield".
Former Wales international Blake added: "You鈥檝e got to get to a point at some point where the owners and the chairman and CEO, they sit and look at themselves and ask the question 鈥榓re we doing this right, is this the right way to go about things?鈥.
"But it won鈥檛 happen, there鈥檚 no sort of self-revision of anything or looking at anything they do, it鈥檒l just be the same old, same old. Whoever takes the job is a brave person, that鈥檚 all I鈥檇 say.
"There鈥檒l always be someone because someone always thinks they can turn it around, 鈥業 can do better, I can manage this situation鈥.
"But until you get in the situation that I think the last 12 or 13 managers have found themselves in, you realise it鈥檚 not as straightforward as it should be.
"You鈥檝e not got the backing, you鈥檙e not making decisions, there鈥檚 no sort of philosophy at the club. It runs deep.鈥