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Neil Harris Enjoys The Fight, But Insists Cardiff Will Be More Than Scrappers

Neil Harris vowed there is more to come from Cardiff City after Leandro Bacuna’s strike earned a 1-0 victory over Stoke in his first home game in charge.

It means that two matches in after taking over from Neil Warnock, Harris is still unbeaten as manager, following last Saturday’s 2-2 draw at Charlton.

The Bluebirds are now up to 10th in the Championship table but Harris admitted: “It wasn’t a classic, it was a typical scrappy Tuesday night football match.

“We played open and expansive football on the weekend. It was exciting, but it’s not always going to be like that. I thought we were more structured tonight and we had more shape.

“I’m delighted for the players. We’ll be better than that, I promise you that. If we have to roll our sleeves up and battle like that then we can do so.

“We limited Stoke’s opportunities. Sometimes you need that one moment. I’m delighted with the end product of a clean sheet.

“Time on the grass has been very limited since coming into the club. I’m trying to get defensive responsibilities into them but it’s hard work for them.

“It’s about action and application. A desire to play for this great club. With a new manager they have to prove they have the determination to play in this team.

“I’m not going to have easy selection decisions to make if the players continue to show the right attitude.”

The only goal of the game came in the 11th minute after Lee Peltier’s long throw fell at the feet of striker Gary Madine.

Bacuna raced on to his deft flick in behind Stoke defender Bruno Martins Indi and powered a shot past goalkeeper Jack Butland and into the roof of the net.

Michael O’Neill suffered his first defeat as Stoke manager after back-to-back victories over Barnsley and Wigan and he has urged his players to be braver on the ball.

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“We’re disappointed to lose the game given the nature of the goal we gave away,” said O’Neill.

“It was poor, it came from a throw-in. We had a lot of possession but possession without a lot of purpose.

“The biggest disappointment was that we didn’t play with the same purpose in the final third. We turned down the opportunity to cross the ball so often in the game, and the quality of the ball was poor. That’s the most disappointing thing.

“They have to play with more belief. We have to be braver, in terms of our decision making and we have to be less concerned about making mistakes.

“That’s not something we saw in the opening two games. In the opening two games, we’ve scored six goals, created a number of chances, so it was disappointing tonight given the level of possession we had that we didn’t see that translate into better opportunities.”

After Bacuna’s opener Tom Ince went within a yard of levelling with a curling free-kick after being tripped by Lee Tomlin.

But moments later the Bluebirds playmaker was having an impact at the other end of the pitch.

He battled with Joe Allen into the area and sent a low cross along the six-yard box to tee up Madine.

The striker looked certain to net his first Cardiff goal, but Butland was in the right place at the right time to deny him to keep it at 1-0.

Ince curled a free-kick agonisingly wide before going close to an equaliser again after half-time, but Cardiff held on to secure their first win under Harris.

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