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Cardiff Daily (CD) > Cardiff Sports News > City FC News > Darren Purse on Cardiff City’s academy rise in Cardiff, 2026
City FC News

Darren Purse on Cardiff City’s academy rise in Cardiff, 2026

News Desk
Last updated: May 15, 2026 2:14 pm
News Desk
4 hours ago
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@CardiffDailyUK
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Darren Purse on Cardiff City’s academy rise in Cardiff, 2026
Credit: Google Maps/Cardiff City FC

Key Points

  • Darren Purse, Cardiff City Under‑21s manager, has spoken about the club’s academy‑driven pathway into the first team under head coach Brian Barry‑Murphy.
  • He emphasised that the Under‑21s’ role is player development, not trophy‑hunting, and cited long‑term plans for players such as Dylan Lawlor and Dak Mafico.
  • Several academy graduates – including Tanatswa Nyakuhwa – spent most of the season with the senior squad, leaving the Under‑21s short‑handed and missing out on Premier League Cup and league play‑off action.
  • Purse described the season as “frustrating” at times because he rarely had his strongest Under‑21s group together, but argued the trade‑off is a deeper first‑team pool for the future.
  • He highlighted the day‑to‑day task of adapting when the first team needs 16 players one day and four the next, underscoring the fluidity of first‑team and academy interaction.

Cardiff (Cardiff Daily) May 15, 2026 – Cardiff City’s Under‑21s manager told the outlet that, despite not winning trophies at age‑group level, the youth setup has delivered exactly what it was designed to do: develop players who can step into the senior team.

Contents
  • Key Points
  • How did the academy graduates step up?
  • Why was the season frustrating for the Under‑21s boss?
  • How did the first‑team demands shape academy planning?
  • What does this mean for the club’s future?
  • Background of the development
  • Prediction: How this development could affect supporters and the club

How did the academy graduates step up?

According to Jones, Purse explained that the strategy of giving young players regular first‑team exposure was not just a reaction to this season but part of a three‑year plan laid out at the club’s Llanrumney and Vale of Glamorgan bases. As he told WalesOnline, 

“Even if I win 10 trophies, Under‑21s football is never about winning trophies,” 

adding that the focus was always on development rather than short‑term results. He cited Dylan Lawlor and Dak Mafico as examples of “first‑year scholars” intentionally thrown into competitive environments to test them early.

In those cases, Purse acknowledged that the club sometimes “got overpowered” when fielding younger, less physically mature sides, which affected results in the Under‑21s league and competitions such as the Premier League Cup.

Nevertheless, he argued that the cost on the age‑group level was outweighed by what he saw as the real reward: the integration of academy players into Barry‑Murphy’s match‑day squads.

Why was the season frustrating for the Under‑21s boss?

As Jones outlined, Purse described the campaign as “frustrating” because so many of his best prospects were permanently pulled up to the first team and rarely available for the Under‑21s.

This constant drain of talent meant the Under‑21s often went into important fixtures depleted, missing out on the end‑of‑season Premier League Cup and league play‑off fixtures.

The journalist highlighted Tanatswa Nyakuhwa as one of the standout examples. Purse told WalesOnline: 

“If I look at Tanatswa Nyakuhwa, I was planning for him probably to be with the 21s or maybe for six months and then go out on loan… to be fair to him, he did pre‑season with the first team and ended up staying up there with them for most of the season and didn’t play any Under‑21s football.” 

That pattern repeated with other graduates, leaving Purse’s side short‑handed and limiting the amount of continuity in his Under‑21s group.

How did the first‑team demands shape academy planning?

According to Jones, the Cardiff City coach stressed that the club now operates in a state of constant adjustment, where the number of players required by the first team can swing dramatically from one day to the next. As Purse put it,

“One day the first team will need 16 players, one day the first team will need four players. So we’re always having to adapt and improvise a little bit on a daily basis.”

This day‑to‑day fluidity, he argued, actually reflects a success: the academy is producing enough quality to be tapped into at short notice, rather than existing as a separate “reserve” track.

The journalist noted that Purse’s comments came amid wider praise for Barry‑Murphy’s willingness to trust young players, which has been widely reported across Welsh and national media. What Purse’s remarks add is a behind‑the‑scenes view of how years of planning at Llanrumney and the Vale of Glamorgan built the pipeline that Barry‑Murphy now regularly draws from.

What does this mean for the club’s future?

Jones’ piece positioned Purse as among the key figures who have had the closest, most sustained view of Cardiff City’s youth revolution.

The Under‑21s supremo insisted the club is only “scratching the surface” of what is coming next, suggesting that further rounds of academy talent could yet come through and reshape the first‑team profile over the next few seasons.

By focusing on the long‑term development of players such as Lawlor and Mafico, the club has, in Purse’s view, created a sustainable model that ties success not just to immediate results but to the quality and depth of the academy pathway.

As the journalist reported, the end‑of‑season analysis suggests that any short‑term pain in the Under‑21s – such as missed cups and play‑offs – is being treated at Cardiff as a calculated trade‑off for stronger first‑team resilience in the longer run.

Background of the development

Cardiff City’s heavy reliance on academy graduates this season is rooted in several structural changes that began years before Brian Barry‑Murphy’s arrival.

As Jones noted, the club invested heavily in its Llanrumney and Vale of Glamorgan facilities, reshaping coaching philosophies and recruitment to prioritise long‑term development over short‑term results in youth football.

That shift gained particular visibility when Barry‑Murphy, who has a strong track record of developing young players at previous clubs, took charge of the Bluebirds’ first team.

His decision to integrate teenagers and scholars into training and match‑day squads aligned with Purse’s vision that the Under‑21s exist primarily as a bridge, not as a standalone competition‑focused side.

The broader background also includes Cardiff’s wider recruitment strategy, which has, in recent seasons, placed more emphasis on identifying and retaining local and academy‑linked talent rather than relying solely on external signings.

In that context, Purse’s comments to WalesOnline illustrate how the club’s youth‑team and first‑team plans are now operating in tandem, with the academy effectively feeding into the senior ranks on a rolling basis.

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Prediction: How this development could affect supporters and the club

Given the trajectory described by Matthew Jones and Darren Purse, Cardiff City’s current academy model is likely to affect several groups in distinct ways. For supporters, the most visible impact will be a more dynamic and unpredictable first‑team picture, with younger players rotating in and out depending on form, injuries and fixture congestion.

Locally based fans, in particular, may see a stronger sense of connection to the club as home‑grown players become regulars on the pitch, something that could be reinforced if some of the current academy graduates – such as Nyakuhwa, Lawlor and Mafico – become established first‑team figures. This could also help the club retain and attract younger audiences, who often invest more emotionally in players they watched come through the academy.

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