Burnley 2-0 Leeds United: No different — Square Ball 20/10/25
Any ideas?
Written by: Rob Conlon
Even the best seasons have days when you want to throw
everything in the bin. Nothing works, Leeds United miss chances they should put
away and the defence concedes sloppy goals that cost us points. In 2024/25,
Daniel Farke’s Leeds won more games and more points than any other campaign in
the club’s history, scoring more goals than they have in a single season for
almost a century. But there was still Portsmouth, and Swansea and, yes,
Burnley.
Everyone knew we should expect more of those days in the
Premier League, yet Leeds’ defeat at Turf Moor stung that bit more because it
felt so self-inflicted and oh so predictable. Once again, we learned nothing
new. Instead, we were only reminded that the concerns that have crept from the
summer into the opening eight games of the campaign are, on this evidence, very
much legitimate.
I could quite happily never hear the phrase ‘difference
maker’ again after a transfer window in which it became embedded in the Leeds
United lexicon. But the fact of the matter is that Leeds didn’t sign enough of
them in the summer, and shorn of the one they did sign, Noah Okafor, alongside
the injured Wilf Gnonto and half-fit Dan James, Farke was reduced to Jack
Harrison and Brenden Aaronson as his wingers at Burnley. In his last 53 Premier
League appearances, Harrison has scored one goal. In the 42 Premier League
appearances across Aaronson’s career, he has scored one goal (when he tackled a
goalkeeper a yard from the line). Since the start of last season, they have
played a combined 91 league appearances and registered two assists, both coming
from Aaronson in the most dominant team in the Championship.
Unsurprisingly, the outcome of their performances at Turf
Moor was no different. Aaronson squandered Leeds’ best chance of the game with
a painfully meek scuff of a one-on-one and amid a dearth of creativity or
invention United resorted to throwing in more crosses than they have attempted
in a game for five years, only to be left chasing their tail by conceding from
the one good delivery Burnley put in all afternoon as Leeds’ defence left
Lesley Ugochukwu to a free header. Get in the bin, indeed.
That, alongside Loum Tchaouna’s spectacular 25-yard hit into
the top corner as Leeds’ defence once again stood and watched, was the
difference. And it meant Burnley could afford to keep kicking the ball out of
play or straight back to Leeds because the visitors were so intent on wasting
anything given to them. Lukas Nmecha and Jayden Bogle also missed chances that
looked easier to score. Harrison swiped at two volleys nobody expected to go
in. Burnley weren’t very good. Leeds could have no complaints.
In the case of the attack, Farke deserves sympathy. Aaronson
and Harrison are starting on the wings for Leeds because no other clubs want
them and the recruitment team failed to sign the second forward the manager was
begging for since they were ghosted by Igor Paixao. For the second game in a
row, when Farke made changes he had to do away with a winger on one side of the
pitch as there were no other options. After leaving Bogle all alone on the
right against Spurs, this time it was Gabi Gudmundsson’s turn on the left.
Leeds are having to hope for some magic from their full-backs because their
wingers produce the attacking output of defenders. Even the chance that
Aaronson passed back to Burnley’s goalkeeper was created by Jaidon Anthony
giving Harrison the ball on the edge of the penalty area with their defence out
of shape.
But Farke can’t absolve himself of responsibility for the
rest of the team. While launching crosses at the head of Dominic Calvert-Lewin
(four goals in his last thirty Premier League appearances) is a useful tactic,
the complete lack of alternative ideas was depressingly indicative of a team
that is all graft and no craft. Leeds were so workmanlike they should have been
wearing hi-vis jackets. It concerned me in the summer that the suits’ extensive
data research heading into the transfer window was distilled into ‘sign big
lads’, but the last time I checked Ao Tanaka still plays for Leeds United, and
with Anton Stach wilting under the intensity of the Premier League, the
midfield could do with the spark of grace and imagination from a player who
enchanted Elland Road last season.
Waiting for things to click in attack has only eroded the
defensive stability of the opening weeks of the season. Saturday’s result made
it five games without a clean sheet, and Burnley’s goals were as slack as any
conceded all season. Jaka Bijol’s opening-day suspension has kept him out of
the team until now even though Leeds spent £18m on his signature for him to
play. I have no idea if Bijol is the saviour, but I do know he has a good
reputation: impressive at Euro 2024, a captain of Udinese, decent form over the
most recent international break in which he helped Slovenia keep back-to-back
clean sheets. Pascal Struijk’s sluggish display against Spurs gave Farke the
excuse he needed to get Bijol in his team and find out whether he can make a
difference or not after all. Instead he waited for Struijk to play even worse
against Burnley and (presumably, I hope) play himself out of the team for West
Ham at the expense of a dismal defeat.
Which in itself is something to hold onto for Friday night.
Even if Leeds are lumbered with Harrison and Aaronson on the wings, there are
still other changes to be made that might just, in theory, improve other parts
of the team. Alternatively, if Leeds lose against West Ham then they will fall
behind their target of a point a game for the first time this season and arses
will start to twitch. What would come next is anyone’s guess. Paraag Marathe’s
struggles to find a manager at Rangers hardly inspires confidence. But if Leeds
are suffering from a lack of imagination in the boardroom and on the pitch,
then it’s over to the guy in the dugout to come up with some good ideas.
