Marcelo Bielsa’s first sign of Leeds fallibility is a test for fans’ devotion - Guardian 6/11/21
Jonathan Wilson
Granted there is an injury crisis, but it has not been a
great start and the beloved manager needs to steer between extremes
The problem with any discussion of Marcelo Bielsa is the
tendency immediately to speak in grand broadbrush terms; everybody already
knows what they think about him. It’s the curse of our age that positions so
rapidly become entrenched, even when it comes to the ostensibly trivial issue
of how football should be played.
Nobody can ever simply question the way Ole Gunnar Solskjær
structures a midfield or his organisation of the press or ask whether the
inclusion of Cristiano Ronaldo might have made those issues worse, without
immediately being cast as anti-Ole or anti-Manchester United, revelling in
every goal conceded.
It feels as though football exported a particularly
blinkered tribalism to wider culture and has since accepted it back with added
paranoia and conspiracy theory. (The most absurd recent example is the idea
that to be sickened by Saudi human rights abuses is to participate in a
decades-long hate campaign against the city of Newcastle. It’s difficult, isn’t
it? Is it possible to be anti-torture without also being anti-Geordie?)
But, Bielsa. He has divided people everywhere he has been,
which is perhaps inevitable given his idiosyncratic and messianic nature. On
the one hand, the Argentinian is extremely down-to-earth, drinking coffee in
Costa, eating in a local Italian restaurant, dressing in a club tracksuit,
apparently unconcerned by anything outside football – and yet simultaneously
extremely sensitive to the sport’s role in society and the importance clubs
play in the local community.
There is an integrity and a humility to him. But at the same
time, he is stubborn and demanding, idealistic and so sure of his own mind that
he insists on, for instance, the training ground being redesigned to his
specifications.
It’s easy to see why Leeds fans love him. Not only did he
take them back to the Premier League after a 16-year absence, but he has given
them a style and an identity. It’s not so much that he has made football fun, although
he has certainly done that, as that he has given Leeds a team of which they can
be proud.
They are not the first fans to feel that way about him. In
2015, four years after he had left the Chile job, I had to have some passport
photos taken in Santiago. It turned out Bielsa had once used the shop I went to
and so three walls of the studio were covered in tiny pictures of him,
thousands of Bielsas staring at you like being trapped in the poster for Being
John Malkovich. Why? “Because he is Bielsa.”
But that level of devotion makes criticism difficult. The
issue of fatigue dominated his first two seasons in the Championship. Leeds
fans hated the suggestion that burnout had caused them to miss the automatic
slots in his first season and even more the idea that the Covid shutdown
facilitated promotion in his second.
The way Leeds finished last season, with one defeat in their
final 11 games, would suggest they had a point. Yet the question was relevant:
given Bielsa’s previous history, at Newell’s Old Boys and Marseille in
particular, why was burnout not a factor? How has he adapted to avoid it?
Sensitivities around the question mean it has never really been answered.
Set against that are those who see Bielsa as a hipster
affectation, those frustrated by his reluctance or inability to conduct
post-match interviews in the familiar English cliches, those who wonder just
how great a manager can be when in 30 years he has won three Argentinian
championships, Olympic gold and promotion with Leeds. Such is the factionalism
of the modern world, Leeds fans probably aren’t wrong to believe that there are
some who would like him to fail.
Which brings us to this season. Leeds went into the weekend
fourth bottom of the Premier League, having won two of their first 10 games.
They have failed to beat Burnley and Newcastle. This season looks like being a
struggle against relegation. And that has led to claims that Bielsa has been
worked out. The past couple of weeks have even brought wild suggestions that
the 66-year-old should be replaced – ludicrous, perhaps, but serious enough for
the club owner, Andrea Radrizzani, to feel the need to rebuff them after last
Sunday’s win at Norwich.
Part of the problem is another recurring theme of the age,
the need for constant growth or expansion. Having finished ninth last season,
with the highest points total for a promoted side in two decades, where,
realistically, was there for Leeds to go? Their wage bill remains one of the
five lowest in the division (although that may change, bringing its own
pressures, if the transfer of shares from Radrizzani to 49ers Enterprises goes
on).
Leicester, who Leeds face on Sunday, have faced a similar
problem: just because they have finished fifth in the past two seasons doesn’t
mean that anything less than that is somehow failure. An extraordinary
achievement one season shouldn’t make that the new par.
Where Leicester and Leeds have suffered this season is with
injuries. Leeds are still without Patrick Bamford, Luke Ayling and Robin Koch,
but have also been without Kalvin Phillips, Raphinha and Junior Firpo at times
and that has had an effect.
The stereotypical criticism of a Bielsa side is that they
are too attacking, but this season the problem has been at the other end: 10
goals in 10 games; to have conceded 17, eight of them in two games, is
unremarkable.
As players return – and if Joe Gelhardt is as exciting as he
appeared against Wolves – Leeds probably will rally. But it’s not unreasonable
at this stage to raise doubts. After all, Bielsa is an exhausting figure and
this is already the longest he has spent at any one club.
It has not been a great start to the season and he is not
beyond reproach; the tendency to divide everybody into Frauds or Goats is
corrosive to proper discussion.
But whatever happens in the rest of this season, Bielsa has
been brilliant for Leeds and his time at the club a rare joy in a world that
feels increasingly sick.
