Leeds United, hysteria and Marcelo Bielsa's 'exacting standards' - Graham Smyth's Verdict on huge win over Burnley - YEP 3/1/22
Leeds United and Burnley are, as two clubs not known for hysteria, something of a tonic at present.
By Graham Smyth
With Sean Dyche and Marcelo Bielsa at the helm of their
respective historic northern clubs, controversy and fuss is kept to a bare
minimum.
Amid Covid outbreaks and cancellations, two men who might
not be considered to have too much in common have rolled up their sleeves and cracked
on.
Where others have complained about the hands being dealt to
them, Dyche and Bielsa have remained stoical.
The sensationalising of the sport that only ever seems to
get more shrill and the growing short-termism that demands change for change’s
sake or signings for signings’ sake is not for them.
“Come on, let’s get on with the challenge in front of us,”
said Dyche recently.
“Remember what we are – professional footballers – and
whatever comes our way we take it on and do the best we can with it.”
It was a statement that could almost have come from the lips
of Bielsa, or rather his translator Andres Clavijo.
What has come the way of both Bielsa and Dyche this season
is a closer brush with the relegation battle than either were perhaps expecting
to face.
By the time they greeted one another on the Elland Road
touchline on Sunday, with five points separating their sides, the January
transfer window was open for business, but neither has been eyeing it as a fix.
Neither man is making public demands of their owners. They’ve both acknowledged
the financial limitations that come with their club’s current reality, Leeds as
a recently-promoted outfit and Burnley as a club whose owners can’t blow many,
if any, Premier League rivals out of the water.
Dyche's post-match reaction #lufc https://t.co/7xiTfqIQC5
— Leeds United News (@LeedsUnitedYEP) January 2, 2022
But speaking to even the most reasonable of supporters in
fanbases that are, again, not known for hysteria, there is business that could
and maybe should be done this month. Burnley could do with a No 10 and a
striker, with goals hard to come by for Dyche’s stable of forwards. Leeds have
also found goals a rare commodity but, for some time now, have felt lack more
acutely in the centre of midfield, particularly when Kalvin Phillips has been
out injured.
Whites CEO Angus Kinnear appeared to be keeping expectations
in check with his programme notes, acknowledging fans’ natural tendency to look
for optimism in the window but noting the difficulty in signing players to meet
Bielsa’s ‘exacting standards’.
It was the players already at the club who provided the
optimism, however, by meeting Bielsa’s standards on the pitch and producing a
first half of good football and a second half of commitment. They had all the
intensity he expects and much of the technical acumen that brings his
footballing philosophy to life. His standards might make life challenging for
the club's recruitment department, but they made life hellish for Burnley at
Elland Road.
Playing as they can is all well and good, but doing it after
such a difficult period and doing it in a game of this magnitude was
impressive. There was no little irony in the fact that it was the midfield, led
by Adam Forshaw and Mateusz Klich, who played such a vital part in the win.
They outfought and outplayed Burnley, running both themselves and their
opponents into the ground and making good use of the ball.
Leeds could still do with another midfielder – at least one
– but the beauty of this game and the performance was that for 90 minutes all
the worry and the noise about the transfer window dissipated. Had they played
badly and lost or even drawn, that noise would be all Bielsa, Kinnear, Victor
Orta and the clubs owners would have heard. Instead, they heard an Elland Road
in fine voice.
It helped that Leeds set a good tone early on, principally
through Raphinha who twice got at the visiting defence in the opening couple of
minutes. For the Clarets it was ex Leeds man Charlie Taylor leading the opening
salvo, cleverly winning a free-kick from Klich that forced Illan Meslier off
his line to punch clear and then racing onto an overlap to cross dangerously.
There was sloppy play from each side, on a slippy surface, but
the early aggression was all Leeds, Tyler Roberts winning a tackle with Matt
Lowton only to be booked for the follow through, Forshaw besting Johann
Gudmundsson with a huge challenge. There were interceptions all over the pitch
that put the hosts on the front foot.
They had the first shot of the game, a low Stuart Dallas’
effort that was well held, and the second, Raphinha’s audacious attempt from 10
yards inside the Burnley half that clipped the crossbar.
Leeds, playing the better stuff, went even closer when
Raphinha whipped in a low ball and Junior Firpo’s flick had Hennessey
scrambling. Meslier produced a reaction save to deny Chris Wood but, other than
that, it was one-way traffic and Burnley were a side hanging in there. They
took their time over restarts and when play did get going, haphazard attempts
to retain possession in their own half led to countless turnovers and Leeds
counter attacks.
When it was James Tarkowski’s turn to err, Jack Harrison
took full advantage, squeezing the ball home at the near post, at the second
attempt. Leeds appeared to be rediscovering themselves, Harrison too. He
rounded Jack Cork and fed Roberts whose flick put Firpo in for a shot he
couldn’t keep down.
Burnley did end the half with a chance, though, Wood firing a
Taylor cross over the top, and more was to come in the second half. Maxwell
Cornet replaced Gudmondsson and the Clarets looked instantly more dangerous.
There was an element of good fortune in the awarding of a
free-kick that led to their equaliser – Cornet appearing to be giving as good
as he got from Diego Llorente yet finding favour from referee Paul Tierney.
There was nothing lucky about the goal, the substitute bending a 25-yard effort
around the wall and beyond Meslier’s dive.
Leeds, unable to get Raphinha into the game to the same
degree as in the first half, still held danger on the counter attack, Daniel
James’ cross for fellow replacement Joe Gelhardt claimed in the nick of time by
Hennessey. The teenager, whose introduction for the injured Roberts brought a
visceral roar from Elland Road, brought energy to the game with runs in behind
that kept the Burnley back line on edge.
But it was more of an even contest. Cornet flicked a corner
just over the top at one end and Raphinha met a low James cross but found the
sidenetting instead of the gaping goal.
Both sides had their sleeves rolled up as the half developed
and the three points were very much in the balance until Leeds’ quality finally
told. A short-corner routine saw the ball rolled into the path of Dallas and he
marked his 250th Leeds appearance with a beautiful finish.
Leeds didn’t look back. Klich unlocked Burnley with some
quick feet, Gelhardt curled in a beauty of a cross and James’ header had too
much on it for Hennessey.
As Elland Road erupted Bielsa embraced assistant Pablo
Quiroga tightly but, after the game, he was quick to point out that this level
of performance will be needed again and again. This was a big win, a huge win
in fact, but no one at Leeds is getting hysterical.