Why Leeds United’s Robin Koch is back in business after frustrating season - Yorkshire Post 3/1/22
Of all the positive steps Leeds United took on Sunday, Robin Koch’s was the least assuming.
By Stuart Rayner
He did not score his first league goal of the season, as
Jack Harrison did in the 3-1 win over Burnley, or even his second, like Dan
James. There was no assist a la Joe Gelhardt, he did not cover the ground
Junior Firpo did, or mark a major milestone like another first-time scorer,
Stuart Dallas, on his 250th Whites appearance.
Leeds did not keep a clean sheet, nor did Koch make
eye-catching tackles or dramatic clearances. But for a centre-back or holding
midfielder, going unnoticed can be good. The quiet efficiency stereotypical of
Germans like Koch can be a hallmark of good defending.
Koch’s marker – milestone would be stretching it – was first
consecutive matches this season. He should not have faced Arsenal before
Christmas. Coach Marcelo Bielsa is uncomfortable pitching players into
first-team football after lengthy injuries without an Under-23 run-out, which
is why Patrick Bamford did not play a month after facing Brentford.
After a particularly miserable opening game of the season
deputising for Kalvin Phillips, Koch suffered a pelvic injury which eventually
forced him to go to America for surgery, then fell ill. But with 10 senior
players unavailable against Arsenal –including all the senior centre-backs and Charlie
Cresswell – Koch got on with it. Managers do not forget things like that.
“Perhaps he came back prematurely and produced a stable
level,” said Bielsa. “(On Sunday) he was able to maintain it in a complicated
game.”
It was also the first time Koch and the other international
defender Leeds bought in the summer of 2020, Diego Llorente, played together at
centre-back. Koch was in midfield for the previous matches they started
together, against Brighton and Hove Albion and Tottenham Hotspur, but on Sunday
Koch was in the middle of a back three, Llorente to his left.
Bielsa’s complication was Aaron Lennon, somewhere between a
No 10 and a partner for Chris Wood. Leeds like to play three centre-backs
against a front two, two versus one. Rather than confuse matters, they stuck in
their three and worked it out.
With Llorente booked and now suspended, the partnership will
be broken up in the next league game, although it could continue at West Ham
United in the FA Cup on Sunday.
Both have shown what they are capable of with a sustained
run of matches but 18 months on, neither have done it enough to be declared
unqualified successes. Hopefully, that can now change.