Aston Villa 3 Leeds United 3 - BBC 9/2/22
Jacob Ramsey, Philippe Coutinho and Daniel James staged a three-way tussle for man of the match in a rollercoaster encounter that saw Aston Villa and Leeds share six goals in one of the Premier League games of the season.
In a gripping contest played at breakneck speed, the two
attack-minded sides traded blow after blow, with Leeds landing the first
courtesy of James' low finish into the far corner.
James had two further chances for the buoyant away side,
hitting the bar with one from range, before Villa hit back in style, Coutinho
twice setting up young midfielder Ramsey for a pair of superb finishes past
Illan Meslier.
But the away side and James had the final word before the
break, with the forward defying his small stature to leap and head home a
looping ball from close range.
They also had the first and ultimately final say of the
second half, drawing level when Diego Llorente fired in following a fluffed
Tyrone Mings clearance from a corner.
There was still enough time for a red card too, with Villa's
Ezri Konsa catching Meslier with a forearm after a corner to earn his second
booking and an early exit.
That incident led to a fractious finale in which tackles
flew, frustrations flared and more than one player flirted with joining Konsa
in the dressing room.
The point maintains Leeds' six-point advantage over the
bottom three and keeps Aston Villa 11th on 27 points, four more than the
Whites.
For some reason, this fixture between two of England's
historically big names consistently produces memorable events, talking points,
excitement and drama.
In recent seasons, it has produced an unchallenged goal
given to Villa by Leeds after the Whites scored with a man down injured and a
thrilling 3-2 last-gasp comeback win for Marcelo Bielsa's team, both in the
Championship.
This game was more in keeping with the latter - an absolute
barnstormer that refused to slow or settle for an expected outcome despite
Leeds' early confidence, Villa's subsequent ascendancy and then demotion to 10
men.
James lit the touch paper with his low finish and was superb
in a central attacking role his physique suggests he is unsuited to. But on
this form, he will make it tough for first-choice number nine Patrick Bamford
to return to the side when he is fit.
His second goal was a sign that his small stature need not
restrict him, with him leaping high above bigger Villa players in the box to
head in after Rodrigo's cross had looped his way.
He was a solid Emiliano Martinez save and a few inches and a
crossbar away from claiming the match ball.
Between his two goals, though, Villa's own mercurial pair
had swung the game firmly the home side's way.
Coutinho was a livewire, ghosting into space - most notably
for his low finish from Matty Cash's cross to make it 1-1 - nutmegging
opponents seemingly at will and threading defence-splitting passes.
Two of these found Ramsey, who underlined his growing
reputation as a box-to-box midfielder of true elite potential. There is no
greater praise than to suggest his driving runs and drilled finishes were
reminiscent of the man under whom he is now learning - Villa boss Steven
Gerrard.
You could have been forgiven for thinking Leeds' race was
run, but they refused to lie down and forced themselves level.
Mings was fortunate to bundle a Pascal Struijk header from a
corner wide with a combination of shoulder and cheek, but erred from another
corner soon after, gifting Llorente the leveller with his dire attempted hack
clear.
Villa lost Emiliano Buendia to injury, Coutinho to tiring
legs and then Konsa to a rush of blood and red card.
Leeds had plenty of the ball and opportunities to fashion a
winner, but six goals and a point each was probably a welcome return for both
at the end of a classic encounter.
"Chaos is the right word," said Villa boss Steven
Gerrard. "Even I needed a breather at half time. It was a great advert for
the Premier League but we need to improve defensively and stop giving sloppy
goals away.
"A lot to be pleased about. Our goals were superb. We
conceded at a poor time just before the break but Leeds probably deserved that.
It was certainly not a game for coaches but for fans."
Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa told BBC Match of the Day:
"It was a disputed game. The dominance was alternate with moments for one
team with possibilities and then the other way around as well.
"At the start I don't know exactly when we were
dominating until and were superior but some things we didn't continue doing and
the game became unbalanced.
"It was difficult but we got a stimulus at the end of
the first half which got us closer. In the second half we slowly started to
deserve a draw.
"A draw was the fair result."