Aston Villa’s Calum Chambers delivers hammer blow to flailing Leeds - Guardian 10/3/22
Aaron Bower at Elland Road
Jesse Marsch is learning the hard way how football can turn
in the blink of an eye. At kick-off here, he emerged for his first match in
charge of Leeds at Elland Road to a cacophony of noise and support. There was
no doubting it: Leeds supporters were backing their new man. Just 90 minutes
later, their mood could not have been more different.
Seconds after Calum Chambers had put this result beyond
doubt with a wonderful strike to make it 3-0 and ensure it would be six
successive league defeats for Leeds, some supporters in the main stand here
turned towards the home directors and made their feelings abundantly clear.
Seconds later, chants for Marsch’s predecessor, Marcelo Bielsa, were almost
deafening. These supporters know what many others do: their team is firmly in a
battle to preserve their top-flight status.
The statistics, and indeed the irony surrounding them, make
for uncomfortable reading. The last time Leeds lost six successive league
games? 2003-04, a season which ended with relegation from the Premier League.
This squad are hurtling towards a similar fate and after another chastening
performance, it is not an understatement to suggest Sunday’s game against Norwich
is nothing other than must-win.
“It is basically a final on Sunday and we have to find a way
to get a result in that match,” Marsch said. “We have to continue to stay
strong and be calm and be clear in what we try to achieve. I underestimated the
stress of the moment from the players’ perspective. I’ve tried to create
clarity for the group as to how we want to play but it was clear from the
beginning that we lacked confidence and aggression.”
Most worryingly for Leeds, the atmosphere their players have
thrived under during Bielsa’s time in charge seemed to have the inverse impact
here, with the pressure almost palpable as they slid to another defeat. “I
heard a lot about the Elland Road crowd and it was fantastic, and the players
want to do well so badly that it brings more pressure on to their shoulders,”
Marsch said.
But this result was as much about Aston Villa’s performance
as it was Leeds’s. This is now three successive wins and clean sheets for
Steven Gerrard’s side, with their attacking triumvirate of Danny Ings, Ollie
Watkins and Philippe Coutinho again impressing. Coutinho’s first-half strike
gave the visitors a deserved lead by half-time – his shot deflected past Illan
Meslier – and they had the better of the chances throughout that first half,
meaning it was no surprise when they eventually went ahead.
“I can’t ask for any more from the players about how they
went about their work,” Gerrard said. “We’ve done it with control and we
thoroughly deserved it. Once we settled in both halves, how we dominated
possession is a real plus.” As Gerrard pointed out, Leeds began both halves
brightly, and they were buoyed after the restart thanks in part to Joe
Gelhardt’s introduction and Patrick Bamford’s long-awaited return from injury.
But despite a couple of half-chances, including a clever
ball across goal from Raphinha which narrowly evaded Dan James, Villa rode the
storm and struck a telling blow just after the hour mark. Matty Cash, who had
already provided the assist for Coutinho’s opener, found himself unmarked at
the back post and he waltzed past Junior Firpo before firing beyond Meslier to
double Villa’s lead. It completely stunted any momentum Leeds had built and
from there, the outcome felt inevitable.
The final 25 minutes were somewhat of a procession and when
Chambers’ curling effort sailed past Meslier, the mood inside Elland Road
profoundly turned with the chants for Bielsa and the ire hurled towards the
directors’ box by Leeds supporters, many of whom were heading for the exits
with 17 minutes still remaining. Marsch, who inherited this situation rather than
playing a role in its creation, must have felt as though he was rudderless
aboard a ship which has all the hallmarks of one that is sinking.
The crumb of comfort many Leeds supporters have held on to
for so long is that despite their own form, there are three teams who are
potentially worse than themselves.
This night, above all else, underlines how that is a
dangerous mindset to take as things stand. This is not quite a job on the scale
of Brian Clough succeeding Don Revie in 1974, but the magnitude of the job
Marsch faces now must feel enormous.