Even without Marcelo Bielsa, Leeds can still take inspiration from his spirit - Independent 3/3/22
As Leeds and their players look to pick themselves up against Leicester on Saturday, they can take inspiration from the man who helped the club to believe again
Vithushan Ehantharajah
It has been quite the week for statements from football
clubs. Without doubt, the most trivial in the grand scheme of things was the
one dropped by Leeds United on Sunday. Trivial because it pertained exclusively
to results on the pitch, though not so for those touched by the last
three-and-a-half years at Elland Road.
Even so, it was not insulated from cynicism. The penultimate
paragraph of 17 dedicated to the news that Marcelo Bielsa was relieved of his
position as Leeds manager was the main focus, revealing plans for a permanent
tribute at the ground for the Chilean. Leeds sit 16th, facing the very real
threat of relegation with 12 games to go. To some on the outside, such a
gesture for one who had only been in situ since the summer of 2018 felt a
little over the top.
That it was lost on some is irrelevant, really. If rival
fans got a say in how others celebrate their own, football would be an even
more soulless, joyless place. He returned the club to the top-flight after a
16-year absence and reinvigorated a club desperate to claw back its sense of
self. The kind of things that count but cannot be counted. Whether the club
decides upon a mural or statue to celebrate Bielsa remains to be seen. One
thing is for certain – the way he emboldened those under his care needs to
sustain over the next two-and-a-half months for Leeds to retain their Premier
League status.
Bielsa was more than a manager. He was a tutor and a life
coach, their inspirer and instigator. The one who coddled them off the pitch to
allow them to express the best versions of themselves on it. Both Robin
Williams in Dead Poets Society and Robin Williams in Good Will Hunting.
The social media accounts of Premier League footballers is
rarely a good gauge of dressing room atmosphere given how few actually post
themselves. But the messages following Bielsa’s sacking last Sunday carried a
refreshing sincerity. Liam Cooper said he will be “forever grateful for
everything you and your staff did for me and my family”. “You saw in me what I
didn’t even see in myself,” tweeted Kalvin Phillips. Over on Instagram, Patrick
Bamford paid tribute to “the man who changed everything”.
Evidently, the players are mourning with the fans. And
speaking of Cooper, Phillips and Bamford in particular, their long absences
this season have contributed to Leeds’ missteps in defence, midfield and
attack. Indeed their returns – collectively, maybe in a month’s time – will
undoubtedly lift the team out of its current malaise. Therefore it’s hard not
to wonder if Victor Orta pulled the pin on Bielsa too early.
The trio have benefitted hugely from Bielsa’s influence. But
at the same time, you cannot say for certain that they would not have come good
on their promise under someone else. Bamford, for instance, has long been
regarded as a footballer of great untapped potential. We could probably chuck
Luke Ayling, Stuart Dallas and Ilan Meslier into that group – those with the
baseline talent to flourish in the Premier League.
But the real “magic” of Bielsa was not simply that he raised
the collective ceiling, but that he raised the floor. One of the key tenets of
his work was appreciation the meritocracy of football only went so far. That
not every player who made it into the professional game was given the same care
and attention. Those perceived to be without the raw materials were not trained
or tactically informed in the same way as those who evidently did.
He knew limited players needed time on the ball, so drilled
them to within an inch of their lives with his training ground methods to help
them find that in games. Along with an accompanying structure of, well, little
structure at all, during 90-minutes of endless back-and-forth that encouraged
them to play on “grooved” instinct. By giving them more room and less time to
second-guess they thrived.
Alas, five defeats in the last six – and indeed the evidence
over the 26 Premier League games so far – show the messaging and belief has
been lost. While Jesse Marsch is seen as something of a like-for-like
replacement, it is worth noting the former RB Leipzig coach has spent the week
moving the squad away from man-marking to stop them from being caught out in
transitions. A necessary shift after conceding 14 goals across three games just
last week. Against Leicester City on Saturday, expect to see less hectic and
less fanciful Leeds, all in the name of survival.
Perhaps Marsch’s most important quality in the immediate
term is his empathy. Those familiar with his work say he is on the more
holistic end of the spectrum, which feels especially necessary for a group so
enamoured with their previous leader. Over the next six games into the first
week of April, which includes relegation clashes at home to Norwich City (20th)
and away to Watford (1th), he will only be able to call on those who have so far
been unable to turn the tide.
Leeds are fourth favourite to go down, their two-point
cushion from the drop zone – not much but enough given Burnley (18th) have
Chelsea this weekend and Manchester City two games later. The quality of those
set to return should be enough to keep their heads above water. They should
have enough to remain a Premier League team next season. But to do that the
majority must retain the belief they are Premier League players, even if the
one who made them believe is no longer there.