Wolves 2-3 Leeds: Breathless, bruising, brilliant - controversy and drama in pulsating Molineux game - BBC 18/3/22
Leeds came back from two goals down at half-time to win a Premier League game for the first time, losing on each of the previous 47 occasions they were two down at the break
Five players off injured in less than an hour, 22 minutes
added on, a controversial red card, a stunning comeback and a last-minute
winner.
Leeds' Premier League trip to Wolves on Friday had it all.
It was a bruising, breathless and brilliant game, which
seemed all but certain to be won by Wolves when they took a 2-0 lead in the
11th minute of first-half injury time.
But Leeds, who had lost four players to injury by the 55th
minute, including the only recently returned Patrick Bamford, had other ideas.
Raul Jimenez is the first Wolves player to pick up two red
cards in a Premier League season, with the Mexican also sent off against
Manchester City in December.
The key moment came five minutes after half-time when the already booked Raul Jimenez raced forward to try to reach a through ball and was involved in what seemed a 50-50 collision with Leeds keeper Illan Meslier.
Meslier limped off but he was not on his own - when Jimenez
got up a couple of minutes later after receiving treatment, he was shown a
second yellow card by referee Kevin Friend.
"Everyone saw what happened and now they have the
chance to watch on TV," Wolves boss Bruno Lage told BBC Sport.
"It's a body contact - Raul tried to win the ball. Bad
decision [from the referee] - and he continued with the opinion he did a good
decision
"In the 45 minutes I think we were the better team. We
were a much better team than our opponents. I am very proud of my
players."
Wolves captain Conor Coady told Sky Sports: "We should
still stay in the game but it is not a red card. I could go mad and kick off
but for me it's not red. It's a fair challenge - there was nowhere else it
could go. These decisions are killing teams.
"I thought from the first minute he threw out yellows
early on and I thought he lost the game. We don't feel like we were fairly
treated.
"We look at ourselves first and foremost because we can
defend better. But other people have to look at themselves as well.
"It's a massive factor in what has happened."
When Jesse Marsch was appointed Leeds boss on 28 February to
replace the popular Marcelo Bielsa, the Whites had lost four games in a row by
an aggregate scoreline of 17-2 and were only heading one way - towards the
bottom three.
Two more defeats followed and a six-game losing run meant
the American manager faced a daunting challenge.
But the victory over Norwich and 3-2 success at Wolves mean
they now find themselves seven points clear of the bottom three. Not safe yet
perhaps, but certainly with breathing space.
Their second-half display at Molineux - goals from Jack
Harrison, Rodrigo and injury-time match-winner Luke Ayling - prompted delirious
scenes at the end.
"We were down but we came out in the second half and
showed a bit of character - the man getting sent off is a massive game-changer
and the boys dug in," Ayling told Sky Sports. "It's a massive three
points. The boys are buzzing.
"As soon as the red card happened it gave us a right
boost and then we scored pretty soon after. Then we got the second but after
that we went a bit flat and tried to go a bit too long too quickly. But we got
the goal in the end - it was just head over it and smash it as fast as I can.
"I tried to do the Robbie Keane celebration but I
couldn't land the cartwheel, which was a bit disappointing. I'll have to work
on that!"
Marsch's side have now won their past two games thanks to
injury-time winners, meaning the manager can look forward to a two-week
international break with renewed optimism.
"We have an incredible group of young men in this
team," he said. "I have been impressed from day one with the quality
at this club and I am certainly very proud of what we have achieved so far.
"We have spoken from the start about not just surviving
but thriving. To be aggressive in our play, play with intensity and we have
tried to do it.
"We had a chat about it and three of the four halves we
have played since that conversation we have performed really well. There is
still a lot of work to do. We are happy at the moment but we know the job is
not done."
The international break will also mean Leeds' four injured
players - Bamford, Meslier, Mateusz Klich and Diego Llorente - will all have
extra time to recover.
Bamford, who has missed much of the season through injury,
looked disconsolate when he went off but Marsch was upbeat about his prognosis.
"I think Patrick was OK," he told BBC Sport.
"He was just disappointed because he wanted to help the team so much. I
could see after 15-20 minutes he was struggling. We had already talked about
what we would do and that we would make the change."