‘I knew I was getting into the fire’: Jesse Marsch battles to keep Leeds up - The Guardian 14/5/22
Manager stands by his footballing philosophy with his side having two games to stay in the Premier League
Will Unwin
“The person in this position, when things don’t go well,
always gets blamed,” says the Leeds manager, Jesse Marsch. The club have two games
to save their Premier League status, not because Marsch has failed since taking
over in February but because of a collection of errors that has left them in a
perilous position.
Marsch finds his side in 18th place heading into Brighton’s
visit on Sunday for a game Leeds will see as their best chance to secure
maximum points. Unfortunately for Leeds, Brighton have lost once – a 3-0 defeat
away to Manchester City – in their past seven games. They have beaten Arsenal
and Tottenham away in that period, so will not fear a trip to Yorkshire.
If you speak to those who know Marsch best, they talk of a
highly intelligent man, someone who can change the narrative and outsmart
opposition managers. The focus since his arrival 10 games ago has been on his
words rather than actions.
Marsch is constantly analysing his own performance and that
of his team to find improvements. Leeds have been reduced to 10 men in the
first half of their past two games, leaving Marsch to wonder if he is
overstimulating his players.
“The key for me is to understand what I’ve learned in this
business, what this particular team in this situation and these particular
players need and how do I best provide that for them so that they can be all
that I believe they can be,” he says. “That’s what the project is from a
mentality perspective. Then there is applying the football tactics and style of
play so that they understand what their roles are on the pitch.”
Marsch has been hamstrung by those available to him. Leeds
failed to make a signing in January. When battling relegation, improving a
struggling squad seems a prerequisite, especially since Marcelo Bielsa was
sacked less than a month after the window closed.
“All I knew when I stepped into this situation was that I
was getting into the fire,” Marsch says. “All I tried to do was learn as
quickly as possible how to help the group in that moment to transmit a positive
way to give us the best chance in these last two matches to have a chance.”
Bielsa was given the chance to sign players in January but was not interested in those put forward, instead wanting to stick with the small squad he knew. Bielsa is a man of conviction and always thought there was enough quality to get them out of danger. Bielsa was not wrong; there is a Premier League standard team at Leeds but not a squad that can cope with the rigours of it, something that can also be said of relegation rivals Burnley, who are level on points with a game in hand but with a much superior goal difference.
Patrick Bamford has made nine Premier League appearances all
season, Stuart Dallas is out with a broken leg, Liam Cooper and Kalvin Phillips
have had lengthy spells on the sidelines. The lack of depth has ensured the
absence of the team’s spine has caused major problems. Missing key players from
back to front can explain Leeds’s defensive problem that can be summed up in
the stats: 77 goals conceded in 36 games.
The players have looked tired in recent times; it is hard to
reinvigorate a squad that spent three and a half years working under Bielsa’s
intense methods. The injury list could just be a coincidence but when pushed to
your physical maximum for so long, it can have a toll on the body.
The lack of options available to Marsch were laid bare
against Chelsea on Wednesday. Lewis Bate made his full Premier League debut in
midfield, while their biggest attacking threat, Raphinha, played as a right
wing-back. Of the six unused substitutes, including 16-year-old Archie Gray,
only Jamie Shackleton and Charlie Cresswell had made a league start.
They will be without Luke Ayling and Dan James on Sunday
after their red cards. Marsch hopes the home crowd will inspire his team but
believes the reckless challenges can partially be blamed on the players’ desire
to show much they care. “It’s because they want to do whatever they can for the
fans,” he says.
Marsch has been frustrated by the coverage of his use of
quotes from Mother Teresa and Mahatma Gandhi among others to inspire his
players. He sees it as part of a bigger picture but Leeds’s long-term view can
go no further than the final-day away game at Brentford. The club’s ownership
group spoke to the players on Thursday in their own attempt to motivate them.
It looks to be a straight shootout between Leeds and Burnley
for the final relegation spot. If Marsch feels the need to provide more
inspirational quotes to his players, then he should look no further than
Leeds’s greatest manager, Don Revie, to remind them: “You get nowt for being
second”.