Leeds must heed warning from narrow escape and revitalise Jesse Marsch’s ailing squad - Independent 24/5/22
Leeds narrowly beat the drop and now must strengthen over the summer and back manager Jesse Marsch in the transfer window or risk struggling again next season
Richard Jolly
The first rule of relegation battles is not to invoke
Mahatma Gandhi. The second is not to quote Mother Teresa. Jesse Marsch broke
both and got away with it. The more meaningful element is that, while the Leeds
manager invited mockery by revealing he draws inspiration from iconic figures,
he did the short-term task required. His return of 15 points from 12 games was
more than respectable, especially as the American took over a team who had lost
their previous four games by an aggregate score of 17-2. Marcelo Bielsa’s
legacy was admirable in many respects but he contrived to ruin Leeds’ goal
difference so Marsch’s job entailed getting an extra point to compensate. Three
at Brentford on Sunday sufficed.
Leeds’ season had seemed laced with tragicomic moments.
There was the time they accidentally substituted Luke Ayling, to Marsch’s
visible fury. A club accustomed to Joy Division-inspired taunts of “Leeds are
falling apart again” from opponents showed a self-destructive streak as first
Stuart Dallas, then Ayling, then Dan James contrived to bring his campaign to a
premature conclusion with a reckless, and arguably dangerous, lunge. This could
have ended in acrimony as well as underachievement.
As it is, Marsch heard Leeds fans chorusing Bielsa’s name
before Pascal Struijk rescued a point against Brighton in the penultimate game.
He may be on probation with a fanbase that idolised his predecessor. He would
be advised to use the emotion and honesty of his dressing-room speech at
Brentford, not the corporate jargon of business school that characterised some
of his earlier pronouncements and which jarred with Yorkshire sensibilities.
And yet, whether harnessed by Marsch or a remnant of
Bielsa’s regime, his side had a spirit that saved them. Seven points in his
brief reign stemmed from injury-time goals: winners by Joe Gelhardt against
Norwich, Ayling at Wolves and Jack Harrison on Sunday, plus Struijk’s leveller.
If Marsch was being undiplomatic when he said Bielsa “over-trained” his
players, their injury record suggests he was right. Yet those formidable
fitness levels, when players weren’t breaking down, may have contributed to a
spate of late goals.
If Marsch brought end-of-season entertainment, Leeds’
decline from ninth last season to 18th with a game to go felt a tale of two
strategists whose plans had gone awry: Bielsa and director of football Victor
Orta. The Argentinian had galvanised Leeds in idiosyncratic, endearing fashion,
putting them in the unfamiliar position of being liked and admired by outsiders
and conjuring exponential improvement from his Championship stalwarts, but the
fundamental flaws in his trademark man-marking became glaringly apparent. There
is only so long Leeds’ willing runners could track far more talented players:
most of their thrashings came when the gulf in ability was greatest.
It also meant that any successor would have to change and
Marsch should not be criticised for doing so. No one plays like Bielsa for a
reason; nothing else would be as iconoclastic or as kamikaze. Instead, Marsch
is not the first manager to discover that a 4-2-2-2 formation is difficult to
implement; his subsequent strange attempts to make Raphinha a wing-back were
misguided.
But both managers were hampered, one by preference, the
other by inheritance. Leeds were left short-staffed and short of quality, both
aspects exacerbated by the lengthy absences of Patrick Bamford, who made four
appearances, none longer than 45 minutes, since September, and Kalvin Phillips.
There was no other senior specialist striker; that Rodrigo was signed when he
was Spain’s No 9 but rarely played as such by Leeds highlights the oddness and
failure of their record buy. There was a hole at the heart of the team after
Mateusz Klich’s three years of overachievement ended.
Amid their midfield problems, Leeds can rue missing out on
Conor Gallagher, who would have been ideal, and Lewis O’Brien last summer and
Brendan Aaronson in January. Yet Bielsa, often the antidote to other managers,
could show a lack of interest in making signings; perhaps his martyr complex
meant he preferred to work what he had. The one exception was James and an
obsession with the Wales winger brought a deal for a player Leeds didn’t need
and who, apart from a two-goal salvo against Aston Villa, ran around at high
speed without accomplishing much.
If the blame for James can be laid at Bielsa’s door, Orta’s
record in the transfer market is decidedly flawed. Raphinha was a superb
signing, a player whose probable departure this summer should produce a
sizeable profit and one whose early-season excellence ultimately kept Leeds up.
But apart from him and converting the loans of Harrison and Illan Meslier into
permanent deals, Leeds have too little to show for their outlay in the last two
years. Diego Llorente at least excelled in the last three months of the 2020-21
season but has otherwise been part of a porous defence. Robin Koch has rarely
looked a player worthy of a place in the Germany squad, sometimes not helped by
being a centre-back fielded in midfield. Rodrigo’s goals have been rarities and
his assists far fewer still. Junior Firpo has been a disastrous buy; the
ultra-versatile Dallas has been a better left-back.
It leaves Leeds looking for both quality and quantity, for a
bigger, more durable group of players, for a style of play that involves energy
and pressing principles but which nevertheless contains more mainstream ideas
and is less risky than Bielsa’s. This is a season that should be a one-off, a
warning. Maybe they were lulled into a false sense of security by their
brilliant return to the Premier League. Now a club who were exiled to the lower
leagues for 16 years should be under fewer illusions that, with more mistakes,
they could return there.