Leeds snatch last-gasp draw against Brighton to move out of relegation zone - Independent 15/5/22
Mark Critchley
It was just one goal to earn just one point but it could
make a world of difference to Leeds’ chances of Premier League survival. Pascal
Struijk’s stoppage-time equaliser, fashioned by the magical footwork of young
Joe Gelhardt, salvaged a 1-1 draw against Brighton and Hove Albion to send the
Elland Road crowd home happy, when they had briefly looked on the edge of
mutiny.
Before Struijk’s back-post header, there were chants from
the home crowd for the departed Marcelo Bielsa and demands for the board to go
the same way as him. While a goal down to Danny Welbeck’s neat first-half
finish, Jesse Marsch’s side faced the prospect of being relegated to all
intents and purposes before they next kicked a ball.
Their vastly inferior goal difference meant that a win for
Burnley at Villa Park on Thursday night would all but end their return to the
top flight after only two seasons. Instead, if Burnley lose that game, Leeds’
destiny will be within their own hands. And at full time, there was renewed
hope around Elland Road that this side may just have enough about them to avoid
the drop.
Despite this marking the end of a three-game run against
top-four opponents, this was never going to be straightforward for Leeds.
Brighton not only came into this game on the back of two impressive, successive
wins against Wolves and Manchester United but had the joint-best away record in
the league outside of the top three too. They looked on their way to another
three points until Struijk’s late intervention.
The goal owed everything to Gelhardt, who took the ball on
the right-hand edge of the penalty box, shimmied around Marc Cucurella and then
sat Lewis Dunk down. He still needed to bypass the Brighton captain and so
clipped the ball over his body, then lofted a cross to the far post. At a
narrowing angle, Struijk nodded in to send Elland Road into raptures. It was
the ending Leeds desperately needed after a poor start.
Burnley’s defeat at Tottenham in the lunchtime kick-off had
energised Elland Road and, briefly, the Leeds players too. Marsch’s side could
count themselves unlucky not to be in front within the first two minutes when
Robert Sanchez fumbled a corner, dropping the ball inside the six-yard box. Joe
Gelhardt spun on his heels to shoot at point-blank range but the shot hit his
own team-mate, Liam Cooper, square in the jaw.
Maintaining that intensity - and feeding off the crowd - was
Leeds’ best hope of taking the points they required but it quickly frittered
away, to be replaced by an air of apprehension. Brighton began to regularly
find space in behind, with Solly March proving a particular handful, staying
onside and popping up unmarked inside the penalty area for a one-on-one with
Ilan Meslier. The wing-back could have done much better than dragging a tame
shot well wide.
Leeds were still pushing at the other end but their
attacking play was marked by hesitation and indecision that would inadvertently
lead to Brighton’s breakthrough. Rodrigo had a simple through ball to play Jack
Harrison in but wavered, allowing Yves Bissouma to snatch the ball from his
toes and launch a sweeping counter-attack. Bissouma slipped in Welbeck, who
barged into the box, muscled Diego Llorente out of a challenge and clipped a
neat finish over Meslier.
Brighton were more than good value for their lead and the
ease with which they were finding gaps to play through was frustrating Leeds,
not least Kalvin Phillips, who threw a water bottle down in anger during a
break in play. Raphinha came over to the touchline and gently pressed his hand
into his team-mate’s, as if to remind him that with half an hour gone there was
still plenty of time to turn the game around, but Leeds continued to let
Brighton come forward with impunity.
A last-ditch sliding challenge by Robin Koch inside his own
penalty area denied Leandro Trossard the opportunity to pull the trigger on yet
another one-on-one, fashioned by March’s delightful through ball.
Leeds had none of the same incision and only looked like
creating on set-pieces. Mateusz Klich came the closest to an equaliser before
the break on a corner, firing from the edge of the area, but a superb
one-handed save by Sanchez turned the ball around the post.
That corner was Raphinha’s and, as usual, if any player
looked likely to dig Leeds out of the hole they found themselves in, it was the
in-demand Brazilian. There was more space for him at the start of the second
half and one cross from that wing was flicked just wide by Rodrigo.
A free-kick hit from around 25 yards out then sent Sanchez
sprawling once more, the Brighton goalkeeper acrobatically clawing the ball out
of the top left-hand corner, and Marc Cucurella had to be alert to stop the
25-year-old from sliding in at the far post to convert a excellent low cross by
Rodrigo.
Leeds had improved and were racking up the chances now, if
still failing to take them. Sanchez had a lot to do with that and denied Klich
once more, beating away a shot from a narrow angle then rising to claim the
dropping ball out of the air.
The hard-working Gelhardt momentarily thought he had beaten
him minutes later, only for his drive to fly wide of the post. Still he kept
going, though, and eventually, he produced the moment that could be a huge step
towards survival.