Leeds United succumb to Phil Foden and champions Manchester City - Yorkshire Post 30/4/22
Of the myriad ways to lose a game to champions Manchester City, conceding twice from set-pieces is probably the most maddening.
By Nick Westby
Yet that is what Leeds United contrived to manage on
Saturday evening as Jesse Marsch’s side - for all their blood and thunder -
failed to slow City down in their nip and tuck Premier League title race with
Liverpool.
City edged back ahead of their Merseyside rivals with a 4-0
win, while at the bottom, a first defeat in six games for Marsch’s men coupled
with another gutsy win from Burnley over Watford, means Leeds are still
nervously looking over the shoulders at relegation.
If Everton were to win their two games in hand - starting
tomorrow at home to Chelsea - Leeds would find themselves in the bottom three
with four games to play.
Harsh on the evidence of the last month, even on Saturday
when they fought gamely to the very end, but old habits die hard, like that
susceptibility from set-pieces.
City have enough weapons to cause problems on the ground in
Raheem Sterling. Gabriel Jesus, Jack Grealish and Phil Foden, before
demonstrating how they can win games from dead-ball situations.
Foden was the architect with his wand of a left foot, first
with a 12th-minute outswinging free-kick that Rodri glanced home after darting
in front of Kalvin Phillips.
And then with a right-wing corner that Ruben Dias headed
down into the path of Nathan Ake to poke home on 54 minutes.
By the time Foden had created a third goal, playing in Jesus
to take a touch and fire home on 78 minutes, the game was up.
There were other periods of alarm, Pascal Struijk doing
brilliantly to throw himself in from of a goalbound Sterling shot, but
otherwise Leeds were not victims of a relentless wave of dark blue shirts.
If anything they had good chances themselves, not least
Rodrigo as early as the third minute when Joao Cancelo fell and he had the
freedom of Elland Road to run into but chose to pass to the quicker Raphinha
too late.
Raphinha himself cut in menacingly from the right and had a
shot deflected over in the second half.
In the dying embers Dan James went through, rounded Ederson
but saw his effort cleared off the line by Cancelo.
Joe Gelhardt forced a fine save from Ederson as Leeds
continued to push for a consolation to reward the unwavering support from the
terraces.
By then the crowd were on their feet chanting ‘We all love
Leeds’ so vociferously that the Manchester City’s fans celebrations when
Fernandinho drove home a fourth in stoppage time were barely audible.
A real worry - other than the predicament at the foot of the
table - was the nasty looking injury sustained by Stuart Dallas at the end of
the first half when he tore into a challenge on Grealish and had to be
stretchered off.
