Leeds stun woeful Chelsea after Brenden Aaronson punishes Edouard Mendy howler - Independent 21/8/22
Leeds 3-0 Chelsea: Aaronson caught Mendy on the ball before Rodrigo’s flying header sent Elland Road wild, with Jack Harrison adding a third and Kalidou Koulibaly being sent off late on
Richard Jolly
It transpires there are worse sights for Thomas Tuchel on
the touchline than Antonio Conte refusing to look him in the eye during a perfunctory
handshake. Back in the dugout while he appeals against last week’s red card,
the Chelsea manager saw his side overrun and overcome, their first defeat of
the season inflicted by Leeds’ frenetic football. Tuchel prizes control and
Leeds’ inspired brand of chaos brought them victory over historic rivals for
the first time since 2002 and their biggest since 1995.
The manner of defeat was as chastening as the score itself.
Chelsea conceded from a set-piece for a second successive match. Edouard Mendy
gifted Leeds their opener. Perhaps sieving three goals will strengthen Tuchel’s
case that Chelsea need to bid still more for Wesley Fofana to bolster his
defence. Instead, the centre-back he has bought, Kalidou Koulibaly, was sent
off as he could not cope with Leeds’ speed; much like Tuchel, suspension
beckons for him. As it is, his transfer outlay is approaching the £200 million
mark and it did Chelsea precious little good. Leeds assembled some high numbers
of their own in the running statistics of Jesse Marsch’s workaholics.
This was a wonderful afternoon for the American. If staying
up in dramatic fashion last season may remain the finest day of his reign, this
was the best result and performance. Leeds were beaten 3-0 by Chelsea three
months ago and there was a role reversal in the scoreline.
Leeds had the wrong sort of 100 percent record against the
top six last season, losing all 12 games, conceding 47 goals. A transformation
was also the endorsement of an ethos, of high-intensity running. Hassling and
harrying brought the first goal. Marcelo Bielsa famously ignored set-pieces but
Marsch has devoted more time to them and a free kick yielded their second. The
supporters who idolised Bielsa ended up chorusing his replacement’s name.
Victory came courtesy of two goals in five first-half
minutes and his flagship signing. Brenden Aaronson was an irrepressible
irritant. He was both distance runner and sprinter. He had completed 5.9km by
half-time and it felt more. Aaronson claimed Leeds’ winner against Southampton.
There was no doubt he scored their opener here and few goals will come from
closer range.
If it was the product of Marsch’s beloved pressing, it was
also embarrassing for Mendy. Even Kepa Arrizabalaga, with his litany of
blunders, rarely conceded in such a calamitous fashion but when Thiago Silva
passed the ball back to his goalkeeper, Mendy dallied, Aaronson pounced,
robbing him and rolling the ball over the line. Marsch set off down the
touchline in celebration which, as Tuchel had done likewise seven days earlier,
was scarcely something he could complain about.
Chelsea struggled to find legitimate ways to stop Aaronson.
Koulibaly resorted to dragging him back, collecting his first caution. Jorginho
hacked him down. The summer signing had eager accomplices in tormenting
Chelsea. Jack Harrison and Rodrigo each scored a goal and made one.
When Raheem Sterling fouled Marc Roca, Harrison whipped in a
free kick and Rodrigo rose highest to glance in a header. Reinvented as a
goalscorer by Marsch and given the captain’s armband, he had twice come close
earlier. If Patrick Bamford’s absences cost Leeds last season, they did not
now. Signed when he was Spain’s centre-forward, Rodrigo looked that player
again. He was terrific.
Scorer and supplier swapped roles for the third. Harrison
had already become just the third Englishman to assist in each of the first
three Premier League games of a season when Dan James crossed, Rodrigo stabbed
the ball into his path and the winger applied the finishing touch. Rodrigo
could have made it four as Leeds were increasingly rampant. Chelsea, meanwhile,
felt shambolic in a game they had actually started well.
Raheem Sterling almost scored in 36 seconds, whipping a shot
just wide, and found the net after a quarter of an hour, only to be ruled
offside. But Mason Mount could only muster a tame shot with his best chance,
which Illan Meslier clawed wide in slow motion. And, not for the first time,
Kai Havertz was a disappointment. Behind him, Chelsea felt underpowered in the
midfield and were attacked on the flanks.
Tuchel borrowed from Claudio Ranieri’s past and became
Chelsea’s tinkerman. He changed shape at half-time, going to 4-2-3-1. Conor
Gallagher, liberated by moving to the right, span and shot just wide. Reece
James, moved from centre-back to full-back, drilled an effort that Meslier did
well to tip past the post. But Harrison scored and Tuchel’s dissatisfaction was
apparent as he changed again, to 4-1-3-2 and then back to a back three.