Leeds 0 Brentford 0 Jess Marsch’s side left frustrated - Mail 22/1/23
Leeds 0-0 Brentford: Jesse Marsch's side are left frustrated after failing to break down the battling Bees as they edge just one point clear of the bottom three after fiery clash at Elland Road
Leeds United's profligate finishing cost them against a
battling Brentford side
It was a fiery clash between the teams at Elland Road but
neither could find net
The stalemate takes Brentford into eighth spot and above
Liverpool in the table
By DAVID COVERDALE
Jesse Marsch said this week that he now has an ‘arsenal of
weapons’. But just when he needed them to cause mass destruction, they fired
blanks here at Elland Road.
The Leeds boss has been purring about his array of attacking
talent since the club-record signing of French forward Georginio Rutter, with
Rodrigo and Willy Gnonto bang in form and Patrick Bamford and Luis Sinisterra
also back fit.
Yet four of those forwards failed to breach Brentford’s
backline on Sunday, while new boy Rutter was left shivering under a blanket on
the bench. It means Leeds have now gone six Premier League games without a win,
a damaging run which dates back to November 5 and leaves them just a point
above the relegation zone.
As is his way, manager Marsch was keen to talk up the
positives of a point gained rather than two dropped. He insists his side are
close to becoming a ‘good team’ and a run of results is just around the corner.
But fans will only believe that when they see it, especially
given their next four Premier League fixtures includes two games against rivals
Manchester United, as well as visits to Nottingham Forest and Everton.
The frustration right now is that they cannot produce a
complete performance. When their attack fires, as it did in their FA Cup win
over Cardiff in midweek when they scored five times, they still leak goals at
the back.
Yet when their defence holds firm, as it did against
Brentford thanks to the new centre-half pairing of Max Wober and Robin Koch,
Leeds are unable to break the deadlock themselves. This was their fourth clean
sheet of the season but they have had three goalless draws.
The hope is that Rutter can come into the team and light up
the second half of the season. With a hefty price tag of £35.5million, that is
the least Leeds will want from their new boy.
The 20-year-old was expected to make his debut against
Brentford from the bench but Marsch opted to ‘wait one more week to unleash him’.
Instead, he was left hoping for more magic from Gnonto following his
scissor-kick volley last Wednesday.
Yet while the in-form Italian did come closest to finding
the net deep into the second half, Bees goalkeeper David Raya kept out his
effort at his near post.
‘The group is disappointed because they really felt that
they played well and they wanted to be rewarded with the points,’ said Marsch.
‘But I have been focusing on the performances and it’s very
clear that we are moving in the right direction. We were very stable
defensively, there was a strong performance from a lot of individuals, so it
was a big positive.
‘The group is coming together. There is momentum. And I know
it doesn’t feel like that necessarily because we have not had a bunch of wins
in a row, but that is where we are at.
‘When I look all of our men in the eye, they know it’s
coming together, they know we are getting better and they know we are going to
be a good team.’
Brentford are unquestionably already a good team, even if
they did not look it at times at Elland Road, when they did not register a
single shot on target. But this draw extended their unbeaten run in the Premier
League to eight games.
And unlike Leeds, when you are sitting as high as eighth in
the table, you can afford a few off days such as this.
‘It was a really solid away performance,’ said Brentford
boss Thomas Frank. ‘We defended very well. We gave almost nothing away.
‘I’m always striving or trying to be even better. But this
is a very difficult place to play and Leeds gave everything. It was a fantastic
battle where the two teams cancelled each other out.’
This fixture had promised excitement given the last two
clashes between the sides. On the final day of last season, Jack Harrison
scored in the last minute to seal a 2-1 win for Leeds which kept them up.
Then last September, Ivan Toney scored a hat-trick in an
eventful 5-2 victory for Brentford. But there was no such drama on Sunday.
In the first half, Brentford were largely restricted to
efforts from range, with Mathias Jensen seeing one strike from outside the box
deflected over.
And when they did get in behind, they chose the wrong
option, as Rico Henry was found in space but tried to cut back to Toney instead
of shooting and Leeds defender Koch was first to the ball.
It was largely the same for the hosts in the opening period
but they piled the pressure on after the break. Brenden Aaronson curled a shot
at Raya from the edge of the box, before Rodrigo tested the Bees goalkeeper,
who dived down to his left to keep out the Spaniard’s 20-yard strike.
Gnonto then had the clearest chance of them all, as Rodrigo
found him to the right-edge of the goal but Raya did well to keep out his
close-range effort.
Marsch waited until the 69th minute before introducing one
of his other forwards from bench, with Sinisterra the first to get the nod.
Striker Bamford, fresh from his midweek brace against Cardiff, was then brought
on 11 minutes from time.
But those substitutes could not alter the outcome, leaving a
familiar feeling of frustration around Elland Road at full time.