Leeds United chaos, drama, emotion and management spiel papered over Jesse Marsch cracks - Leeds Live 7/2/23
Leeds United sacked Jesse Marsch yesterday after 343 days in charge which delivered just three moments of genuine belief this project might be moving in the right direction
Three fingers can probably add up the occasions Leeds United
looked like a competent, progressive project with a future under Jesse Marsch.
That’s three matches from the 37 Marsch took charge of across 343 days.
That sums up why Andrea Radrizzani and the board had to act.
If you’re a Leeds boss at the helm of a listing ship in February, you have to
live in fear of your phone ringing.
Thomas Christiansen and Marcelo Bielsa each took bullets
from the Elland Road hierarchy in February when it became clear pre-season
expectations were in danger of getting away from them. Radrizzani, Victor Orta
and Angus Kinnear evidently have a cut-off point where enough is considered
enough.
Perhaps that point should have been drawn in the sand far
earlier than now. Even as Leeds went into last summer on that wave of
disbelieving euphoria from Brentford, there remained grave questions about
whether we had seen enough progress from Marsch in his opening dozen games.
The American was given the benefit of the doubt because of
when he was appointed, how little time he had to turn the team’s fate around
and how many players he was missing through injury. It had been very hard to
watch for so many of those 12 matches down the run-in, but we told ourselves he
deserved to get his own team in place, with suitable players and a full
pre-season under their belts.
If there was no sign of discernible progress from Bielsa’s
reign by September or October then a tough decision may need to be made. We
reached that point in late October, as predicted.
Consecutive losses to Leicester City and Fulham felt like
the straws which should have broken the camel’s back. We were braced to unleash
our ‘manager sacked’ content plans that night after the Cottagers’ win, but the
call never came.
Winless in eight, bereft of confidence or any sign of things
improving, we were anticipating an Anfield repeat of Bielsa’s last away game as
Leeds boss. Crysencio Summerville’s last-gasp winner and Illan Meslier’s
goalkeeping heroics saved Marsch’s job that night.
The chaotic fightback, more chaos theory later, against
Bournemouth only added gloss as the board came to terms with giving the
American one final roll of the dice through the World Cup break. It was the
natural pause in the campaign many expected Leeds to use as their reset for a
new man to take the reins and instil their philosophy.
Not only was Marsch given the World Cup break and flown out
with the squad to Spain for a week, but they doubled down on their backing.
Orta, so assertive in his belief Marsch was the right man to follow Bielsa,
pushed to give the American everything he could to succeed.
In the summer, former colleagues Brenden Aaronson, Tyler
Adams and Rasmus Kristensen were reunited with Marsch. Then last month, Max
Wober linked up with Marsch again too, before compatriot Weston McKennie and
the biggest investment the club has ever made, in Georginio Rutter.
Even Chris Armas, arguably the closest man to Marsch in
football, was recruited as late into his friend’s tenure as 12 days ago. Orta’s
unlikely to have any regrets about giving Marsch the tools he needed for the
job, but he may well have doubts about the original appointment decision.
Has this ever looked like the right fit? Watford away last
season, Wolverhampton Wanderers on the opening day and then Chelsea in August.
Those are the aforementioned three occasions it felt like Marsch may be onto
something.
Watford, a husk of a Premier League side by the time Leeds
visited in April, offered up the three points which, at the time, felt like the
batch to keep United out of trouble. It had been a third win in four games and
there was a window of optimism for the summer ahead with top-flight status
supposedly secured.
Wolves and Chelsea, who would sack their embattled bosses
not long after their Leeds losses, were the most confident, assured, emphatic
wins of Marsch’s tenure. The latter remains a high water mark for Elland Road’s
recent history, let alone the American’s zenith.
As time went on it became a bigger and bigger stick to beat
Marsch with. It began to look like an oasis in a desert of dire, directionless
football. There were of course more than just three wins under Marsch, but the
others were so chaotic and freakish they could do nothing for his legitimacy as
a top-flight head coach.
Last season at Molineux, Joe Gelhardt day against Norwich
City, Gelhardt day part two against Brighton & Hove Albion, final-day
survival at Brentford and then the Bournemouth comeback in November. None of
those results were won with a methodical, effective tactical system which
pulled the opposition apart.
Villa Park and Arsenal’s Elland Road visit were good
performances, but what sway does that hold when, once again, they would fall to
defeat on each occasion? Much of the patience with Marsch, inside and outside
the dressing room, is derived from his character, moral compass and qualities
as a human being, if not as a football tactician.
He was a pleasure to deal with in press conferences. Marsch
was engaging, made eye contact and showed no ego at any point. Even away from
the professional sphere, he was interested in your background as a person.
In Spain, at dinner with the travelling media, he would ask
about your family and how you came to be reporting on Leeds United. It’s easy
to understand why the dressing room was so angry about a false report which
suggested mutiny in the ranks, when Marsch was evidently so good to them as
people.
When American radio stations asked you what the perception
of Marsch was like inside the Leeds bubble, you could only praise his
personality and talk up how much you wanted him to get it right. It’s just
never been there on a consistent basis.
Yes, Leeds are left with a squad in Marsch’s image, but
there are a lot of very good footballers in that group who can adapt to new
systems. The cold, hard investment has been there across two windows and this
is a squad which should be higher than 17th in the league table.
Marsch was never appointed because of the American link with
49ers Enterprises, so the incoming owners will not feel personally slighted by
this failed experiment. They will, however, have a sharp eye on who comes next
as, most likely, the first head coach of their tenure at the top of the club.
Another centre-back, or perhaps a more natural left-back,
seems to be all this squad realistically needs in the summer. Every other
department looks well catered for, barring unforeseen exits, contract issues or
relegation
Add the right head coach to an ambitious and hungry set of
new owners and, with this squad, the potential remains immense. Just as it was
12 months ago, however, survival is the first priority for the next head coach
picking up the pieces.