Leeds United 0-0 Sheffield Wednesday: Working on it - Square Ball 3/9/23
LEARNING ON THE JOB
Written by: Moxcowhite • Daniel Chapman
This was one sunny September afternoon for throwing footie
truisms around, about how players have got to want to wear the shirt and give
it all on a Saturday, how they’ve got to earn the right to play, that you can’t
walk the ball into the net and, on a day when we hoped what the transfer window
had left of Leeds United’s firepower would be enough to hit a cricket score
past Sheffield Wednesday, that a strong team is built on defence. The first
clean sheet since 25th February against Southampton, who lost 5-0 to Sunderland
this weekend. More than six months. 21 games of goals against, including one
against League Two’s Salford City.
A clean sheet and a point against the Wednesday, who have
floated up from League One like a Tesco bag in a canal lock, was not all United
and their fans wanted from Elland Road. Going by the songs aimed at Luis
Sinisterra at the start of the game, a player now beaming with pleasure on
social media after getting a loan transfer to Bournemouth, retribution was also
required, if not from him then from whoever inserted the legalese in his
contract that meant the move had to happen. At the very least we wanted a
return on the good night’s sleep we lost as the fuss of negotiations went on
til midnight, and some sign that the exciting clinicism of Sinisterra’s goal
against Ipswich was not going to be missed.
We may have to pause that thought until we’ve had a look at
Sinisterra’s replacement for the season, Jaidon Anthony. He scored eight and
got six assists when Bournemouth left this division in 2021/22, so he should
know what he’s doing. But then, Joel Piroe scored nineteen goals in this
division last season, and 22 the season before that, so he should know what
he’s doing, too.
As the match with Wednesday took shape, it became clear that
what Leeds United’s forward four of the day don’t know is a lot. Piroe is the
oldest and most experienced, aged 24 years and one month. This was Crysencio
Summerville’s second start in the Champo, Wilf Gnonto and Georginio Rutter’s
third each. They have experience beyond the EFL – Gnonto, for one, is a full
Italy international. But even he has only started 33 club games of any kind.
Rutter has 29 starts, Summerville has 46, the equivalent of a full season of
Championship football, if only fifteen of them hadn’t been in the Dutch second
division before he was eighteen. It’s not just the lack of games in total: it’s
his average of four starts a season for the last three years. Summerville, and
Gnonto and Rutter, haven’t done much in this sport and what they’ve done has
been sporadic.
I could conclude the report on this game right here by just
saying, ‘and boy couldn’t you tell’, without even mentioning that an actual
schoolboy, Archie Gray, was backing them up in midfield or that the late
substitutes, Djed Spence and Glen Kamara, only signed for Leeds this week. The
result of it all was frustrating, as Leeds camped in Wednesday’s half, reduced
Barry ‘cultured’ Bannan to hoofing the ball away to nobody, and yet were kept
some distance away from the actual goal and scoring in it.
But as a spectacle it was absorbing. After the painful end
to Marcelo Bielsa’s time in charge, when it hurt to watch us conceding four to
Spurs, to the hapless chaos when Jesse Marsch was here and one of his better
games was in charge of us conceding four to Spurs, to the inevitable punchline
of Sam Allardyce naming a team of defenders that couldn’t stop us conceding
four to Spurs, I’ve seen a lot of bollocks over the past two years being sold
to me as football. As a relief from that it was refreshing to watch a young
Leeds team figuring out together, in real time, how to play and how to win.
Players applying what they know about playing football, working out how to make
it cohere as a team. It was exciting to feel like each attack might be the one
that comes off, that the next one-two will hit or the next through ball will
make an unmissable chance, that only an inch here or a different move there
could mean a goal, that a goal is getting closer and closer until, in the end,
the referee’s whistle meant it was out of reach for this week.
After Archie Gray seized on Wednesday’s loose goalkick and
Summerville put him through, Piroe should have put Leeds ahead in the tenth
minute, but shot low across the goalie and wide. Rutter had a good effort in
the first half, stopped by a good save after Summerville put him through into
the six yard box, and a terrible effort in the second half, when Wednesday’s
offside trap froze and, after doing well to control a chip, he did badly by
knocking the ball into the keeper’s hands. He did return the favour to
Summerville in the second half, a pass onto his toe in the penalty area, a
flick meeting a low save. Gnonto and Jamie Shackleton didn’t give Wednesday’s
right side any peace, running at them, playing one-twos, dribbling around them,
dipping shots over the bar and into bodies and tackling any player who tried to
run away. Summerville went wandering, trying to be influential; Rutter stayed
up top, trying – and succeeding more than he has – to be strong. Piroe, playing
deep behind him and being moved aside by Summerville, wasn’t involved enough.
Leeds needed, and will need, one of two things. One would be
an early goal to loosen things up, break up the opponent’s defence, lift the
confidence. Without it, as sixty minutes became seventy and then eighty, the
certainty that United would score gave way to desperation in case they
couldn’t, while Wednesday’s spirits were raised, along with their average
height thanks to their substitutes flipping them into Big Lad Mode. The other
would be an experienced creative attacking midfielder, who wouldn’t necessarily
have to be called Pablo Hernandez but let’s just say that would be convenient
if a little freaky. In Daniel Farke’s world the name is Emiliano Buendia, and
as he directed United’s business in the transfer window, picking up defensive
midfielders and moving in on Djed Spence after Max Aarons spurned him, I wonder
how much it hurt telling Nadiem Amiri to make his own way home while still
thinking of all the key passes and assists he could make at this level. The
last twenty minutes was when Leeds’ young team needed a knowledgeable creative
influence to take charge of the game and come up with a matchwinning idea. They
got Glen Kamara, a defensive midfielder they’d only just met.
In the end all this is, in keeping with the time of year, as
much about the transfer window as it is about the game of football. Whatever
Farke might feel in private, he has walked a careful public line between his
obvious desire for more better players and accepting his lot in life and
getting on with the job. If good coaching is education we must hope that Farke
is a good coach, because the players he has here have a lot to learn. Going by
his time at Norwich, Farke is that good coach, with a lot he can teach about
playing in this division.
The Championship is, in its way, a great league to learn in,
with 46 games and a big mix of quality in its teams and players making room for
seasons to ebb and flow or to build and sustain or to weave and lurch and to
still end up anywhere up or down the table. Elland Road, though, despite
hosting a club that prides itself on bringing youngsters through and moulding
them into exciting teams, does not always feel patient when the fans can’t see
progress. The transfer window has had Leeds stuck so far, still fighting
shadows of last season’s battles but through the dire medium of Fabrizio
Romano’s Twitter account and the legal department’s clausework. With the
transfer deadline followed by an international break, and an inconvenient game
of football now played, Farke and his squad can go away for a while, now, and
maybe we’ll start to see what this season is going to look like when the
Millwall game comes around. That will be matchweek six. High time for this
season to start.