Leeds United essential worker status enhanced as cliche bites hard - Graham Smyth’s Stoke Verdict — YEP 26/10/23
It was never going to take very long for someone to use a standout performance by one of Leeds United’s attacking stars to start a January conversation.
By Graham Smyth
No sooner had Crysencio Summerville put Norwich City to the
sword than fingers put to flight a Tweet suggesting Premier League clubs were
giving him the once over with the mid-season transfer window in mind.
On one hand it would of course be no surprise, because as he
has proved at Carrow Road and elsewhere, Summerville has a talent that belongs
outwith the Championship. But given that he and his people were so content to
remain at Leeds this season instead of pushing for a summer move, and given the
length of his contract, and given 49ers Enterprise' ambition to secure
promotion at the first time of asking, a January exit would be as stunning as
it would be self-defeating, at least for the club. The question for any player
in this Whites squad with designs on a top flight career is whether that would
be best served at a club presently eyeing a top flight relegation scrap or one
pushing to rejoin the Premier League next summer to make a real fist of life at
the top table. Money talks, loudly, in this game but Leeds' new owners have
some and if the players were to do the job this season and restore Premier
League status then there would be even more floating around. So a January move
will only really make sense for those not currying favour with Daniel Farke and
not deemed essential to the cause.
Summerville, however the club viewed him at the start of the
summer, is by now situated right near the top of the essential workers list.
And it says much about the work done to put together a proper squad that Farke
felt able to drop his Saturday matchwinner for Wednesday's trip to Stoke City.
Or at least it would have done had players who came in for the in-form
Summerville, Daniel James and Glen Kamara took their chance to shine.
As he plotted his changes to the side Farke had tried to
steer clear of the 'cold whatever night in Stoke' cliche before the game but
even his awareness of it was evidence of the Potters' status as Championship
gate-keepers. This is the kind of team you need to beat. This is the kind of
ground you have to win in. Alex Neil is a good Championship manager, the kind
you have to outwit. Marcelo Bielsa was able to do it in two of the five
occasions when his Leeds met Neil's side. Prior to this game Farke had done so
on two of six occasions. His second promotion season with Norwich included a
November midweek win in Stoke. There's nothing to say that you can't go up if
you don't win at this particular venue but it's a place where slip ups can
happen and momemtum can falter.
That's precisely what happened when Leeds made the trip to
the bet365 Stadium and in many circumstances there would be no shame in that.
What was so disappointing for Farke and his men, however, was that their slip
up was entirely avoidable.
Even if Leeds were sloppy from the outset, struggling to put
together cohesive passages of play and giving the ball away dangerously, they
still should have won a game that hinged on a single second half moment.
Maybe that moment was in character with the general
performance though, because this was so far from vintage, free-flowing
Farkeball.
In the first minute Andre Vidigal was allowed to steal in
and connect with a cross that Joe Rodon left, in the mistaken belief that
Archie Gray had it covered. The save was comfortable for Illan Meslier, as was
the next one that came when Gray's pass was cut out and Stoke countered, but
these were warnings to be heeded.
Meslier was tested again by Vidigal, who should have done
better with his header after getting up in front of Gray, and then again by the
same player who had ghosted past the Leeds right-back. When Ryan Mmaee blasted
wide from a rebound it was a question of how many warnings Leeds would get away
with without sustaining real damage.
Leeds hadn't worked Stoke out at all by the midway point of
the half but did eventually fashion a chance, Georginio Rutter profiting from a
loose ball in the middle to run on and slide it through perfectly for Joel
Piroe whose shot was well saved by Travers. Rutter headed the resultant corner
down and Travers saved again and without playing anywhere near their best Leeds
could suddenly count themselves unfortunate not to have two goals.
The longer the first half went on, however, the more obvious
it became that this was going to be the archetypal night in Stoke because it
really wasn't very good.
Jaidon Anthony failed to get going at all on the left flank
and Willy Gnonto's performance on the right hand side was just about a mirror
image. Full debutant Ilia Gruev barely announced himself at all and just like
at Carrow Road the lack of half-time changes raised eyebrows.
For the first 10 minutes of the second half there was no
discernible change, poor passing and decision making halting any chance of
forward progress for Leeds.
Slowly, but surely, they started to build something however.
Moments in the Stoke half led to half chances and half chances led to pressure,
Rutter at the very heart of it all. He, at least, carried on from where he left
off at Norwich.
With 20 minutes to go Farke turned to Patrick Bamford, James
and Summerville and almost immediately the latter showed his importance, taking
Rutter's pass, cutting back inside and curling just wide of the far post.
Then came the big moment, where the game could and should
have been won and instead was lost. Rutter produced his trademark flash of
skill then slipped the ball superbly into the run of Bamford, whose movement
was too much for Ben Pearson and brought a collision in the area. A penalty was
the obvious outcome but Bamford taking charge of it, with the high-flying
Summerville showing an interest, was less so. Twice last season he was
unsuccessful from the spot, in games that were lost by a goal and drawn 2-2 respectively.
Those misses were as costly as this one, because almost as soon as he the ball
had sailed over the Stoke bar it became obvious that he had all at once dealt
his own side a blow and handed the hosts the impetus.
With the home fans back in the game the home team responded,
winning a dangerous free-kick and then a corner, from which they took the lead.
Wesley's header hit the bar, hit Pascal Struijk and hit the net.
That, bar a Summerville chance that was snuffed out by a
vital defensive block, was that and Leeds fell to a third defeat of the
Championship season. They fell further behind second-placed Ipswich Town, too.
Speaking after the game Farke stood up for his team
selection, his players' resilience in digging out a second half performance
form the rubble of first half struggle, and Bamford. You didn't have to read
between the lines, though, to detect the manager's regret that Bamford took the
penalty, he admitted it would have been better for someone else to have stepped
up. Farke felt the striker wanted to prove his doubters wrong and it's fair to
suspect that Bamford also saw the spot-kick as a chance to kick-start his
confidence and his season. Had he found the net it would have been good for him
and for Leeds United. That he didn't was bad for both and ultimately his taking
it did not prove to be the best thing for the team. Next time, someone else
probably will, added Farke.
The manager's philosophical overview was that no matter how
scrappy the performance, his men should have won, deserved to at least draw and
though they did not, this is the Championship, it's relentless and off days can
happen. No matter how much you agree or disagree with what he did, in terms of
team selection, or what he said about it all afterwards, it remains a fact that
his Leeds could not do it on a cold October night in Stoke. What that says
about them, with so much of the season left to play, remains to be seen.