Leeds United 3-0 Rotherham United: Leeds Leeds Leeds — Square Ball 12/2/24
SALUTE
Written by: Moxcowhite • Daniel Chapman
Leeds United Football Club has a power that draws people in
and refuses to let them go. There are some clubs people can move on from, and
some they can’t. Remember Jonny Howson, boyhood fan and hero of our League One
promotion, not letting his seniority at Middlesbrough stop him from pulling
Mateusz Klich aside on the pitch after losing to Leeds, and telling him, get
promotion to the Premier League done. That promotion gave Sam Byram another
reason to be frustrated by the way Massimo Cellino offered him a pay cut,
wedged Steve Evans between him and the fans, and sold him. “With hindsight,”
Byram told The Athletic in November, “if I’d known that the club would achieve
promotion – to be able to play in the Premier League with Leeds – I’d like to
say I’d have turned the move down.” Promotion took four years after Byram left.
He’d have gladly stayed through all of that to be part of it, and now he’s back
he’s hoping he still can.
For recent evidence this weekend’s game with Rotherham
United presented Connor Roberts’ debut. Roberts wasn’t raised in Leeds, or as a
Leeds fan, but says one game at Elland Road – for Middlesbrough, when the home
fans were hissing and howling at Garry Monk – was all it took for him to want,
one day, to be a Leeds United player. In his first interviews after arriving on
loan last week he talked about how he “likes a scrap every now and again” and,
coming on as a substitute for the last ten minutes of this long-won game, he
played like someone who knows Leeds fans like a player who likes a scrap and
was determined to make an impression. Did he need to scythe Sebastian Revan
down in front of the north-east corner? No. Did it have fans nodding
appreciatively and remembering with fondness the time Gaetano Berardi
two-footed an Accrington player through the neck on his debut? Yes. That
Accrington player, by the way, was a Leeds fan and former player. Will Hatfield
is quite proud of being kicked by a legend.
Rotherham were not immune to the crazy on Saturday. Sean
Morrison is not a Leeds fan as far as anyone is aware, and if he is, he must be
more disappointed than anyone by a career spent playing for Huddersfield Town,
Cardiff City and now Rotherham – the only bright spots being four goals against
Leeds, from centre-back, and seven wins; he was also sent off at Elland Road
for chopping down Eddie Nketiah in the closing stages of our 3-3 draw with
Cardiff in 2019, although the greater crime might have been the Hulk Hogan
style dyed blond handlebar moustache he’d grown for a Christmas party. But he
was still spotted on Saturday giving a sarcastic Leeds salute to supporters who
were annoyed by the time he was taking over a long throw. That’s cultural heft,
right there: most people don’t really understand what the Leeds salute is,
including the people who tried to make a cartoon of it into our club badge. But
everyone knows what it is, so Morrison had somewhere specific to go when he
wanted to take the piss.
This is how Paul Heckingbottom’s first interviews as Leeds
manager ended up being all about how he’d hated Leeds as a kid: that was just
what people did in South Yorkshire, he said, and beneath the initial outrage
was an understanding that this is how things are with Leeds United. It was
better to fess up to being a Leeds-hating Barnsley bastard rather than
pretending not to care. Billy Sharp took the opposite tack when he moved to
Elland Road, a Sheffield United fan-turned-player risking his super-Blade status
by admitting, “even though Sheffield United fans are supposed to hate Leeds
United, I always had a soft spot for them. I have always wanted to play for
Leeds.” Heckingbottom hated Leeds. Sharp liked Leeds. Both wanted to come to
Leeds. That’s the way it is.
Rotherham manager Leam Richardson didn’t bother hiding his
allegiances in the build-up to this game. “I didn’t live too far from the
stadium and have been there many times as a fan, player and coach,” he said. “I
used to sit in the Kop with my brothers and dad and enjoy it from there. It was
the time of Howard Wilkinson, Vinnie Jones, David Batty, Gary Speed and Gary
McAllister. I’ve seen a few promotions and highs and lows, like many Leeds fans
have.”
What a treat for him, then, not just to work with former
Leeds captain Lee Peltier every single day, but to be the main man in the
dugout for a big game at Elland Road. I can’t pretend to know Richardson’s
usual matchday routines, but I can wonder about what he was thinking when he
came out of the tunnel five minutes before his team, waved to the few Rotherham
fans who had paid the unreciprocated pricing and travelled, then went to sit
alone on the bench for a while. This might be his usual pre-match routine as a
manager, but this was not his usual view of either a Rotherham United game or
of Elland Road. As he looked out at the pitch, could he avoid remembering
Vinnie, Batts, Speed, McAllister? Replaying the two titles he saw those players
winning as a kid? Was he feeling inspired by his Wilko’s eye view of the pitch?
Perhaps he was contemplating the patch of grass in front of him, that Tony
Dorigo made his own in the 1990s. Richardson was a left-back and close to
joining Leeds as a youngster, but his parents advised him there’d be more
chances to play at Blackburn. Maybe he was remembering his debut for Rovers, at
Elland Road in the League Cup, and losing to a late Danny Mills goal. “It was a
dubious goal,” he said last week. “The match came and went in a blur, but it
was a great experience, a proud moment.” Maybe he was thinking about being
assistant manager with Wigan when they came to Elland Road, in April 2019 and
February 2020, and won, putting severe dents in Marcelo Bielsa’s promotion
plans. It must have been weird for a Leeds fan, to be a contributing factor to
Elland Road’s ongoing misery, but at least he had the excuse of working for
Paul Cook. This time, up against Daniel Farke’s promotion ambitions, a win
would be his to own. With this Rotherham side that felt unlikely, but in the
dugout waiting for the teams, waiting to hear Marching on Together and the roar
from the Kop where he used to stand, he had a place to dream.
That was the last time all day that Rotherham had a dream of
winning. Despite Richardson’s Mick Henniganesque barking from the technical
area, Leeds were easily better than the Millers from the beginning, taking only
ten minutes to take the lead. Joe Rodon’s surge started a good move with Glen
Kamara and Junior Firpo, and however the ball went in the net – whether off a
Rotherham defender, or Pat Bamford’s arm – we can strongly suspect the latter
because a) Bamford’s celebrations were a full over-the-top Tardelli ’82 as if
he’d scored the undisputable volley of the century (again) while running away
from the lino so they couldn’t see the guilt in his honest eyes or the waggle
of the arm that he couldn’t resist when he was far enough away; and b) because
Bamfs went and told everyone it hit his arm, apparently including the referee,
much to Richardson’s chagrin.
From there, this was a standard Farke’s Leeds performance,
meaning they should have had ten more goals by half-time but still only had
one. Midway through the first half, when Crysencio Summerville hit a gifted
opportunity over the bar, Farke simply turned and went to sit in his dugout,
trying to hide his anger; he gave up on that tactic as the misses kept coming
in the second half, marching across his technical area with palms raised to the
skies, pleading with the heavens for answers. Leeds did, at least, get a second
soon after half-time, Junior Firpo’s tackle giving possession to Summerville
who sent Rutter through, to beat one player then thread his through ball
between the legs of another. Summerville got to it, went one-on-one with the
goalie and slotted in. He got another goal before the hour was up. Wilf Gnonto
was doing his best to be more direct and fed Summerville in the box; he won a
penalty and, after a fake-off with Bamford and ignoring Gnonto’s pleas, put it
away with a panenka. “I’m too old for this generation,” Farke sighed after the
game. “In terms of penalties I’m a bit more old fashioned,” he said. In terms
of scoring goals in general he’d really like these kids to just, like, do that.
“Sometimes it seems we make it a bit too complicated in front of the goals, and
we just can score in a complicated way,” he said, bemused by a gang of forwards
who can’t score tap-ins but thrive off twenty-five yard volleys, elbows and
panenkas.
Richardson tried some half-hearted complaining about the
first goal but he knew it didn’t make any difference. What I’d like to know is
whether, when he went straight into the Leeds’ dugout to find Liam Cooper at
full-time, he was delivering a Howsonesque ‘get this done’ message, or even,
‘please let me play in your testimonial’. Then he stood by the tunnel waiting
until every Leeds player had completed their post-match lap so he could shake
them each by the hand – last off, Rutter seemed very apologetic about making
him wait. I’m sure Richardson does this against every team as a matter of
course, but I’m also sure that he doesn’t give every player quite the same arm
around the shoulder he gave to Archie Gray, a chance he’d also taken when
handing the ball to him for a throw-in and a chat in the first half. The latest
in the Gray line has that effect on Leeds fans, a seventeen-year-old legend you
can’t help being excited to meet, the embodiment of all that’s great about your
favourite club. Then you go down the tunnel, walk reluctantly past the historic
home dressing room to yours, close the door, and try to think of something to
say to Pelts. Something that isn’t, just, ‘Leeds Leeds Leeds’.