Swansea City 0-4 Leeds United: Being here — Square Ball 14/2/24
LET'S GO
Written by: Moxcowhite • Daniel Chapman
Back when the EFL fixtures were announced in June this was
immediately the week nobody wanted. First of all, nobody wanted these fixtures
at all, 46 of them, with Sky Bet logos all over, a hidden optical illusion, if
you squinted, revealing Keith Andrews’ tiresome frown. But mid-February stood
out, the week of Saint Valentine, a distinctly unlovely pairing of Swansea
Tuesday, Plymouth Saturday, while Rotherham Saturday looked after us aghast
like a scorned lover. What a league. What a week. What a lot not to look
forward to.
What a night. Down the road in Bristol, where Daniel Farke
forbids us to look, Southampton were regretting the calamitous end of their
unbeaten run and packing their things to go back down south, and back down to
3rd place. The problem with conceding three at Ashton Gate is that Bristol City
announce each goal with a gif so tightly packed with cringe it is inevitably
seen far across social media. The problem with Southampton’s run of 22 unbeaten
games, starting with a 3-1 win over Leeds, is that at the end of it, they are
not above Leeds and not in the automatic promotion places. They, maybe, are
wondering if they’ve made the most of it. Perhaps, after conceding six in two
games to Huddersfield and Bristol City, they’re wondering if one defeat will be
the worst of it. On Friday they’re going to West Brom.
We’re supposed to be concentrating on Leeds. Sorry Daniel.
Seven consecutive wins. One goal conceded. Seven scored in the last two games.
We thought Pascal Struijk was the rock but the defence has hardened without
him. We thought Ethan Ampadu was the anchor but midfield is blooming with Ilia
Gruev. This season was Dan James’ resurrection but since he has fallen Wilf
Gnonto has risen. Perhaps it was Pat Bamford, returning to fitness, making
everything work. He dropped out injured in the warm up, and Joel Piroe scored
one of United’s four. A difficult away trip in a difficult and dreaded week,
made more difficult since June by accumulating more difficult away fixtures
around it, looked easy. That it took Leeds into the top two made it worth
celebrating.
The real victory was that this win felt so ordinary and
looked so replicable. I know I’m placing a curse on the whole thing, but this
winning run becomes eight in a row at Plymouth on Saturday. Before the game at
Swansea, Farke was talking about what it takes to instil a winning mentality
into a relegated club, and his basic message was first that it isn’t easy,
second that it takes time, and third that it’s all based on good habits – you
have to start winning before you can work out how to keep winning. Once winning
commences, improvements can follow. You have to see the problem before you can
solve the problem and Farke has, recently, been bemoaning United’s lack of
attacking “efficiency”, from behind a healthy position formed by winning
anyway. Then Bamford scored after ten minutes on Saturday and it was 3-0 by the
hour; and at Swansea Crysencio Summerville and Piroe had both scored after ten
minutes, and it was 3-0 by half-time. At this rate, expect three goals in the
first ten minutes at Home Park and 5-0 by the half-hour.
Okay, it probably won’t be that easy, or as easy as it was
to beat Swansea – Plymouth have made our results against them difficult, and
have the extra motivation of our recent history. But how easy Swansea made this
game is open to interpretation – would they have been more stubborn had Leeds
not kept things going after a corner until Summerville, cutting in, got his
shot deflected in? It’s hard to say. The Swans had barely looked present in the
eight minutes to that point, and were nowhere at all two minutes later when
Piroe dropped deep, played a long one-two with Gnonto, swapped feet in the
penalty area and booted the ball in off the goalie. I don’t know if Swansea had
given up or had nothing to give. Farke, though, must have been delighted by
those two goals – low blasts deflected in, the kind of good old fashioned
finishing he yearns for amid United’s yen for complicated panenkas.
Gnonto restored some of the old order when Glen Kamara,
perhaps having heard Swansea boss Luke Williams praising his coach (and
ex-Leeds defender) Alan Sheehan’s set-piece architecture at the weekend – “I
loved that Alan Sheehan gave us this work of art of a set-piece … To watch Alan
go to work with the set-pieces and watch the players concentrate, it’s a
privilege to witness it” – intercepted one of Sheezdogg’s rehearsed corners and
started a counter attack that Gnonto delivered to the goalkeeper when he had to
score. That would have been 3-0 on fifteen minutes. Instead Gnonto made it
three on 35, doing the right amount with the finish – cutting across defenders,
zipping the ball inside the near post – after a simple but not subtle set-up.
You could and maybe should praise Gnonto’s movement here, before he was found
by his visionary right-back Archie Gray, but honestly, he just waited until the
Swansea players surrounding him all looked the other way then ran off, ‘see
ya!’, towards the box.
Ironically, given all the fears about travel wearing Leeds
down, Williams seemed to think a weekend in the air of Hull had hindered his
players. “The output in that game was the highest of the whole season,” he
said. “It’s not something we’re accustomed to at the moment.” There’s the habit
factor again. 1-0 at Hull was Swansea’s first win after four defeats. Against
Leeds, he said, Swansea were “too timid”. “We caused ourselves huge problems.
Then when we got in close contact, we didn’t win enough tackles … If you look
at the way they applied pressure to our back line, that’s the difference.”
He may have had United’s fourth, specifically, in mind. Out
wide, Paterson and Placheta were given a tough ping by Matt Grimes, and after
Gruev and Georginio Rutter had hassled them into giving up, Grimes saw
Summerville go by him with the ball like he was scrolling through a half-read
vaguebook post. Summerville passed to Gnonto on the run, who positioned himself
and composed himself within chopping distance of Bashir Humphreys’ chasing,
knowing no chopping would come. A simple finish into the bottom corner quelled
any question of Leeds’ relative second half slackness letting Swansea back in;
United had taken their lead before the heaviest rain, and let Gruev take them
ticking through to full-time.
Leeds are at the point, now, where even discomfort can be
feigned. Georginio Rutter’s upset at being substituted without scoring was
real: he’d have loved to make it five. But after a word with Farke on the
touchline, glum Georgi in the tunnel was an actor, hamming for the camera as he
slouched past, hiding behind Bamford, his hands covering his eyes as if he was
crying. A word from Piroe – “No speaking? Come on, we win 4-0, bro!” – and
Georgi span right round, trying not to let a smile ruin his put-on as he stared
down the camera, before breaking character back into character. “No party, no
Piroe! Let’s go!”
“Meanwhile, he’s already smiling in the dressing room as you
can hear,” said Farke, as he did his post-match press conference on the edge of
the party bounds. “Probably the loudest singer as well.” There they all are,
then, where nobody wanted to be, Swansea on a wet Tuesday in mid-February in
the Championship, the best examples of what it’s like to change habits, from
losing to winning: Rutter, a year from joining, now so happy to be frustrated
that he can pretend to be sad; Gnonto, who wanted away, scoring three in two;
Bamford, his knee hurting him again, all grins in the tunnel; Piroe, who has
been sitting watching Bamford play, making sure Rutter threw away his sad cloak
to enjoy the moment. “We win 4-0, bro! We win 4-0!” They did, and they do, and
there’s nothing bad to say about being here now it’s happening.