Numbers hide Leeds United reality as unbeaten Championship run finally comes to an end — Yorkshire Post 7/4/24
There are so many statistics about modern football these days you can just look at the numbers instead of a match report.
By Stuart Rayner
Leeds United's 2-1 defeat at Coventry City was a good
example of why you should not. The metrics showed why they ought to have won
but they did not deserve to.
It was a first Championship defeat of 2024 – dropping them
out of the automatic promotion spots with five matches left rather than going
top but a third below-par game in a row.
Not playing well and taking points – one from Watford, three
v Hull City – is essential in a 46-game campaign. Do it too often in succession
and it will catch up with you.
Hit-and-miss centre-forwards are perhaps the biggest
weakness of a team which does not have many. Joel Piroe did both but Patrick
Bamford only managed the latter.
Normally a tight defence and midfield roadblock minimises
the load but even with Ilia Gruev back from injury, Coventry scored twice on
the counter-attack.
"We were not effective in the decisive duels at both
ends of the pitch," opined manager Daniel Farke.
Buoyed by Ipswich Town's recent (earnt) luck with late goals
running out in defeat at Norwich City, plus the return of Gruev to the XI and
Willy Gnonto and Connor Roberts to the bench, Leeds made a start almost as
bright as their away kit.
But the first goal rattled them and although they eventually
got their poise back, the pizzazz was never forthcoming.
You cannot beat Coventry without it, certainly not when
cheered on by their biggest crowd at a rented stadium which has caused them so
much grief. If their performance was a worry for Leeds, it will also have been
for Hull and Middlesbrough, hoping the drain of a Wembley FA Cup semi-final
this month over-rides the quality that got them there.
Before Leeds' promise amounted to anything, the Sky Blues
pounced, breaking from their defensive third and forcing a corner when Illan
Meslier saved from Haji Wright.
Meslier and co lacked authority, allowing the ball to bounce
around in the wind. Bobby Thomas hooked it to ex-Barnsley team-mate Liam
Kitching, who headed it to Ellis Simms for his 14th goal in 11 games.
Soon Meslier had to save with his feet from Callum O'Hare
and the Championship’s most composed, secure defence looked anything but.
There were problems at the other end too.
Bamford scores amazing goals – like at Peterborough – and
poacher's ones – Sheffield Wednesday away – but you cannot bank on him.
Junior Firpo's 28th-minute cross was the stuff of No 9s’
dreams, yet Bamford could not convert.
"If he put his right foot in it probably would have
been a goal," said former centre-forward Farke wistfully.
He was not the only culprit.
Minutes after Leeds replaced the lacklustre Glen Kamara with
Roberts, Coventry scored again.
Joe Rodon won Crysencio Summerville's free-kick but Coventry
claimed the second ball and sent birthday boy Josh Eccles sprinting down the
right to curl a centre as inviting as Firpo's. Wright also went with the wrong
foot but scored.
There were 40 minutes – plus added time – left but hosts
already ticked off for timewasting and enjoying counter-attacking were not
about to buck the trend of Leeds possession, even if manager Mark Robins
insisted it was unintentional.
On came the Leeds cavalry, Mateo Joseph for Bamford,
Georginio Rutter pushed alongside him and Piroe into a three-man line behind.
Summerville forced a save from a tight angle then had
another shot which may or may not have gone in but for Jake Bidwell’s brilliant
diving header. If not, Rutter had a tap-in.
Piroe's 76th-minute goal was as understated as his shirt was
loud, controlling and poking in with minimal backlift then reverting to 2024
type. A one-two with Joseph ended with a strike he did not get hold of and he
shot over in the 87th minute.
But the worst was in the third added minute, firing a chance
at the goalkeeper which the pre-Christmas Piroe would have gobbled.
It was another shot on target, more onto the expected goals
tally for the pseudo-scientific guessworkers. In reality, Leeds needed more.
If hiding poor performances with ill-deserved points is a
skill, bouncing back from defeats is another.
Tuesday's visit of Sunderland as Ipswich twiddle their
thumbs until Wednesday can add another zig-zag to a title/promotion race which
just cannot decide where it is going.