Leeds almost reached the ‘promised land’ but will face a ticking timebomb of issues in the Championship — Independent 27/5/24
Rather than joining the Premier League, the Yorkshire club may have to raid it for fringe players
Richard Jolly
The Premier League was so close that Leeds United could see
it. So near that, twice in swift succession, Daniel Farke referred to it as
“the promised land”. He got a glimpse of it, and then a return ticket to the
more familiar terrain of the Championship. But then both the play-offs and
Wembley promise only disappointment for Leeds. They have another year to
reflect on the Dan James half-volley that hit the bar, lacking only the dip to
take the game level, perhaps to extra time. Instead, Southampton prevailed and
bumped up a division.
Or maybe they have 12 months to ponder the April defeats to
Coventry, Blackburn and QPR when Leeds, after a season playing catch-up, had
manoeuvred themselves into a position where automatic promotion beckoned. The
promise loomed large then, too. Farke referenced their total of 90 points a
couple of times, too. That would often bring a top-two finish. But not this
year and not for Leeds.
Nothing comes easily to them. Certainly not promotion. Since
the Second World War, they have spent 38 seasons outside the top flight and
only gone up in four of them. And one of those was to get them out of League
One. When next season starts, it will be their 18th out of 21 in the Football
League. They will have played less Premier League football over that time than
Wigan or Burnley, Bournemouth or Brentford, Norwich or Swansea, Hull or Stoke.
There is a theory that, as football becomes increasingly
stratified, the bigger clubs are destined to gravitate to the top. Then there
is Leeds, the exception to every rule, often with the bittersweet distinction
of being the biggest club below the Premier League. So near and yet so far. “It
hurts a lot because we were only one step away,” said Farke.
It will hurt Leeds’s owners, the San Francisco 49ers, in
different ways. A contingent from California were at Wembley. They started
their attempts to purchase the club from Andrea Radrizzani before relegation
and completed them afterwards. They saw the potential in the club; so did
Farke, who has said he would not have signed for anyone else outside the
Premier League.
Leeds have moneyed backers but a ticking timebomb in
parachute payments, the questions of financial fair play (FFP), given that the
previous regime’s heavy spending made demotion doubly damning, and the enduring
strangeness of some of the contracts former director of football Victor Orta
awarded.
Farke referred to his “difficult start with all the exit
clauses”. Many of the more expensive players Leeds own, those who – in theory –
represent assets on the balance sheet, had clauses allowing them to leave on
loan after relegation. Exit, among others, Diego Llorente, Brenden Aaronson,
Rasmus Kristensen, Marc Roca, Max Wober and Jack Harrison. Now, and lacking
clarity about the situation, the assumption is they can go out on loan again,
reducing Leeds’s chances of recouping some of their outlay. Good news for
Everton, who would like Harrison back for another year; less so for his parent
club.
Another complication last summer was Wilfried Gnonto’s
determination to leave; he was kept, galvanised and influential. Yet Gnonto and
his teammate Crysencio Summerville may have outgrown the Championship; Leeds
might be forced to cash in. Their other emerging talent, Archie Gray, was in
tears at the end; recently turned 18, making 52 appearances this season, he may
be both the club’s best right-back and central midfielder. He has Leeds in his
blood, is part of a family with more than 1,000 games for the club between
them, and it is easier to envisage him staying.
Yet if Leeds could be deprived of two match-winners –
reducing their firepower at a point when there are concerns the forwards Joel
Piroe and Georginio Rutter are not potent enough – Farke also bemoaned the
inexperience of his side, contrasting it with the clinical finish Adam
Armstrong supplied to send Southampton up. Captain Liam Cooper is likely to
leave; sadly, Stuart Dallas has already been forced to retire.
Cooper was sidelined in part by Joe Rodon, an excellent
loanee. Yet a lesson of Southampton’s promotion is that Saints arguably played
the loan system better than Leeds: a blend of quantity and quality in Flynn
Downes, Taylor Harwood-Bellis, Joe Rothwell, David Brooks and Ryan Fraser.
Rather than joining the Premier League, Leeds may have to
raid it for fringe players. They have already constructed two plans. “In the
background, we have prepared a bit,” said Farke. “But before you press a button
you need to know which league you are in.”
It is one he knows well, finishing first, first and third in
his last three attempts. His record suggests he is their best chance of
promotion. “My players don’t want a manager who speaks about himself and gives
some messages for his own future,” said the German, in a non-committal mood;
yet he sounded determined to remain and the board ought to back him. “We will
take this as extra motivation to come back stronger,” Farke said.
Logically, Leeds and the three relegated teams will be the
four favourites for promotion next season. Yet it developed into a four-horse
race this year and the other three went up. If Leeds are often defiantly
different, there are times when they must wish they were not the odd ones out.
And this was one of them.