Leeds 1-0 Harrogate: Largie Ramazani scores only goal — Mail 11/1/25
Leeds 1-0 Harrogate: Largie Ramazani scores only goal as Daniel Farke's side secure victory in FA Cup third round tie
Largie Ramazani's 59th minute goal saw Leeds overcome
Harrogate Town
A much-changed Leeds side should have been more ruthless in
front of goal
By DAVID COVERDALE
Sutton United, Newport County and Crawley Town. They are the
lower-league teams who have knocked Leeds United out of the FA Cup in the last
eight years, and for an hour at Elland Road on Saturday night, home fans must
have feared Harrogate Town were about to join that list.
As it was, the Championship leaders squeezed past the League
Two strugglers thanks to Largie Ramazani’s header. But this was a nervous night
for Leeds in the first-ever competitive meeting between the two Yorkshire sides
and Daniel Farke ended it relieved to have avoided embarrassment.
The Whites boss saw his much-changed side enjoy two thirds
of the possession and have 21 attempts at goal. Yet their wastefulness meant a
team ranked 68 places below them in the football pyramid had hope until the
final whistle.
Opposing fans like to sing how Harrogate is just a ‘town
full of tea shops’, while the club’s chief executive Sarah Barry was asked in
the week if it was ‘too posh for football’. Well, Simon Weaver’s men put that
myth to bed as they took the fight to their illustrious neighbours – even if
they ultimately failed to give them a bloody nose.
This was far from your usual Yorkshire derby at Elland Road.
They are usually hostile affairs, but there was a more convivial atmosphere
inside this old ground, perhaps because many home fans actually count Harrogate
as their second club and will attend both Elland Road and Wetherby Road
throughout a season.
Harrogate even train on the outskirts of Leeds, which is
closer to Elland Road than the hosts. And Weaver – the longest-serving manager
in the top four divisions – had called on his players to make sure they enjoyed
what was the club’s second-ever third-round tie.
Both teams, of course, have other priorities this season.
Leeds lead the Championship in their push for Premier League promotion, and the
Sulphurites are 21st in League Two and battling relegation.
As such, Farke made eight changes to his Whites team but he
still picked a strong side packed with experience, with all of his stars ready
to be called off the bench if required.
Josuha Guilavogui was making his first start for Leeds
following his free transfer in October. And the Frenchman was perhaps fortunate
not to concede a penalty early on when he tangled with Harrogate striker Josh
March, who took a tumble in the box.
That, though, was the last time Town would find themselves
in such a position for the rest of a first half dominated by the hosts.
Harrogate were indebted to their captain Warren Burrell for
blocking Mateo Joseph’s strike after Ramazani led a swift Leeds counter.
Then just before the break Joseph struck the woodwork from
the edge of the box after terrorising the Harrogate defence. On the whole,
though, Leeds were wasteful in the final third, which is why Harrogate’s dream
of a cup upset was still alive at the halfway mark.
At the start of the second half, Solomon brushed the bar
with a curling effort. But Harrogate were enjoying much more of the ball, with
March drawing a first save out of Leeds stand-in stopper Karl Darlow.
Just as the underdogs were starting to grow in confidence,
however, Leeds finally broke the deadlock on the hour-mark to roars of relief
inside Elland Road.
Solomon raced past Dean Cornelius down the left before
standing up a cross to Ramazani, who found himself unmarked five yards out to
comfortably nod into the net.
Leeds were denied a second when Harrogate goalkeeper James
Belshaw blocked substitute Daniel James’ close-range shot with his legs. It
meant the visitors still had hope in the dying stages, but Farke’s favourites
held firm to reach the fourth round.