Leeds United 0-2 Millwall: Bag of chips — Square Ball 10/2/25
Sparkle
Written by: Chris McMenamy
As time ran out in Leeds’ 2-0 loss to Millwall, I wondered
to myself what the kids attending their first game at Elland Road might
remember of it in years to come. Pascal Struijk’s missed penalty, Karl Darlow
being beaten at his near post, or something else entirely?
Leeds’ 2-2 draw with Liverpool in the 2003/04 relegation
season was my first trip to LS11. Harry Kewell predictably scored on his return
to Elland Road and I threw the ball back to Didier Domi, a real Leeds legend.
Like almost every FA Cup tie at Leeds, the ninety minutes of
football got in the way of a memorable day for any kids debuting at Elland
Road. As much as I vividly recall the roar when Mark Viduka equalised against
Liverpool 21 years ago, what stayed with me was the first glimpse of the
imposing East Stand and being overwhelmed as I reached the top of the steps to
see the pitch.
Sam Chambers was another kid making his Elland Road bow, the
17-year-old winger starting for the first time as Daniel Farke made ten changes
from the win at Coventry. Chambers’ only senior appearance came from the bench
against Plymouth in November, so his inclusion from the start was certainly a
surprise, or perhaps an indicator of the importance Farke had placed on this
match.
While Chambers started brightly, linking up well with the
lesser spotted Isaac Schmidt down Leeds’ right side, Millwall had the
Championship leaders on the back foot for the opening fifteen minutes. But the
visitors failed to create any real chances, and it was a rare Leeds corner that
prompted the first sight of goal — Chambers seeing his name up in lights before
shooting over from just inside the box.
Leeds’ almost totally new side unsurprisingly failed to look
cohesive and the game suffered as a result. Millwall were happy to sit deep,
defend compactly, and pick their moments to counter, meaning the most
entertaining moment of the first half hour came when the South Stand took
exception to a Millwall fan wearing a flatcap, accusing him of being a shit
Tommy Shelby.
Unfortunately the playful banter between supporters went
sour once the Millwall crowd sang about Turkey and the murder of Chris Loftus
and Kevin Speight in April 2000. There’s not really much to say about the loud,
prolonged chants that Millwall’s official statement described as coming from a
‘minority’ — which feels like an alternative interpretation of the facts —
other than they’re depressingly predictable and not worth rising to. Leave them
to the brainless of Burmondsey.
Leeds’ highlight of the first half, and perhaps the game,
came when Joe Rothwell’s delightful long ball found Schmidt near the Millwall
box. The full-back played it inside to Chambers, who beat two players and just
needed to pick a corner to complete a fairytale full debut, but shot straight
at the ‘keeper.
Both Millwall goals came from Leeds losing possession
cheaply. The first as Schmidt was bullied off the ball in his own half, before
Femi Azeez’s deflected shot evaded a stranded Karl Darlow in the Leeds goal.
The second came ten minutes after half-time and from almost nothing. Josuha
Guilavogui was robbed inside the Millwall half and Azeez broke down Leeds’
right, which neither Schmidt nor Ethan Ampadu appeared to be guarding. Azeez
bore down on goal and beat Darlow at his near post with a shot that explained
why Farke didn’t rush to switch his goalkeeper after Illan Meslier’s series of
clangers against Blackburn and Hull.
By the 55th minute, Millwall were leading 2-0 and, in
hindsight, we could have left it there. Most people had seen enough, even the
thousands attending who can’t normally get tickets for league games.
Ampadu was having his worst game for Leeds. Right after
Millwall scored their first, he lost the ball running across his own box,
leading to Azeez hitting the bar. Guilavogui’s error leading to the second was
nothing compared to the stud marks he left on Cameron De Norre’s shin, a
reckless accident brought about by a loose touch in another disjointed Leeds
attack.
Pascal Struijk missed a 60th-minute penalty, and Leeds’
chance to inject life into a tie that was quickly fading. As Millwall ‘keeper
Liam Roberts tipped the ball onto the post, Elland Road groaned with an air of
resignation as if to say that Leeds United tend to do this in the cup and, on
the whole, it’s hard to care too much. Farke paid lip service to the idea of
winning by introducing Manor Solomon, Junior Firpo, and Ao Tanaka as the
seventy-minute mark approached. Joel Piroe came on shortly after to give Mateo
Joseph some assistance on a day when nothing went right for the 20-year-old.
But it was all to no avail. Leeds didn’t look like scoring, and they didn’t.
There wasn’t much comfort in seeing fringe players get much
needed minutes, but perhaps that’s to be expected when you throw ten of them
onto the pitch at the same time. Barring an unparalleled injury crisis, we
won’t be seeing Saturday’s starting XI together again this season. “To rotate
is necessary and important, but two or three changes are healthy for fresh
legs,” Farke said after the game. “If you rotate in ten positions it can’t be
beneficial for the fluidity of your football.” Again, if Farke knew this
beforehand and still did it anyway, it shows how important he felt this tie was
in the grand scheme of things, even if he was talking in the build-up about how
“stranger things have happened” than Leeds winning the FA Cup in 2024/25. He’s
right, stranger things have happened. About three of them in the history of
mankind, maybe.
Leeds will likely return to their newly-established
first-choice side for Tuesday night’s trip to Watford and do the same again for
Sunderland next week, two games upon which much greater importance is placed
than a FA Cup fourth-round tie. When you’re chasing promotion back to the
Premier League, sometimes you have to just bite the bullet and ruthlessly
prioritise. It’s often the fans that suffer, especially those going to games
for the first time, who are often the next generation of Leeds fans. The cup has
lost its sparkle in the eyes of clubs whose motivations are increasingly
financial, but then how do you explain that to a kid going to Elland Road for
the first time?
You don’t. You get them a bag of chips on the way home and
tell them you’ll take them to a Premier League game next year, hopefully. If
that doesn’t placate them, just tell them to be grateful they weren’t at bloody
Histon.