The Premier League perils awaiting Leeds as promotion edges closer — BBC 25/2/25
Simon Stone
For the second time in two days, a set of jubilant away fans
celebrated victory at the home of their rivals by belting out the chant
"we're gonna win the league".
Like Liverpool fans at Manchester City on Sunday, those
Leeds United supporters celebrating a 3-1 comeback win at Bramall Lane over
second-placed Sheffield United now believe they will be Championship title
winners in May.
The symmetry is neat. In 2020, the season halted, delayed
and then restarted in front of no supporters because of the Covid-19 pandemic,
Liverpool won the Premier League and Leeds won the Championship, returning to
the top flight after a 16-year absence.
Daniel Farke's side are now five points ahead of Sheffield
United, who are in the other automatic promotion place, and seven in front of
third-placed Burnley. After Saturday's visit by West Brom to Elland Road, 10
out of Leeds' last 11 games will be against teams outside the top 10.
In all likelihood, work will be going on behind the scenes
to try to make Leeds' next top-flight campaign far different to their last,
which ended in relegation after three seasons.
Making an impact will not be easy.
In the past 15 years, 42% of all promoted teams have dropped
back to the Championship in the first season. That rises to 50% in the past
decade.
Bielsa shadow & Farke's 'yo-yo' Norwich experience
Former Leeds manager Marcelo Bielsa remains a legendary
figure among fans from their last promotion into the Premier League.
Firstly, let's deal with the elephant in the room. Marcelo
Bielsa.
When Leeds were last promoted in 2020, they did so under the
guidance of a man who has assumed legendary status in West Yorkshire.
Bielsa took a group of average players and turned them into
a collective force.
They shrugged off the heartbreak of missing out on promotion
in 2019 by going up the following season and then finishing ninth in the
Premier League.
They played exhilarating, attractive football and were a joy
to watch.
Bielsa's team eventually faded, shattered by the demands
placed on it. Bielsa was sacked in February 2022, with the Leeds hierarchy
fearing relegation.
It was an astute move as Bielsa's replacement, Jesse Marsch,
kept them up. But the stay of execution lasted only a year and Bielsa's
reputation among supporters remained high.
Farke accepted the challenge. The former Norwich boss signed
a four-year deal in July 2023. His first season ended with 90 points but defeat
by Southampton in the play-off final at Wembley.
Many fans wanted the German out. It was never going to
happen.
"I always thought he had a two-year window, so I never
felt he was in jeopardy," said BBC Radio Leeds commentator Adam Pope.
"They got 90 points and the basis from which he started
was such a mess. Players were agitating to leave and I don't think he knew who
was going to be available from match to match.
"It was an extraordinary effort to get as far as they
did. But this was the year it has felt like it had to happen."
Farke himself will have a point to prove, as well as big
question marks over his own Premier League credentials.
His Norwich team bounced between Championship title winners
in 2019, Premier League relegation in 2020 and promotion again in 2021, before
he was sacked 11 games into his second Premier League campaign in November
2021. Farke's top-flight record is six wins from 49 games.
The price of Premier League promotion
One source with knowledge of the inner workings of Leeds
explained the issue the club had on their last three-year stay in the Premier
League was that then-owner Andrea Radrizzani just didn't have the funds to kick
on.
Radrizzani's shares were bought by the 49ers Enterprises
when they took over Leeds in the summer of 2023, The investment arm of the
American football franchise San Francisco 49ers is also attempting to buy a
significant stake in Glasgow Rangers.
They proved that they have the finance by methodically
working through what has been described as the massive 'credit card bill' of
instalment payments for transfers from a sizeable churn of players in and out
of Elland Road.
Doubtless they will have a plan for this summer and beyond.
However, there are two issues that are inescapable.
Firstly, Leeds are hamstrung by the knowledge two seasons in
the EFL slices £44m off the maximum £105m three-year loss limit that applies to
the rest of the Premier League.
And beyond that, how much will survival actually cost?
For the second year running, the three teams that were
promoted from the Championship are looking likely to go straight back down.
Two of them, Leicester and Southampton, have far more recent
top-flight experience than Leeds. Their struggles prove jumping up from the
Championship - even with the benefit of parachute payments - is one thing, but
staying there is another matter entirely.
Leeds clearly need at least one striker. They sold Georginio
Rutter to Brighton for £40m in August, which sets a benchmark for a decent
Premier League forward.
When you start adding in creative midfielders, full-backs
and a goalkeeper - Illan Meslier added another mistake to this season's 'crime
sheet' by scoring an own goal to give Sheffield United the lead on Monday - the
millions rack up.
Two of Farke's mainstays, Joe Rothwell and Manor Solomon,
are on loan and will need to be bought or replaced, so the bill for a decent
shot at survival is going to be astronomical.
Redeveloping Elland Road & 'staying humble'
One way of paying for this would be to generate greater
revenue from Leeds' vast fanbase.
Plans are already in place to expand the dated Elland Road
stadium from its current 38,000 capacity by redeveloping the West Stand and the
Revie Stand to eventually take the capacity to 55,000.
The aim is to use the same model as Liverpool, whose work on
the Anfield Road stand was done by building over the top of the existing
structure.
But this work will not be cheap. Leeds need to be in the
Premier League before club chiefs press ahead.
For Leeds' financial executives, a delicate balance needs to
be navigated between ploughing resource into infrastructure and Farke's squad.
Ideally, it should be a twin track process and fans understand that.
After Monday's match, I asked Farke if he felt an
"obligation" to take Leeds back to the Premier League.
He said not. But the answer was revealing.
"In the last 25 years, we were promoted to the Premier
League once and had three seasons in it, one outstanding season for Marcelo and
two difficult ones, including a relegation," he said.
"At the moment, you are not allowed to label us as an
established Premier League side. This is what I want to change.
"It is good for us to stay humble. At this club, after
a win, everyone speaks about Europe, after a loss, people are saying we will
probably go down to League Two. That is what these clubs are all about.
"It is a great honour to be in this chair at this
amazing club. It is a great responsibility but it comes with pressure.
"Everyone expects us to win. That is what Leeds is all
about."