Six moments that mattered as Leeds won promotion — BBC 21/4/25
Ian Woodcock
BBC Sport England
Adam Pope
BBC Radio Leeds reporter
Leeds United have sealed their return to the Premier League
after two years back in the Championship.
From a slow start to a silent January and changing
goalkeepers with seven games to go, BBC Sport looks at the key moments in their
successful promotion campaign.
23 August - Sheffield Wednesday 0-2 Leeds
Eight months is a long, long time in football and so it was
that the mood around Leeds United three games into the season was in stark
contrast to the one there now.
A helter-skelter 3-3 opening-day draw with Portsmouth was
followed up by a thumping 3-0 home defeat by Middlesbrough in the Carabao Cup
and then an uninspiring 0-0 draw at West Bromwich Albion.
The Whites headed to Yorkshire rivals Sheffield Wednesday on
a Friday night with the pressure on to get their season kick-started.
Off the back of a mind-numbingly boring goalless draw at
West Brom, the climate ahead of the trip to Hillsborough felt like that around
the Birmingham City defeat early on in the previous season.
Did Leeds have enough players to challenge for promotion?
Georginio Rutter was on his way to Brighton, following Archie Gray and
Crysencio Summerville to the Premier League. Was Willy Gnonto next to go before
the window shut?
A clean sheet and a first victory of the campaign in what
Farke described "the perfect away performance" allayed the fears of
some fans who were considering whether to let Brenden Aaronson back into their
lives after he had returned following jumping ship to Germany for a season.
His goal and the quality of Dan James' finish provided some
evidence that Patrick Bamford's prophecy may prove true when he told his
podcast partner Joe Wilkinson that week: "Every time that I've been in a
team when we haven't gone up, we've done it the next year. Hopefully that's a
good omen!"
Farke admitted after the game that more additions were
needed and wingers Largie Ramazani and Manor Solomon duly arrived before
deadline day.
A candle of hope had been lit.
24 November – Swansea 3-4 Leeds
Two defeats in their 12 matches after the Sheffield
Wednesday win had seen Leeds cruise up towards the top two places.
A comfortable 2-0 win over Sheffield United in October had
seen Blades boss Chris Wilder call them the best team in the division and by
late November it was becoming hard to argue.
Then Swansea City head coach Luke Williams said before the
game he fully expected Leeds United to be promoted having gone so close last
season but he could not have predicted the glut of goals which followed on a
weekend where Storm Bert had wreaked havoc throughout south Wales.
The fact Leeds scored four times was a big deal because the
Swans had not conceded more than a single goal in 17 matches up to that point.
Gnonto came off the bench to score the winner very late on
after Leeds let a 3-2 lead slip, having earlier twice come from behind. It
showed the fighting spirit was there if not game management and sent Leeds top
for the first time this season on goal difference.
3 February – Transfer window closes without any January
additions
Sometimes the wisest thing to do is nothing at all.
With his side in scintillating form, Farke had been adamant
he would only look to make additions if they were better than what he had.
Southampton striker Cameron Archer was linked with a move
but it came to nothing and, two days before the transfer window closed, the
Whites demolished struggling Cardiff 7-0.
Transfer deadline day passed without a single addition.
It felt like Leeds had gambled. Everybody knew the squad as
it stood had the ability to win the league but the point was how much of it
would still be standing if injuries hit?
How costly would it be not to sign a number nine with
Patrick Bamford a long-term injury, or a proper number 10, and not to provide
cover at centre-back? These were the big questions in the wake of a window
which saw their main rivals strengthen while Leeds were left lighter.
Two days later United went to in-form Coventry City and won
2-0 and it could have been 12. Farke and the owners had rolled the dice. It
looked like it could be paying off.
24 February – Sheff Utd 1-3 Leeds
Leeds headed into mid-February in great shape before
back-to-back Monday night challenges against top-four rivals, Sunderland and
Sheffield United.
The former took an early lead at Elland Road through Wilson
Isidor and with time running out it looked like the Whites were going to fall
to a damaging defeat.
Centre-back Pascal Struijk was the unlikely hero as the
Dutchman, on as a sub, headed in two wicked deliveries from fellow replacement
Joe Rothwell to produce a dramatic turnaround.
Leeds would head to Bramall Lane top of the table.
Five points clear at the top and for many it felt like
promotion was guaranteed.
After the game left-back Junior Firpo gave a timely reminder
that everyone should just calm down. He talked of the need to "stay
humble", that the job was "not done yet". He was right and he
was also correct about how powerful Leeds were late on in games.
Once the Dominican Republic international had deservedly
equalised with a thumping header with 18 minutes remaining, Blades boss Chris
Wilder and assistant Alan Knill looked spooked on the touchline.
Defeat looked inevitable for the hosts from that moment and
Leeds did not disappoint. A precision header from Ao Tanaka and a rip-snorter
from Joel Piroe ignited euphoria in the away end inside an otherwise empty
Bramall Lane on full time.
Leeds had seen it through in a massive game.
29 March – Leeds 2-2 Swansea
Promotion had felt inevitable after those raucous Monday
night wins in February but March brought the kind of jeopardy Whites fans had
feared.
The unbeaten run which stretched back to a 1-0 reverse at
Blackburn on 30 November was ended on 9 March by a 1-0 defeat at struggling
Portsmouth.
Although Millwall were despatched 2-0 three days later
Farke's men then needed to recover from a horror start at QPR to escape with a
2-2 draw.
The international break looked like it had come at a good
time to reset and refocus, with the lead over third-placed Burnley cut from
seven points to just two.
Managerless Swansea arrived in town in poor form and hopes
were high of a return to winning ways.
Gnonto looked to have won the game from the bench late on to
send Leeds top and rescue goalkeeper Illan Meslier after a calamitous drop
under no pressure had gifted Swansea an equaliser.
But Meslier eventually cost his side top spot and himself a
place in the side thereafter by allowing another equaliser to squeeze through
him from a tight angle in the final seconds.
The credit for his earlier penalty save was completely
eradicated as it felt like a defeat and the Frenchman's litany of errors was
now too severe for him to keep his place.
"You have to suffer a little bit," Farke told the
press after the game and that, despite March seeing them slip from first to
third amid a run of one win in five games, he was "100% confident his side
would be playing Premier League football next season."
Many were sceptical, others called for a head which was
keeping composed when some were being lost.
12 April – Leeds United 2-1 Preston North End
Karl Darlow was given the gloves for the draw at Luton the
week after the Swansea debacle.
There was little he could do to stop Isaiah Jones netting
the opener before James levelled with a fine finish but some fans were unhappy
that Farke called the point against the strugglers a good result as their own
poor run stretched to one win in six.
However, Sheffield United's unexpected loss at Oxford later
that day, when a win would have moved them four points clear of the Whites,
proved Farke's words correct.
The battling 1-0 midweek win at play-off chasing
Middlesbrough ended a run of three straight draws and, as the Blades lost at
home to Millwall, Leeds had turned third back to first in no time at all
heading into the final five matches.
This was a battering for Preston make no mistake.
Leeds backed up a gritty win at Middlesbrough to produce a
cracking performance under intense pressure to hit the top of the table. Joel
Piroe should have had a hat-trick but his battling and link-up play were
intrinsic to United carving Preston apart. With James injured it needed him and
Manor Solomon to step up. The latter was unplayable at times and scored a
curling pearler in the first five minutes to set Leeds on their way.
Once in front Leeds do not lose and so it proved.
The news filtering through from Home Park of a third
consecutive defeat for Sheffield United created an incredible atmosphere inside
Elland Road for the latter stages of the match.
Coinciding with concrete news from the club's owners that,
in tandem with the council, steps were definitely being taken to expand its
capacity the famous old stadium provided a timely reminder of how unique it is
as a footballing experience.
A free bar was laid on afterwards to say thank you to the
fans - pints and points on a pivotal day.