Birmingham 1-1 Leeds: Daniel Farke challenges his side to become club legends — Mail 15/2/26
Birmingham 1-1 Leeds: Daniel Farke challenges his side to become club legends by winning the FA Cup after surviving a scare at St Andrews
By TOM COLLOMOSSE
This was a day to remember that plenty of officials can make
correct decisions without needing to be hooked up to their mates in a TV booth
100 miles away.
The pro-VAR lobby have been loud and proud this weekend
following a series of dodgy calls made by referees, with the technology not
deployed during the third and fourth rounds of the FA Cup.
Leeds United advanced to the fifth round here at the expense
of Birmingham after the sides could not be separated during 120 thrilling
minutes, mostly dominated by Blues. Against the run of play, Lukas Nmecha had
given Leeds the lead early in the second half only for Patrick Roberts to force
extra-time late on. With no further goals, Tommy Doyle and Roberts missed in
the shoot-out and Leeds scored all four of their efforts to advance. They would
also have been grateful for another penalty incident that went their way much
earlier.
Three minutes before half-time, Birmingham winger Carlos
Vicente drifted past Sean Longstaff and flung himself to the ground. From a
distance, it looked a penalty, but referee Paul Tierney was in the perfect
spot. He blew immediately for a free-kick to Leeds and booked Vicente, who
walked away looking a little sheepish.
Had VAR been in use, we would have had a three or
four-minute check to verify a decision Tierney had needed a split-second to
make.
Leeds have not been past the fifth round since they reached
the quarter-finals in 2003.
‘The Cup is always a chance for us to write a chapter of our
very special history,’ said Farke. ‘It’s not realistic to speak about it yet.
But in scruffy games like these, when you find a way to get through, this is
when you can write history and these are the games you look back on.
‘Perhaps one day we will even speak about how it all started
with our games at Derby (in the third round) and now at Birmingham.
‘The first thing I dream about is a home draw. It feels like
we are always on the road. I would like to have a full Elland Road for the
fifth round.
‘The recent history of this club is not great in the FA Cup
but a little cup run is always quite cup. If we had only one game per week,
maybe we wouldn’t rotate so much. But now there are more chances for players to
compete and it means everyone stays focused.’
Who knows, if the gang at Stockley Park had studied replays
for long enough, perhaps they would have determined that the airflow from
Longstaff’s moving boot had disrupted Vicente’s stride? Maybe it would have
been a penalty after all – only for it to be overturned because, on closer
examination, a stitch on Vicente’s boot was a fraction offside.
In fact, Leeds felt they should have had a spot-kick at the
end of extra-time when Brenden Aaronson fell under Patrick Roberts’ challenge,
but it was another 50-50 call that would have been disputed had VAR reversed
it.
The reaction to Saturday’s mistakes, particularly in the
Aston Villa-Newcastle game, has been maddening.
Just because a referee has a poor game, it does not mean
that VAR is unequivocally ‘a good thing’. Newcastle boss Eddie Howe even
acknowledged as much after watching his team’s 3-1 victory.
It is a fair bet supporters would be happy to swap the
tiresome delays and baffling over-rules in exchange for a few more errors
slipping through the net, which is why the temptation to introduce VAR
throughout the Cup and in the EFL should be resisted.
Birmingham, of course, will hope to see a great deal more of
VAR in the years ahead. US investment group Knighthead have huge plans for this
club and they are targeting a second promotion in as many seasons, having
returned to the Championship from League One last term. There was more heavy
spending in January, too, to try to make the play-offs.
Chairman Tom Wagner, the driving force behind those
ambitious plans, is currently recovering from a stroke but is said to have
watched the game.
The Tilton End unfurled a banner that read ‘Get Well Soon,
Tom’ while players wore TW13 – Wagner’s lucky number – on their sleeves.
Wagner would have liked what he saw in the first half.
Though both sides made six changes, Birmingham settled quicker – no surprise
for a team beaten only once at home in the Championship this season. Lucas
Perri had been recalled in goal for Leeds and he made a stunning stop in the
11th minute, turning Jay Stansfield’s angled effort on to the bar at full
stretch.
It was all Blues. Gabriel Gudmundsson slid to cut out
Vicente’s cross with Stansfield and August Priske lurking. Christoph Klarer’s
goalbound header from Kai Wagner’s corner was blocked. Then Demarai Gray twice
came close, first with a strike that hit team-mate Priske, and then drawing
another stop from Perri following a slick break involving Priske and Vicente.
Frustrated that his team could not find the breakthrough,
Vicente took matters into his own hands and was shown the yellow card for
tumbling near Longstaff. Leeds were just glad to make it to half-time and boss
Daniel Farke sent on Ethan Ampadu for the woeful Facundo Buonanotte.
Ampadu’s presence seemed to galvanise Leeds and four minutes
into the second half they took the lead. Nmecha collected Noah Okafor’s pass,
found space on his right foot and beat Ryan Allsop at the near post from 20
yards.
Birmingham did not lose heart and continued to force the
pace, yet at the decisive moments they found luck and composure had deserted
them.
During two second-half stoppages, Blues boss Chris Davies
gathered his players for on-the-hoof team talks as they did everything to reach
extra-time – and they finally had their reward when substitute Patrick Roberts’
89th-minute strike from distance took a huge deflection off James Justin and
flew past Perri.
And they should have won it with the last kick of normal
time when Justin switched off, Ibrahim Osman – who missed several chances – hit
the post and fellow sub Kanya Fujimoto’s follow-up was blocked by Jaka Bijol.
