Daniel Farke's Leeds United surprise ends 45-year wait — Graham Smyth's Man Utd Verdict — YEP 14/4/26
By Graham Smyth
The Verdict on Leeds United's momentous 2-1 win at Old
Trafford.
When you wait 45 years to beat your most bitter rivals in
the league on their turf the manner of victory matters little but Daniel
Farke's Leeds United fully deserved their bit of history - their latest bit of
history.
A point would have been a fine result at Old Trafford for a
relegation-threatened side sitting just three clear of the drop zone. After
all, Manchester United were flying under Michael Carrick. Third in the table
and looking to consolidate their Champions League spot, the hosts were playing
their first game since March 20 so could either be described as rested or
rusty. Leeds, on the evidence of their start and subsequent performance, were
ready.
Farke went with a line-up with some intent about it. Ao
Tanaka retained his place in central midfield after doing well in the FA Cup
and with Brenden Aaronson, Noah Okafor and Dominic Calvert-Lewin in the side
Leeds had some pace, power and plenty of nuisance factor. Still, few would have
foreseen anything other than an 11-man defensive shift, the likes of which
earned a precious point at Anfield earlier in the season. Men behind the ball,
countering when possible but certainly not enjoying much in the way of
dominance. Farke obviously had something different in mind.
Leeds should have been ahead inside three minutes, when they
created the kind of chance that has been so hard to come by in recent Premier
League outings. Tanaka found Okafor, he pushed it out wide to Gabriel
Gudmundsson and his cross was perfect for Calvert-Lewin, who slid in five yards
out and somehow found Senne Lammens rather than the net.
In other games this season, like against Manchester City at
home, the Whites were made to rue golden, squandered opportunities. At Old
Trafford they simply set about creating another. With five minutes on the clock
they went down the right this time, Jayden Bogle's cross went over the head of
Calvert-Lewin but dropped at the feet of Okafor and he swept the ball home. To
get anything at this ground Leeds would need to be clinical and Okafor's finish
was precisely that. VAR might have taken a look at Calvert-Lewin's challenge in
the seconds prior to the goal but if any side in the Premier League is due a
break from Stockley Park it is Leeds United.
With the lead, the visitors might have relaxed or simply
dropped back into a defensive shell, but that was not their approach. Whenever
possible they pressed and clamped down on Manchester United's attempts to play
out and between them Ethan Ampadu and Tanaka caused all manner of problems.
With the ball there was real bravery, sticking with their passing moves even
under pressure. And, crucially, there was no sign of the naivety that has
arguably cost this team on occasions this season.
When Bruno Fernandes went down claiming a foul Gudmundsson
initially stopped before realising play could and should go on. Leeds attacked
the space offered to them, they attacked the box and after a sequence that
seemed to last forever the ball dropped yet again to Okafor, this time outside
the area. He bravely took on a volley, fortune favoured him with a deflection
and Leeds had a two-goal lead inside half an hour at Old Trafford.
With the way the rest of the first half panned out, no one
could say the visitors were not worth the scoreline. If anything, they ought to
have gone down the tunnel further ahead. There were half chances and promising
moments but none more so than Tanaka's big moment. He spotted a chance to step
in and nick the ball on the very edge of the box and suddenly had just Lammens
to beat. The killer blow was right there, on his boot. Ao did he miss it?
Tanaka did indeed beat the keeper, going past him with nifty footwork but was
thwarted by the strength of his touch and the appearance on the goal-line of
Lisandro Martinez.
A rollercoaster second-half for Leeds United
A response was inevitable from Manchester United and they
came close to an early goal in the second half. Benjamin Šeško was played in
behind his Slovenian compatriot Jaka Bijol and though Karl Darlow got something
on the shot, it looped towards the net. It was James Justin's turn to appear on
the goal-line, nodding the ball over the bar to safety.
But Leeds were still presenting a confident front. Bogle
streaked away on the counter and was taken out by Luke Shaw, who saw yellow.
And then the game changed with a card of another colour. Unseen by referee Paul
Tierney, Martinez got his hand on Calvert-Lewin's man bun. He didn't yank it,
but it was a pull of sorts - enough to ruffle the striker's preferred hair
set-up. VAR felt Tierney should see it again and once he did, he produced a
red.
What followed was hair-raising stuff. When Leeds got it
right against the 10 men and passed to their spare player, each pass was met
with an olé from a jubilant away end. When they didn't get it quite right and
rushed it or forced it, they gave the hosts a chance and allowed the game to
become end to end. In that kind of spell both sides could have scored. Matheus
Cunha got in behind as Leeds fell asleep and drew a big save from Darlow. The
keeper then came close to his first assist as a Leeds player, sending Bogle
away down the middle only for the defender to be caught and foiled as he
reached the area.
If Leeds were to kill the game dead, composure is what would
do it. Okafor looked up and saw he was being marked by the yellow-carded
Fernandes, blowing past him to put Leeds back on the attack. His pass to
Aaronson wasn't quite right, though, and Man United went back down the other
way to win corners and put balls in the box. One went right to left, Casemiro
popped up completely unspotted and unmarked and his header made it all a bit
hairy.
Farke sent on Ilia Gruev, a man many would have predicted to
start this game in a more defensive approach, to replace Tanaka. The manager
clearly told his midfield replacement to calm things down and he set about his
task well with sensible passes that made the hosts chase around the pitch. But
when the chance arose to play on the front foot again, Gruev took it, playing a
nice pass in a move that ended in a neat Bogle cross and a Calvert-Lewin header
straight at Lammens.
The rest of the chances came at the other end. Darlow came
up big, Calvert-Lewin came up bigger with two goal-line stops in a matter of
seconds. When seven minutes of time added on were up and Tierney blew his
whistle, Leeds came up holding three points.
Twice in eight days Farke's men have accomplished a feat
last seen in the 1980s and their celebrations with the travelling Whites felt
appropriately significant. If you don't properly enjoy moments like these, you
never will. And this Leeds team could soon be celebrating again. The six-point
gap between themselves and Spurs before an Elland Road meeting with Wolves
feels like a significant opportunity. It's a chance to take the relegation dog
fight by the scruff. It's one that calls for more of the bravery seen at Old
Trafford where Leeds who dared, won.