Leeds make history in rare Old Trafford win but the real loser isn’t Man Utd — Independent 13/4/26
Manchester United 1-2 Leeds: Daniel Farke’s side picked up their first league win at Old Trafford since 1981 to take a huge step towards survival
Richard Jolly at Old Trafford
A terrible night for a relegation-threatened team who play
in white. Although that team, admittedly, is Tottenham Hotspur. For Leeds
United, this was a seminal, spectacular evening; a historic one, too, though
even the significance of a first league win at Old Trafford since 1981 felt
less immediate than the growing probability they will stay up.
But for Michael Carrick and Manchester United, even a
rousing attempt at a rescue act could not alter the combination of a wretched
first half and a dreadful result. It was compounded by the consequences, with
Lisandro Martinez’s comeback short-lived as he was sent off for grabbing
Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s hair. Just when it seemed they were certainties to
qualify for the Champions League, Manchester United contrived to inject an
element of doubt. Carrick lost his 100 per cent record at Old Trafford as United
manager. The danger is the favourite to become the permanent manager loses
rather more than that.
Carrick was an unused substitute for Leeds’ previous win at
Old Trafford in 2010. This, however, was a first league victory on enemy turf
in 45 years and Noah Okafor can now join Brian Flynn in Leeds folklore. The
summer signing’s volleyed double was his first brace for Leeds. The goals came
in a pair for this particular Noah, perhaps changing the arc of each United’s
fortunes.
For Daniel Farke, though, a survival mission is almost
complete, especially with home games against Wolves and Burnley to come. This,
indisputably, was Leeds’ finest day since returning to the Premier League,
perhaps their best in the division since the 2022 triumph at Anfield. “Very
proud,” said Farke. “We were outstanding in the circumstances. There is no
doubt we deserved the win.”
But as Leeds know from bitter experience, however, they
rarely do things the easy way. Carrick’s United threatened an act of
escapology. They mounted an assault in the second half. James Justin headed off
the line to deny Benjamin Sesko, whose shot had looped up off Karl Darlow after
the striker made a buccaneering run. The goalkeeper made a terrific save from
Matheus Cunha.
Manchester United halved the deficit with Casemiro’s
terrific far-post header from Bruno Fernandes’s deep cross, underlining why
United will miss his goalscoring habit when he leaves, and taking the captain
one closer to the Premier League assist record.
There was almost an equaliser. Sesko, no stranger to late
goals, forced a brilliant save from Darlow. Casemiro’s second terrific header
was superbly cleared off the line by Calvert-Lewin. “Doing my job,” said the
striker who, without scoring, was ubiquitous in other respects.
Manchester United had various reasons to rue his
involvement. Carrick thought that the Leeds forward had clocked Leny Yoro
before Okafor’s opener. “It's a clear, clear forearm smashing the side of his
head,” said the beaten manager. “The first goal should not have stood.” He felt
his side luckless, but took heart from their response to adversity. “It was a
really good reaction,” he said. Yet there was much to fault in their start,
without citing the officiating. Carrick’s side were good with 11 men, poor with
10.
It was their first game for 24 days and they scarcely looked
ready for it. Carrick has shown great consistency in selection but made four
changes, two enforced. United appeared a team of strangers.
They looked dozy and dopey as Leeds hassled and harried
them. They were fired up but fantastic. If sterility in attack threatened
Leeds’ place in the Premier League, that changed as they made the most vibrant
of starts. They arrived equipped with ambition and confidence. They could have
been two goals ahead inside five minutes. They got one.
A tactic of outflanking Manchester United with their raiding
wing-backs worked even before they led and produced chances from either flank.
First Gabriel Gudmundsson was the creator, with a low cross that Calvert-Lewin
met, sliding in only to be denied by Senne Lammens, who made a brilliant
close-range block.
Then Jayden Bogle delivered a deep cross that Okafor
converted for Leeds’ first goal in five league games and their first in open
play for six. A second followed before the half-hour, struck from 20 yards
after Manchester United had missed a series of chances to clear.
Leeds had chances to get another. “We could have been easily
3-0 or 4-0 up,” added Farke. “We could have buried the game.” Calvert-Lewin
spurned one opportunity, heading at Lammens when unmarked. Before his early
exit, Martinez made a remarkable goal-saving challenge on his own line, denying
Ao Tanaka, who had gone past Lammens, after the goalkeeper had given the ball
away.
And yet it was not why Martinez’s night will be remembered.
His first appearance in two months was curtailed when the fit-again defender
was sent off for pulling Calvert-Lewin’s hair, a replay persuading referee Paul
Tierney to dismiss him.
“One of the worst decisions I have ever seen,” said the
usually mild-mannered Carrick. “It was shocking.” His argument was that an
off-balance Martinez only touched Calvert-Lewin’s hair. “It's not aggressive,”
he said. “There's no jolt. There's no tug. There's no sudden movement.”
He is considering appealing Martinez’s dismissal. If it
fails, a ban takes in clashes with Chelsea, Brentford and Liverpool, with the
possibility Harry Maguire will also be suspended for the trip to Stamford
Bridge. Feeling himself unfortunate, Martinez walked off shrugging in surprise.
“I was not happy about the red card because we were by far the better team,” said Farke. “I wouldn’t say it was a key moment in our favour.” It galvanised Manchester United, he thought. But Leeds prevailed. “We work hard to get rid of that old narrative that Leeds are falling apart,” said Farke. It is a familiar chant, to the tune of Joy Division. But this, for Leeds, was joyous and could keep them in the division.
