Leeds turn the screw on Spurs as Daniel Farke finds blueprint for Premier League survival — Independent 1/5/26
Leeds United 3-1 Burnley: Anton Stach, Noah Okafor and Dominic Calvert-Lewin scored the goals that all but secured Leeds’ Premier League place next season
Richard Jolly at Elland Road
The day after one promotion specialist of a manager
departed, his survival mission ending in failure, another celebrated the
greatest achievement of his career. Scott Parker is gone, but Daniel Farke has
confounded many a doubter.
A three-time winner of the Championship has kept Leeds up
with three games to go. And if it is not a mathematical certainly, no team has
ever gone down with 43 points in a 38-game Premier League season. The choruses
of “we are staying up” felt the safest of predictions.
Farke restricted himself to saying: “Forty-three points is
good.” But this has been a triumph of him and of recruitment. It felt fitting
that three summer signings scored for Leeds. Anton Stach and Noah Okafor
arrived for £17m apiece, Dominic Calvert-Lewin on a free transfer that may
render him the signing of the season. Burnley, whose demotion can be traced in
part to their missteps in the transfer market, were duly condemned to a fifth
consecutive defeat.
It leaves Leeds nine points ahead of Tottenham. This has
been a surge to safety. “To deliver in such a pressure period from four Premier
League games, 10 points,” marvelled Farke. “This is a sign if you deliver in
the crunch time.” The catalytic result may have been beating Manchester United
at Old Trafford. Leeds always had the insurance policy of home matches against
Wolves and Burnley. They beat both, and emphatically.
Much like their manager, they have answered questions about
their suitability for the top flight. When Leeds only scored one goal in their
first four games, there was a theory they lacked sufficient firepower. Yet now
they have 47 goals, as many as Aston Villa.
Perhaps paradoxically, they have become more potent after
swapping to what is nominally a more defensive system. Farke’s preferred
formation remains 4-2-3-1 but, if it looked like Leeds had overloaded on
defenders in their summer buying, it was always with the thought they might
play a back five. The turning point in their campaign came with Farke’s switch
of system mid-match against Manchester City in November. Since the start of
December, they have only lost four of their last 22 league games; only the Manchester
teams and Bournemouth have been beaten fewer times.
“What we have done so far is outstanding,” said Farke. Leeds
have had tactical nous, a side whose physicality was an illustration they
learned the lessons of previous promoted teams who got outmuscled, and an asset
in their atmosphere. They are specialists under the lights, with an excellent
record in evening games. Elland Road delivered on another rousing occasion.
Undaunted by FA Cup semi-final defeat, Leeds looked a side
intent on grasping their opportunity. They soon struck.
After Calvert-Lewin, Stach arguably ranks as the best
signing Leeds made this season. The German illustrated why, driving in a
25-yard shot. “He is a bit weird and a crazy guy and he can be sleepy and
cheeky but he delivers quality performances from the first day,” smiled Farke.
A powerhouse of a midfielder with the ball-striking ability of a craftsman,
Stach has been a bargain.
But his eighth-minute opener was an indication, too, of why
Burnley are going down. In the opening 10 minutes of league games this season,
they have conceded 10 goals and scored none. On this occasion, they at least
had the mitigating factor that Parker had left the day before the game, Mike
Jackson was plunged into caretaker charge and Burnley began looking
dishevelled. “It has been a big shock with Scott leaving,” said Jackson.
His side regrouped only to concede twice more at the start
of the second half. Okafor swept in a volley from Jayden Bogle’s cross. It was
Okafor’s sixth league goal in seven appearances. Signed from AC Milan, the
Swiss has delivered in the run-in. But it was a move started and then garnished
by Calvert-Lewin, with a lovely backheel to find Bogle.
The centre-forward got his goal with a simpler touch,
providing the close-range finish after Ao Tanaka’s low drive from parried by
Dubravka. It was his 12th Premier League goal of the season to support Farke’s
decision to make him his main top striking target last summer; for
Calvert-Lewin, who rejected Champions League football with Bayer Leverkusen,
this has been a reward for signing for Leeds. “We had smart and sustainable
recruitment,” Farke added.
Loum Tchouna was to hook in a consolation goal for Burnley.
He was a fourth summer signing to strike, but Leeds’ recruitment was both
better than Burnley’s and more coherent as their paths diverged. They were
promoted together with 100 points apiece but Leeds have more than double
Burnley’s haul in the Premier League.
Whereas Elland Road was full and bouncing here, when
Burnley’s fate was sealed last week, Turf Moor was emptying. There is already a
vacancy in the dugout. Parker’s departure on Thursday may have only
fast-tracked the inevitable.
Now Burnley have to work out what, and who, they want. There
has been no contact yet with Steven Gerrard or Craig Bellamy, two obvious
candidates, though their former assistant manager is likely to want to stay
with Wales anyway. Rewind a year and Leeds faced a choice. There were
suggestions that they should dismiss Farke, that he was hired to win promotion
and incapable of keeping a team up. But he has, and how.