Showing posts with label leeds united. Show all posts
Showing posts with label leeds united. Show all posts

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Man Utd 0 - 1 Leeds United

League One leaders Leeds United caused the biggest shock of the FA Cup third round by beating Manchester United 1-0 at Old Trafford.

Jermaine Beckford's winner gave League One leaders Leeds a famous FA Cup victory over their fierce rivals Manchester United in a thrilling tie at Old Trafford.

Forty-two league places separate the two clubs following the Yorkshire club's dramatic fall from grace during the last decade but Simon Grayson's side showed the rate of their recent revival with a memorable triumph.

Man Utd had never before lost in the third round of the Cup - or been knocked out of it by a lower-division side - during Sir Alex Ferguson's 23-year reign as manager - but they began 2010 on the wrong end of their biggest upset in this competition since they were dumped out by Bournemouth in 1984.

It was a fully-deserved win for Leeds too, who were full of endeavour coming forward before Beckford outpaced the Man Utd defence to score and, just as importantly, defended as if their lives depended on it afterwards.

Grayson's men came into the game unbeaten in 15 games and having lost only twice all season but they were still expected to be brushed aside by the Premier League side, who themselves have found form since their defensive injury crisis abated.

True, Ferguson made seven changes to the side that thumped Wigan earlier in the week, but he kept Dimitar Berbatov and Wayne Rooney together up front and Man Utd should have had far too much fire-power for the visitors to handle.

Instead, roared on by 9,000 fanatical supporters, Leeds set about by first frustrating the hosts and then taking the game to them.

Man Utd had most of the early possession but Leeds were not panicking when they did get the ball, and stunned the home crowd when they took the lead after 19 minutes.

Beckford escaped Wes Brown to latch onto Johnny Howson's superb lofted pass and, although his first touch was poor, he recovered to coolly slide the ball past Tomas Kuszczak and into the bottom corner of the net.

It was the kind of finish which showed why Beckford is one of the most sought-after strikers outside the top-flight and might mean Newcastle have to spend a little more than they hoped if they are to prise him away from Elland Road in the transfer window.

It almost got even better for Leeds two minutes later when the impressive Howson broke forward down the right and sent over an inviting cross that Luciano Becchio headed wide.

Only then did Man Utd come forward with intent and they came agonisingly close to levelling when Berbatov released Rooney down the right. The England striker made for goal and clipped his shot over keeper Casper Ankergren but Jason Crowe got back superbly to hack the ball off the line.

Rooney and Danny Welbeck both tried their luck with curling shots from the edge of the box that were both just off target and Jonny Evans headed wide after Ankergren flapped at a corner but otherwise the home side were unable to break down Leeds' determined defence.

The game continued in the same vein after the break, with Man Utd pressing but struggling to create clear-cut chances and Ankergren proving a reliable last line of defence when the home side did get a sight of goal.

He saved brilliantly from Welbeck but otherwise they failed to really threaten an equaliser until the final half-hour.

By then, Antonio Valencia and Ryan Giggs were off the bench - soon to be joined by Michael Owen - and at last Man Utd looked dangerous, only to be thwarted by some dreadful finishing.

Owen miscued with the goal gaping after Valencia teed him up and Rooney was also wildly off target when the ball fell to him in the box.

Leeds were not just defending either, and could have extended their lead before the end when Beckford fired wide after running through and substitute Robert Snodgrass smashed a rasping free-kick against the bar.

In the end, however, one goal was enough to send Leeds through to round four and show why Grayson is rated one the most promising young managers in the game.

To paraphrase Alexander Pope; Hope does spring eternal.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Leeds vs Manchester United

Sourced from here:

Tomorrow, the most eye-catching tie in the third round of the FA Cup will see old enemies Manchester United and Leeds United go head to head for the first time in nearly six years.

Back then, in February 2004, Leeds earned a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford thanks to a goal from Alan Smith — but the club was falling apart at the seams. A sustained bout of extravagant spending on expensive, high-earning players such as Robbie Keane, Rio Ferdinand, Mark Viduka and Olivier Dacourt had taken them to the semi-finals of the Champions League (in 2001), but also created a financial timebomb that was in the midst of exploding.

http://cdn.bleacherreport.com/images_root/slideshows/160/slideshow_16070/display_image.jpgpix from here.

Leeds chairman Peter Ridsdale and manager David O’Leary had been gambling money they didn’t have in an over-ambitious attempt to become regular Champions League contestants and thereby earn back the money they had already spent. When those heady levels of success proved elusive, they were stuck with a debt mountain that nobody was in a position to pay off.

Players were sold in a desperate attempt to balance the books, leaving an inexperienced squad with insufficient quality to compete in the Premier League, never mind on the European stage. With Ridsdale, O’Leary and their superstar signings long since departed, Leeds were relegated in May 2004. But the financial scars remained and they continued to spend beyond their means. Three years later, they were relegated again, placed into administration and very nearly ceased to exist.

Now, it seems Leeds are making strides on the long road back to regaining the top-flight status they have enjoyed for the vast majority of their history. With their debts finally paid off (or waived), they’re currently eight points clear at the top of League One, promotion to the second tier looking almost certain. But there’s still a long way to go before former glories are restored, if they ever are.

Leeds’ descent and fall was so spectacular that you’d expect it to serve as a cautionary example for other ambitious clubs — a kind of textbook on how not to run a Premier League football club. But it hasn’t. Their tale of woe is far from solitary, and it seems inevitable that other clubs will continue to follow them all too eagerly down the fast-lane motorway to ruin.

Southampton, for example, spent 27 consecutive seasons in the top flight before getting too big for their boots, deciding they could become a top-six club and spending accordingly. One bad season was enough to relegate them in 2005, a year after Leeds, and they’re now in the middle reaches of League One after narrowly fighting off extinction in the summer.

A few miles along the south coast, Portsmouth’s situation looks even more perilous. Years of unsustainable investment brought the short-term glory of winning the FA Cup in 2008 but the long-term damage of massive debts and no way of paying them.

Having been forced to sell all their best players (Peter Crouch, Jermain Defoe, Glen Johnson and Nico Kranjcar, to name but four), Pompey are currently firmly rooted to bottom place in the Premier League, forbidden from conducting any transfers until debts from previous purchases are paid off, have just failed to pay their players on time for the third time in four months, and have been given a winding-up order over unpaid tax bills. Did they learn nothing from Leeds?

West Ham will be looking forward to tomorrow’s cup tie with Arsenal as an opportunity to cause an upset, but they’re not too far behind Portsmouth on the road to oblivion. The story is familiar –—over-investment in average players (£80,000 (RM440,000) per week for Lucas Neill?!), unsustainable spending, then panic selling of key assets, leading to an uncompetitive squad and the threat of relegation. If West Ham are relegated at the end of the season, they could become another Leeds.

These financial implosions will continue to unfold as long as the Premier League remains the unregulated free-market scramble for success that it is today. With no central controls on spending, clubs are left to make their own decisions about how and where they invest, leaving directors and managers free to chase their unrealistic ambitions and bring their clubs to the verge of meltdown.

When they watch Leeds taking on the champions at Old Trafford tomorrow, everybody connected with a professional football club in England should realise how far and how easily the mighty can fall if financial mismanagement is allowed to take control. They should see a club that was once regarded as one of the game’s powerhouses now reduced to enjoying an occasional day in the sun for a cup tie that has little meaning for their opponents. They should understand that splurging vast sums of borrowed money in the pursuit of success is not the wisest strategy. They should, but they won’t.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Lessons from The Damned United

The movie, The Damned United which is the core matter for the preceding post contains some principles that may be extracted for business leadership and, of late and, possibly more importantly, for political leadership.

The protagonist, Brian Clough (played most excellently by Michael Sheen) was an ascerbic and caustic maverick with a gigantic ego. His 44-day saga as manager of the then-English First Division League Champions, Leeds United offers interesting lessons.

First, keep your most loyal man beside you. Clough ditched his long-time deputy, Peter Taylor in a fit of hubris. Taylor is the type of deputy every mercurial leader needs. While Clough went on his visonary exploits, he needed Taylor to put the nuts and bolts together. Taylor was the talent-spotter. Taylor was the one players went to after another tempestous outburst by Clough. Taylor was the man who patched the team together. Every leader needs a deputy like Taylor. Needless to say, without Taylor's soft skills, Clough was quickly left in an alienated position in Leeds United.

Second, build the team spirit. The first time Clough met with the highly-decorated Leeds United team he antagonised them by telling them that they won their trophies by cheating. This is hardly the way to get a team spirit going.

Third, taking over a team or organisation with a successful past track record requires patience. The new leader can never emulate nor imitate his predescessor. But, that does not mean that the new leader should go on an iconoclastic binge of destroying the predescessor's reputation or trivialise his record. Instead, he needs to patiently deconstruct and, then, reconstruct. This is a process that takes time.

Fourth, the leader who ignores the above principles is not lost. He or she can move on to achieve great things again through another club or organisation.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Damned United



When I was in Form One there was only one football hero for me. It was Norman Hunter. The team was Leeds United. Playing at left-back, Norman Hunter was a certainty to put a snarling stop to any flanking attacks down the left side of the pitch. And, once the ball was won, Hunter used his trusty left foot to lay on inch-perfect passes back to the centre of the pitch. He was my role model. It was 1975. Leeds were still at their peak. In that same year, Leeds reached the European Cup Final playing a dominant match against Bayern Munich. But, in that foggy day, Bayern prevailed. It was a heartbreaking match.

The year before that, 1974, was in many ways a pivotal year. Don Revie, the legendary Leeds manager who had nurtured a Second Division team from 1961 to become League Champions in the 1968/69 season and again in the 1973/74 season with many silverware in a trot was tapped by the English FA to replace Sir Alf Ramsey as England manager. Regrettably, Revie never repeated his success at the international stage, resigning as England manager in 1977 under controversial circumstances to a lucrative stint as manager for the UAE team.

David Peace, wrote a historical fiction about one key episode for Leeds United in 1974. It was about the highly emotional and controversial replacement for Don Revie. That replacement manager was Brian Clough. He was manager of Leeds United for only 44 days. It was a stormy 44 days.

Peace's book was made into a movie called The Damned United.



The movie is about the great friendship and partnership between Brian Clough and Peter Taylor. This great partnership created the great Nottingham Forest team that won back-to-back European Cup victories in the 1980s. But, to me, the movie is a nostalgic period piece that transports me back to the 1970s, when my boyhood footballing hero, Norman Hunter and his team mates, Billy Bremner, John Giles, Paul Madeley, Allan Clarke, Terry Cooper, Jack Charlton, Eddie Gray, Peter Lorimer, Paul Reaney, Trevor Cherry and, later on, Terry Yorath, Gordon McQueen, Joe Jordan, David Harvey, Duncan McKenzie and the rest of them dominated the English First Division.

http://www.fhcorporate.com/imag/norman%20hunter.gifNorman Hunter pix from here.

The movie also speaks of the terrible animosity between Revie and Clough which begged the question as to why, for the life of me, the Leeds United board determined that Clough was a logical successor to the Don. The following Youtube clip is revealing of the hostility between the two gentlemen. Until today, Leeds United partisans believe that Clough planted himself as a Trojan Horse to sow the seeds of the eventual destruction of the great Revie team.



With the great character actor, Michael Sheen (he was Tony Blair in The Queen), playing the protagonist Clough, and ably supported by a great cast, The Damned United is a must-watch for fans of football and, others.

For me, it is well and truly a nostalgic trip. Proof absolute that the team that now dominates the League One, the old Third Division has the necessary pedigree to bring the historic Elland Road Stadium back to the glory of the English Premier League. It may take a little while longer. But, we'll get there.

Hardcore Leeds United supporters can get a full dose of Leeds United history here.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Alan Smith, wherefore art thou?


A poor haiku in the aftermath of Leeds 0, Doncaster Rovers 1:-

-

Sorrow

Nostalgia

Smudger

leave Newcastle

Leeds is home

Come back

prodigal son

More sorrow!
-
The Leeds gaffer's stoic feelings are better and, certainly more upbeat than my haiku:-
-
Leeds United boss Gary McAllister conceded that his side were below par as they crashed out of the League One playoff final with a dismal 1-0 defeat at the hands of Doncaster Rovers. James Hayter was the man that fired Rovers into the Championship, with their goalkeeper, former Leeds United stopper Neil Sullivan rarely tested and McAllister moved quickly to accept that his side had been second best.
-
Speaking to skysports.com he said:“We huffed and puffed but lost a poor goal at a set-piece. We've defended set-pieces better than that in the past. “Doncaster played well, we knew they'd come and pass the ball. We huffed and puffed but our quality wasn't there today. “We didn't make Sully make a save today. There were a few near bets where we got in the box but our final ball in wasn't good enough.”He finished with the most important bit for Leeds fans:“The players will come back next season ready for it, with the stomach for it.”

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Leeds United




It was during their 1974/75 season in the English 1st Division that I became a supporter of Leeds United. It was my classmate Hock Chai (a really good midfielder and occasional center-forward in school) that got me hooked on Leeds. I haven't caught up with Hock Chai for many years. When I do, I will ask him if he's still a Leeds fan. I still am, despite their recent travails.
-
Not that I'm in a philosophical mood, but can being a supporter or fan of a sports club or a sports hero be telling on a person's character? I haven't given the matter much thought. I tend to think that supporting Leeds gives me a primal need to be part of a tribe (in the Elias Canetti-sense of tribal behaviour). But I haven't really examined the psychology of fan-behaviour.
-
Can we learn anything from being fans and supporters (especially hardcore supporters) and, apply it to political affiliations? Or, use it to gain insight into why people quit from political parties that they have been such an integral part of? Or, to explain motives for leaders hopping from one political party to another? I'm just playing around. Firstly, I don't think we can derive any lessons from sports fan behaviour and apply it to politics. Secondly, I have no intention of adding to the boisterous voices and thoughts expressed about the merits, ethics and morality of quitting political parties, shifting alliances, hopping from one political party to another, crossing the parliamentary aisle ... matters which have so dominated Malaysia's media and blogosphere in recent weeks. I don't believe I can contribute to that obssession for the reason that a fast-developing political situation demands what newshounds call a "scoop". The only scoop I do is to scoop the pile of poo that my pets release around my house (though I suspect that many newshounds may feel as I do - when scooping dog poo - as they "sniff" around for scoops in Malaysia's political scene!). So I'll leave it at that.
-
Anyway, Leeds United in the 74/75 season was managed by Don Revie. Revie is revered by Leeds fans for the manner in which he completely reorganised the club and its players. The story is legendary and well-told by Leeds fans and historians in sites like http://www.leedsunited.com/ and, in particular, http://www.mightyleeds.co.uk/. I cannot do better than that. But I do visit those sites often just to re-live the days when, as a young teenager (in an era when "live telecast" was reserved only for major events such as the World Cup Finals, FA Cup Finals and European Cup Finals) I stayed up for the European Cup Final of the 1974/75 season where Leeds played Bayern Munich in foggy conditions and .... lost 0-1 amidst controversial refereeing decisions and bad fan behaviour.
-
The long and short of it is that Leeds United played this 2007/08 season down in, what is called League One. This is the old 3rd Division. Not only that. After suffering the ignominy of relegation from the Premier League and languishing for 2 seasons in the Championship League (old 2nd Division), last season (2006/07) Leeds was relegated to League One and, went into receivership (for which the English FA penalised it with a 15-point deduction).
-
Tonight, Leeds plays Doncaster Rovers at Wembley Stadium in a play-off for promotion from League One to the Championship League. I know, what an underwhelming feeling and oh! so far from the madding crowd and rarefied heights of Top 4 Premier League clubs this is. But despite being in the "gutter" of English football, us Leeds fans can take some measure of comfort for staying the course and, being true to the cause that Leeds is, despite adversity, ridicule and (worst of all) wry sympathies from itinerant Arsenal "supporters".
-
I like Gary McAllister, who is the current manager. Liverpool fans will remember Gary for his scintillating contribution to Liverpool's cup campaigns 2 seasons ago. But, Leeds fans remember him for his spell in Leeds during the 1990s when Leeds won the last League Championship of the old 1st Division in the 1992/93 season (after that the Premier League was formed). His spirit and commitment has brought into the Leeds dressing room a team spirit and zeal that should give them an edge over Doncaster Rovers tonight. Gary was preceded by Dennis Wise (ex-Captain of Chelsea) who really brought a great spirit from the "siege mentality" that he instituted amongst the young Leeds team of today.
-
Unlike the itinerant fans of clubs like Manchester United, Liverpool, Arsenal or Selangor (!!!, I was a hardcore fan in the 1970s when Soh Chin Aun, R. Arumugam, Wong Choon Wah, Mokhtar Dahari and Santokh Singh played), this is the sad life of a Leeds fan. You learn to dig deep into your character and soul (yes! just ask hardcore fans) to seek meaning to sustain your loyalty. That's where History gives all that you are a meaning and, a context, to explain your emotional attachment to a cause that appears to be a "lost cause". The situation may appear to be bleak, the situation may have been bleak some for time now, but, we will draw great spirit and comfort during the long, cold winter of discontent if we have a sense of History.
-
Maybe the political hacks can learn from being football fans after all!