Daniel Farke earns Leeds United's first'since records began' as league leader. - Flashfootballnews
Home » Daniel Farke earns Leeds United’s first’since records began’ as league leader.
Daniel Farke

Daniel Farke earns Leeds United’s first’since records began’ as league leader.

Daniel Farke’s style of play is difficult to pin down, but the German has already accomplished something that Jesse Marsch and Marcelo Bielsa were unable to do following last weekend’s Championship triumph over Plymouth Argyle.

daniel farke

Farke, unlike his Elland Road predecessors, is not commonly regarded as a high-pressing coach; even less so, as some have said. In fact, in an era when the footballing jargon strives to categorise coaches and players into precise categories and descriptors – long-ball, park-the-bus, heavy-metal-football, and so on – Farke‘s approach does not fit into any of these categories.

Despite this, Leeds are now the most effective pressing side in the Championship, at least in terms of goal scoring and opportunity creation. Last Saturday, the Whites scored twice after giving over possession in the opposition’s defensive third, capitalising immediately. Those who remember Jesse Marsch‘s 11 months in charge at Elland Road will recall the American’s propensity for winning the ball back high up the pitch in order to produce good-quality efforts while reducing the distance required to transfer the ball to the opponent’s goal. However, Marsch discovered that his team was ill-equipped to carry out this specific approach and suffered as a result.

elland road takeover

Farke, on the other hand, has Leeds clicking out of possession despite being in a lower tier. According to sports data collection experts Opta, Leeds‘ press is the league’s third-most stifling, allowing opponents the third-fewest passes on average before white shirts seek to regain the ball. As a result, United has the most shot-ending high turnovers in the league, with 33. This indicates that Leeds is winning the ball ‘in open play within forty metres of the opponent’s goal’ and shooting more than any other side in the second division.

But what good are shots if they don’t result in goals? Leeds are also joint-top of the Championship standings in terms of goal-ending high turnovers, with five each, alongside Sunderland and West Bromwich Albion. Last Saturday, Glen Kamara’s pushing of Kaine Kesler-Hayden on the edge of the Plymouth box directly contributed to the Argyle full-back’s miscued clearance arriving at the thankful feet of Daniel James 18 yards from goal. Crysencio Summerville‘s successful pressure on Julio Pleguezuelo later in the half set up compatriot Joel Piroe for his sixth goal of the season and Leeds’ fifth goal-ending high turnover of the season.

elland road

As a result, Leeds became only the second Championship team this season to score two goals from high turnovers in the same game, the other being Sunderland’s 5-0 win over Southampton. Perhaps more notably given Marsch‘s tenure and that of the man he replaced, Marcelo Bielsa, whose high-energy football was championed en route to promotion and a ninth-place Premier League finish, Leeds’ two high turnover goals against the Pilgrims were the first time the Whites had scored twice in the same game since record collection of this particular metric began in 2014/15.

While Farke has accomplished something that neither Marsch nor Bielsa were able to accomplish with their respective teams, he has yet to match their achievements of, in the Argentine’s case, gaining promotion or retaining the team in the Premier League. The latter, which he was unable to achieve twice with Norwich City, remained a source of concern for the 47-year-old when he met with media on July 4 at his Elland Road unveiling, yearning for another chance at top flight management in England.

farke and players

Since the German’s arrival, a lot has changed, including people at Elland Road, but the manager has been able to put entertaining – and winning – back on the menu. At its best, Bielsa’s football was a show for the neutral, anchored by relentless running, a suffocating man-to-man pressing structure, and a never-say-die approach to falling behind. Marsch, while not a huge hit, did preside over some of the more bizarre meetings in recent memory, as well as a magnificent escape that you couldn’t take your eyes off. He, too, was proud of his team’s ability to run itself into the ground. Marsch-ball sputtered and threatened to catch fire, but never did, whereas Bielsa-ball functioned until it didn’t. Farke-ball is similar in some ways but significantly different in others.

Crucially, the manager has restored that crucial winning component to Leeds‘ style of play. Even if Leeds‘ two goals at the weekend were the essence of gegenpressing, his approach can’t be summed up in a single term, but with nine wins in 16 league games, it’s undeniable that whatever you name it, it works.

More Reading

Post navigation

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

As ‘agreement nears’ over important player; Leeds United’starts talks’ with target

After a Boxing Day snub, a Leeds United loanee receives an update

Blackburn Rovers make a loan approach for Leeds United’s star; Boxing Day rivals are also interested in signing the player