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30 May 2022 12:07:53
Stolen, and pasted, but to me, it explains everything. Sorry it's so long. (Said the vicar) .

This is a very good article by Graham Smyth on Bielsa. 👇🏽👇🏽

Marcelo Bielsa receives fitting Leeds United farewell with lingering anxiety consigned to the past
With Premier League safety secured, Leeds United can finally reflect on Marcelo Bielsa's tenure with a glint in their eye
By Graham Smyth
Saturday, 28th May 2022, 6:00 am

It seemed beyond the comprehension of certain pundits and journalists why Marcelo Bielsa wasn't 'under pressure' at Leeds United until the very end.

They didn't get why he spoke in Spanish and used a member of his staff as a translator. They didn't get why, in his first season in the Premier League, there was no outrage from Whites fans after heavy defeats and why there was no 'plan B' to speak of. They didn't get him. But Leeds fans did.

It is a hard thing to understand and articulate, especially if you don't share the love that he and the supporters had for Leeds United and each other.

He was the man who gave them something to be proud of, football to salivate over and a promotion to write in big, bold lettering in the history books.

He was the man who took mid-table Championship players and transformed them to such an extent that they held down a top 10 position in the Premier League. Bielsa made them running machines who could find each other with a pass without thinking or even, at times, without looking. He made them better, he made them fitter and he made them richer.

For Bielsa, Leeds fans were the ones who gave him and the team a love that was unconditional. Of course it helped that he won so many games in his first season and masterminded so many sparkling performances, but his hope was that people would value performances and play a patient, supportive role like in his romantic notion of English football's days gone by. So when, with the team sinking to a low ebb, the fans stayed with the team, they gave him his wish.
It made no sense, to the neutral observer - if such a thing exists when Leeds United play football - that those in the grounds sang through the disappointment of defeats. But Bielsa and Leeds made complete sense - defiant outsiders against all comers, against it all.

In football everything good comes to an end eventually and the way this love affair reached its conclusion will forever be debated. The team looked lost in their final games under Bielsa and answers to problems he had previously solved suddenly escaped him. Things that had made Leeds so different and so good took on the appearance of millstones dragging them down.
But the collective cry of anguish that greeted his sacking said it all about the Argentine and his West Yorkshire family.
There is no doubt that it wounded Bielsa greatly, as it did the fans, but both were left with memories of a time that didn't have to be understood by outsiders, because it was being lived by Leeds.

The smile on his face when he lifted the Championship trophy was the same smile that greeted well wishers at his Wetherby flat when promotion was secured, young supporters welcoming him to Elland Road on a match day or devotees asking for a selfie in Morrisons.

With them, Bielsa was normal and that made him abnormal in the modern game so the nostalgia for his era will not be restricted to goals and points. For Leeds, for a time, he was perfect. In Leeds he was understood.

Agree3 Disagree0

30 May 2022 14:01:26
I didn’t bother.
Abridged please.

30 May 2022 14:01:48
Brilliant article Brighty,

And without Bielsa none of it would of happened, even people not a fan of the great man needed the tables to turn before criticism was merited, I’ll always maintain without our injuries……well that’s the past.

Hope they invite him back or do something to recognise his achievements.

But I do now recognise Radz incredibly risky, brave decision was proven to be correct. (After all it was HIS business)

Different strategy required now under JM either he finds his own magic formula otherwise we need significant investment, without making Everton’s mistake of spending huge amounts on a number of highly rated ‘individual self centred’ players.

Without a cohesive team genuinely fighting for each other you’re back to fighting for survival.

31 May 2022 08:20:40
Mr Bielsa was so unlucky with injuries to vital players of his squad like you say even in big defeats nobody got is back he was and is leeds united legend anyone say anything elsa about Mr bielsa didn't see him as proper football fans but there enthusiasm remains the same where all fans . ot wigan whites my hope is jesse brings Bielsa ball with 2 at back at all times we had to many ofenceif players.







 

 

 
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