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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Tim de Lisle

Cardiff 2-2 Leeds: FA Cup third round – as it happened

Sonny Perkins celebrates in front of the away fans after his late leveller for Leeds.
Sonny Perkins celebrates in front of the away fans after his late leveller for Leeds. Photograph: Kieran McManus/REX/Shutterstock

Ben Fisher's match report

That’s it from me – thanks for reading. A breathless cup-tie is kept alive by Sonny Perkins – good enough to get his name in lights, but still new enough to be mis-spelt by his own club.

And the prize for the winner will be ...

A trip to Boreham Wood or Accrington!

The draw is in the capable hands of John Brewin.

This game was so exciting, it prompted an email from Mary Waltz that was not to do with Everton. “It is true,” she says, “that PL teams don’t take the FA Cup fixtures as seriously as they used to and that is a shame. Watching Cardiff trying to hang on, saving a pen, is high drama. Waiting to see who Wrexham draws for the next round is a hoot as well.” Ah yes, Wrexham, now twinned with Beverly Hills. The draw, by the way, is due any minute.

The Cup, the gift that keeps on giving. Cardiff were clinical in the first half, but had little to offer in the second. They ended up allowing Leeds something like 26 shots to their own five. Leeds were bright early on, then dim, then spirited, and finally just good enough. A round of applause for Jesse Marsch, who brought Rodrigo on just in time to save the game, and showed faith in his teenagers that was repaid by that last-ditch equaliser from Sonny Perkins. He will now reap the headlines that his first name is made for.

Updated

FULL TIME! Cardiff 2-2 Leeds

It’s all over! A classic cup-tie, a hard-fought draw with extra drama, and now they’ll do it all again at Elland Road, which hasn’t staged an FA Cup game for donkey’s years.

90+4 min Heartbreak for Cardiff, but it was a lovely piece of opportunism from Sonny Perkins, seeing that a shot was heading straight for the keeper and nipping into flick it into the corner.

GOAL! Cardiff 2-2 Leeds (Perkins 90+3)

The drama! And it’s a teenager who does the business.

Sonny Perkins of Leeds United scores the team's second goal.
Sonny Perkins of Leeds United scores the team's second goal. Photograph: Michael Steele/Getty Images

Updated

90 min Five added minutes, and Cardiff escape at last to win a free kick at the other end.

89 min Two more subs for Cardiff – Ralls and Ng for Harris and Oto, whose goal remains the difference between the sides.

87 min Big chance! For Leeds, as Rodrigo sprints onto a through ball and cuts back for Joseph, who can’t get his shot on target.

83 min So Cardiff have a big boost but they have to see out the last ten minutes with ten men. It won’t make a great difference to their formation, which just goes from 4-5-1 to 4-4-1. But they may have to remember how to keep the ball, something they have barely done in this half.

PENALTY SAVED!

Jak Alnwick, you beauty. Rodrigo hits it hard but at a very saveable height, and Alnwick, at full stretch, bats it away.

Jak Alnwick of Cardiff City saves a penalty taken by Rodrigo of Leeds United.
Jak Alnwick of Cardiff City saves a penalty taken by Rodrigo of Leeds United. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

Updated

PENALTY to Leeds!

And a red card – for Joel Bagan, who punches the ball off the line and tries to make it look like a header.

Joel Bagan of Cardiff City handles the ball leading to a penalty.
Joel Bagan of Cardiff City handles the ball leading to a penalty. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

Updated

77 min Two more subs for Cardiff. Off go Sawyers and Philogene, scorer of the opening goal; on come Wintle and O’Dowda. “More recognisable-looking Cardiff team,” says Clive Tyldesley. “Wintle takes the armband.”

74 min Leeds still have Jack Harrison up their sleeve, but the card Jesse Marsch feels like playing is a wilder one: Mateo Joseph, on for Joe Gelhardt. He’s part Spanish, part English, and only 19. Either Marsch rates him very highly, or he’s not as bothered about an upset as he sounded before the game.

72 min Can Cardiff cling on? The heart says yes, the head begs to differ. Another spell of pressure leads to a chance for Greenwood, who blasts over from ten yards.

69 min Just before the goal, there was a sub for Cardiff: Ollie Tanner on for Isaak Davies, who put in a shift as the lone striker. Tanner’s role could be even more lonesome as it’s all Leeds now.

Updated

66 min The short corner was well worked, going sideways rather than back and leaving the supporting player, Sam Greenwood, with time to line up his chip. Rodrigo did what Gnonto couldn’t in the first half, getting between the defenders and making sure he headed the ball down. So we now have the scoreline from 2002, but this time the momentum is with Leeds.

Updated

GOAL! Cardiff 2-1 Leeds (Rodrigo 65)

A short corner and, of all things, a proper header!

Leeds United forward Rodrigo Moreno (19) scores a goal
Leeds United forward Rodrigo Moreno (19) scores a goal. Photograph: Simon Davies/ProSports/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

62 min Chance! Leeds have their umpteenth corner and Struijk gets a free header that he can only glance past the post.

Updated

60 min Leeds have been “lifeless,” Ally McCoist reckons. Toothless, for sure. Here comes the subs: Rodrigo for Summerville, Wober for Gyabi, and Drameh for Kristensen.

55 min Leeds threaten down the left, with Summerville, but Tom Sang gets his tackles just right, as he needs to after picking up an early yellow. Marsch seem to be preparing three subs.

51 min Cardiff, so purposeful when they do get forward, win a corner on the right, and then win the header as Curtis Nelson nods back across the goalmouth. What have you got, Jesse?

51 min A glimmer for Leeds as Joe Gelhardt gets a flick on the end of a cross and Jak Alnwick finally has to make a save. It’s a comfortable one, the kind that allows a keeper to sink to the floor and waste a bit of time.

Updated

49 min Leeds are getting plenty of possession again, but possibly not enjoying it as they struggle to find any kind of cutting edge. Get Rodrigo on!

46 min Leeds get the second half under way. No subs yet, though Max Wober has been seen going through a serious warm-up. As Clive Tyldesley points out, there are swathes of empty seats around the ground, which seems a hell of a shame.

HALF-TIME! Cardiff 2-0 Leeds

Welcome to the FA Cup, Mr Marsch. Leeds have had two-thirds of the possession but none of the shots on target. Cardiff have been clinical – amazingly so for a team who seldom trouble the scorers in the Championship – and they deserve their lead. Leeds do tend to show resilience, so this isn’t over yet, but Marsch surely needs to bring on Rodrigo and Harrison soon. Time for a cup of tea.

45 min Cardiff get upfield again and Oto, hemmed in on the left wing, delights the crowd by using a rabona to get out of jail. There will be three added minutes.

41 min Jak Alnwick, in goal for Cardiff, hasn’t played for months, but when he finds himself in a one-on-one he does everything right, racing out to clear. And then, as a cross is whipped in, he plays a good decisive punch.

39 min The game settles into a pattern again – a much more even one than before, as Cardiff, ten feet taller now, fancy their chances of adding a third on the counter. Leeds have a good chance from a corner but the header, from Gnonto, is wayward.

“Nice to experience your mbm for first time,” says Jeff Sachs. “Am watching snooker masters, Murphy vs. Robertson.... while reading mbm..... snooker seems more exciting right now.” This, you’ll gather, was written before the goals.

Updated

32 min This is a beauty. After some build-up on the right, Andy Rinomhota floats a gorgeous left-footed chip over the back line. Sheyi Ojo, clean through after a simple angled run, takes it effortlessly on his chest and slams it into the top of the net with his right. It’s the kind of FA Cup goal you know you’ll be seeing a lot more of.

Updated

GOAL!! Cardiff 2-0 Leeds (Ojo 31)

Another one!

Sheyi Ojo of Cardiff City scores.
Sheyi Ojo of Cardiff City scores. Photograph: Michael Steele/Getty Images

Updated

29 min Leeds react to this setback by getting two yellow cards. Struijk’s is for a foul, Gnonto’s for a dive. “Leeds, Leeds falling apart again,” sing the home fans, to a well-known tune from Joy Division.

25 min And it did come from a slip at the back. Pascal Struijk seemed unaware that Mark Harris was snapping at his heels. Harris’s shot was saved by Joel Robles but the ball stayed alive, Cardiff had enough people in the box to win it and Jadon Philogene slotted it away very calmly. That is the definition of “against the run of play”.

Updated

GOAL! Cardiff 1-0 Leeds (Philogene 24)

Cardiff go into an unlikely lead!

Jaden Philogene of Cardiff City scores the first goal .
Jaden Philogene of Cardiff City scores the first goal . Photograph: Michael Steele/Getty Images
Jaden Philogene of Cardiff City celebrates after he scores the opening goal.
Jaden Philogene of Cardiff City celebrates after he scores the opening goal. Photograph: Gareth Everett/Huw Evans/REX/Shutterstock

Updated

20 min Leeds have some possession before a slip-up at the back gives Cardiff a glimmer. That might be their best hope. Whenever there’s a ball to be won, Leeds have about four men around it to Cardiff’s two. Summerville, moving better now, has a chance in the inside-left channel but he curls it over.

16 min Cardiff’s best moment since that early corner as some quick passing on the left sends Sheyi Ojo away. He thinks he’s won a corner, but the ref is having none of it.

14 min Cardiff, ITV informs me, are the lowest-scoring team in the Championship. Leeds are certainly getting into the area with the greatest of ease. They’re not yet making the pressure tell but there’s a lovely jinking run from Gyabi, dribbling with both feet at once before having his shot blocked.

12 min Leeds win a corner, then another, but nothing comes of either one.

9 min It’s raining hard, and that has something to do with the first yellow card of the afternoon. Tom Sang of Cardiff dives in for a water-sliding tackle on Summerville and wins the ball but gets a lot of the man too. Summerville stays down for a while, then walks gingerly off.

8 min Leeds are back on top, with Crysencio Summerville looking sharp. Apologies in advance for all the typos I will inflict on him today.

5 min Cardiff finally manage to get out of their own third. Curtis Nelson does some good chasing to win a corner, but nobody can get a touch on it.

We have an email. “Never mind the benches!” says Jeremy Boyce. “Hi Tim, Happy New Year.” And to you. “As I say, and to paraphrase the Pistols’ debut album title... Never mind the Benches, It’s the Supporters! Both sets are obviously off their trolleys and there’ll be a cracking ‘atmosphere’’.

“I’m a simple country lad (Shrewsbury) and have had the pleasure of visiting Ninian Park back in the day for an away Mighty Shrews fixture where we were serenaded with incessant Sheepsha**er tributes. As we said at the time, they should know. But also a die-hard NotSoNastyAsTheyUsedToBeLeeds fan (blame my parents/grandparents) marching on together with the rest of them and generally trampling on anyone else’s sensible parts who gets in the way.

“My forecast ? Can’t see it being goal-less. A potentially fun 2-3 on the pitch, much more to appreciate from the terraces. Hope they’ve got enough security on duty...”

3 min It’s all been Leeds so far and the first attempt on goal comes from Darko Gyabi, ex-Man City, who whips a right-footed shot just wide.

Updated

The players are in the tunnel, wearing kits that are a traditionalist’s dream. All blue plays all white. Nothing against funky colours, but I’m still recovering from going to Old Trafford the other night and finding that Bournemouth had come as a box of violet creams.

Updated

Jesse Marsch is on ITV, speaking from a dense thicket of Emirates branding. “I’m excited,” he says. “Cup matches carry a lot of weight and the FA Cup has such a historic presence. We also know as a club we haven’t advanced past this round in a few years [five, actually] and we’re totally focused on coming here and fighting for everything. We know our fan base has a love of this tournament, and the club has history in it.”

Marsch has made seven changes, but insists it’s not rotation. “A lot of the guys aren’t ready to play,” he says, “so even if this was a league match our line-up would be pretty similar.” He mentions Max Wober, the centre-back Leeds have just signed from RB Salzburg for a reported £11m, and says he’ll probably come off the bench. Anyone getting the feeling that this game could be all about the subs?

Updated

A tale of two benches

So, plenty of changes from both managers. Jesse Marsch puts his two biggest threats, Rodrigo and Harrison, on the bench, although that means another start for the exciting Wilfried Gnonto, who should get the travelling fans going.

Mark Hudson’s bench is interesting in a different way: he gives a first taste of a senior squad to two teenagers, Morgan Wigley, a striker for the Under-18s, and Lewys Benjamin, a goalie who seems to be only 16. Benjamin is almost beyond the reach of Google, though there is this story about him signing for the Under-9s in 2015. If the caption is accurate, he’s the tall kid in the picture, second from the right. Both teens are surely an FA Cup hero waiting to happen.

Updated

Team sheet: Leeds

Team sheet: Cardiff

Updated

Preamble: look back in rancour

Afternoon everyone and welcome to an FA Cup tie that is dripping with history. The last time Cardiff entertained Leeds in the FA Cup, 21 years ago this week, the game was so rivetingly rancorous that it ended up getting its own Wikipedia page.

Leeds were top of the table – yes, the Premier League table – while Cardiff were 10th in the third tier. Leeds had Rio Ferdinand, Alan Smith, Mark Viduka and Robbie Fowler, but Cardiff had Ninian Park. To describe it as a bearpit would be to risk a lawsuit from the bears.

Sure enough, Leeds lost. The shock sent them into a slump (no league wins for two months, according to my omniscient colleague Rob Smyth) and the slump turned into a spiral. Five and a half years later, the team in the third tier was them.

It is, of course, a very different Leeds who make the trip to Wales today. Their bright-eyed American manager, Jesse Marsch, brings so little baggage that he has never even been in charge for an FA Cup match. And Ninian Park has given way to the less evocative Cardiff City Stadium. But history does have a habit of hanging around. The two sides have met 22 times since that toxic day in 2002 and the score is 14-3 to Cardiff.

They may be languishing near the bottom of the Championship, but Cardiff are above Blackpool, who demolished Nottingham Forest yesterday. And what’s a 26-place gulf between enemies? If Cardiff can cope with Leeds’ hyperactivity, this could be a classic.

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