Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Dominic Booth

Leeds United 3-1 Leicester City: Championship – as it happened

Archie Gray celebrates scoring Leeds United's second goal against Leicester City.
Archie Gray celebrates scoring Leeds United's second goal against Leicester City. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images

Right, that’s your lot from me. What a way to begin the weekend. Forget the Premier League, this was the Championship’s finest and it delivered in spades, didn’t it.

Louise Taylor had the pleasure of taking in the action from Elland Road and here’s her match report. Night all!

Rutter gets the Player of the Match award – which is fully warranted in my book. He was excellent. There would have been plenty of Leicester contenders for that prize, had they not completed imploded in the final 10 minutes. Neither Pereira nor Dewsbury-Hall deserved to be on the losing side.

Scenes.

Georginio Rutter says “I don’t have words” and calls it a “crazy game” while congratulating Archie Gray – who is also chatting to Sky Sports – on his goal.

“I can barely hear myself speaking,” says Gray as he looks around at the celebrating fans. “I got a bit lucky with the goal.”

The interviewer then tells him it’s gone down as an own goal. Boo!

The gap at the Championship summit is now just six points and Leeds will believe they can go on to become champions.

Are Leicester, who have bossed the league pretty much all season, in danger of dropping out of the top two? Probably not, but they’ve just lost successive games for the first time since November. The two teams they were beaten by then? Middlesbrough and Leeds? And now? Middlesbrough and Leeds.

Reposting this, for obvious reasons.

FT: Leeds 3-1 Leicester

My goodness. How on earth have Leeds United won that football match by two goals?

They were trailing, they were struggling, Leicester were dominating the second half and should have been out of sight, but missed chances (and wrong call to disallow Patson Daka’s strike) have cost the Championship leaders at Elland Road. A late turnaround means the points are with Leeds. Nine wins in a row for them!

GOAL! Leeds 3-1 Leicester (Bamford, 90 + 4)

The free-kick is in such an inviting spot for Leeds to make it 3-1.

And Daniel James obliges! That was simply too hot to handle for Hermansen, via another deflection it has to be said – it was actually Bamford who got the final touch. Elland Road does not care about that, the place is in raptures right now.

Leeds United’s Daniel James scores his side’s third goal of the game from a deflected free-kick during the Championship match against Leicester City.
Daniel James’ free-kick deflects off Patrick Bamford and Leeds have a third goal. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA
Leeds United forward Patrick Bamford claims the third goal against Leicester City.
Bamford celebrates. Photograph: Simon Davies/ProSports/Shutterstock
Daniel James (obscured) celebrates with his Leeds United teammates after their third goal.
Then is joined by his teammates as the Leeds players celebrate their remarkable comeback. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images

Updated

90 mins + 3: As it stands, the automatic promotion race is wide open.

Leeds want a penalty as Rutter is tripped by Vestergaard, but it’s just a free-kick on the edge of the box and a booking for the Dane.

90 mins: Jaidon Anthony replaces the excellent Summerville.

And then the added time board goes up. Just the five minutes!

Please give us neutrals another 10 minutes of this terrific football match. Leeds fans might disagree, of course.

Summerville is snuffed out by a despairing Leicester defence.

Limbs!

88 mins: Faes screams for a penalty, believing he was held while Dewsbury-Hall was taking that set-piece. The header goes over and Leicester’s frustrations go on.

87 mins: It’s all happening. Roberts is booked for scything down McAteer. A free-kick in a good spot for Leicester.

The TV commentators believe Leeds’ second goal should go down as a Faes own goal. Surely you cannot deny Gray like that.

86 mins: OK, this isn’t over. Far from it.

Leicester have the bit between their teeth, obviously riled by the pure injustice of this scoreline. Pereira and James come to blows after a meaty 50-50.

What a time to score your first professional goal! Archie Gray is still only 17.

This was the leveller from Roberts:

GOAL! Leeds 2-1 Leicester (Gray, 83)

Archie Gray! What a turnaround! Can you believe this?

Gray’s strike takes a huge deflection off Faes, but again it came from Rutter’s invention in the inside-right channel, with the ball eventually worked to the other side, where the teenager will take all the credit.

Archie Gray fires home to give Leeds United the lead during the Championship match against Leicester City.
Archie Gray fires home to give Leeds United the lead. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images
Archie Gray celebrates scoring Leeds United’s second goal against Leicester City.
Gray celebrates. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images

Updated

83 mins: Honestly, though, Leicester should have been streets clear. The Daka disallowed goal. The missed chances from Mavividi and Daka. They should be halfway down the M1 with the three points by now.

Instead …

82 mins: So, as I was saying, about Leeds not having a sniff …

GOAL! Leeds 1-1 Leicester (Roberts, 80)

Oh my goodness, out of nothing! The most unlikely goalscorer too!

Rutter finally comes to life, slaloming beyond a couple of blue shirts and it’s not fully cleared by Leicester … allowed to reach Roberts whose finish is a good one, low and arrowing into the far corner.

Connor Roberts fires home to put Leeds back on level terms against Leicester City.
Connor Roberts fires home to put Leeds back on level terms. Photograph: Varley Picture Agency/Shutterstock

Updated

79 mins: The visitors’ defence in this second half has just been excellent. So fierce in the tackle, so solid in their lines, pressing when needed. Leeds haven’t had a sniff for a long while.

78 mins: Leicester are making their first two changes of the night, as Mavididi and Daka go off, with Cannon and Kasey McAteer coming on.

76 mins: Kamara is beaten in midfield and, chasing back desperately, barges into Fatawu and goes into the referee’s notebook.

74 mins: It’s another chance that’s been gift-wrapped for a Leicester forward, but for the second time in this second half, the opportunity has been criminally wasted. Daka conspires to pass his finish wide when it was far easier to hit the target.

Firpo has gone off for Roberts, by the way.

72 mins: Connor Roberts, he of the Burnley loan, is going to be next on for Leeds.

71 mins: Rutter and Dewsbury-Hall come to blows in the centre circle. Both with their socks rolled down and acting as their team’s prime creator, they are kindred spirits, you feel. They share a knowing smile.

69 mins: Leicester’s defensive shape is immaculate at the moment. But as long as it’s only 1-0, Leeds will believe. Further replays have confirmed that assistant referee error on the Daka goal, by the way. He was NOT offside.

67 mins: Leeds finally draw a save from Hermansen and it’s Bamford, on the swivel, who does it. It’s a simple stop, mind.

66 mins: Virtually nothing has gone Leeds’ way since the resumption, so there are ironic cheers when they get a cheap free-kick. And it gets them going forward, with Summerville closed out twice when trying to guide it home.

64 mins: Messrs Bamford and James are being readied. Not before time, from a Leeds perspective.

Gnonto and Piroe are replaced.

63 mins: My word, that’s a huge miss from Mavididi. He was clean through, 1 v 1. Somehow he’s steered it wide, albeit under pressure from Gray. A let-off for Leeds.

Leicester City's Stephy Mavididi (left) misses the target with his shot as he’s put under pressure by Leed’s Archie Gray.
Leicester City's Stephy Mavididi (left) misses the target with his shot as he’s put under pressure by Leed’s Archie Gray. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

62 mins: Looking back on replays of that Daka goal that was chalked off, and I’m really not sure it should have been. The final touch that played Daka in was off Rutter … no VAR of course.

61 mins: It’s Meslier v Mavididi again and the goalkeeper wins the battle again, this time with a simpler save.

Correction: It was actually Vestergaard who hit the woodwork with that header.

59 mins: Farke HAS to make a change soon, surely?

Leeds have lost whatever control the had of this game. Mavididi is causing mayhem and the midfield is being bossed by Winks and Pereira. As for set-pieces … Leicester are dominating them! Daka thinks he’s made it 2-0 after a header from Justin smacks the post, but the striker was offside. Ooooh.

Patson Daka of Leicester City scores a goal which was later ruled out for offside during the Championship match at Leeds United.
Patson Daka sticks the ball in the net … Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images
Leicester City's Patson Daka reacts after he has a goal ruled out for offside against Leeds.
But he’s denied from adding his name to the scoresheet by an offside flag. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

57 mins: Super save from Meslier!

Mavididi has been threatening to do this all night, collecting it wide left and surging inside into space before hammering a right-footed shot at goal. The Leeds keeper shows strong wrists to beat it away.

56 mins: Daka is OK for now. Leicester are getting a few good look-ins on the counter, with Leeds appearing increasingly open.

55 mins: Not for the first time, Firpo sees the ball nabbed from under his nose. Leeds’ willingness to play expansively with the ball around the back is proving dangerous.

53 mins: Daka looks to have taken a hefty knock there, and Tom Cannon is loosening up in a fluorescent bib on the touchline.

52 mins: Leicester actually look the more physically adept of the two teams. They certainly boast the advantage in terms of height and in midfield, bar Kamara, Leicester look stronger and more athletic than their opponents.

Pereira is now regularly stepping into midfield and using his speed to get away from his markers. Ampadu is booked for clattering Daka.

50 mins: Another Leicester corner almost drops the way of Faes again. But then Leeds win it and break. Rutter shoots over the bar after a rapid run and then a composed cutback by Summerville.

Updated

49 mins: Quick and incisive football from Leicester, with Pereira playing a couple of give-and-gos to split open the Leeds midfield; then Mavididi cuts inside and shoots, but it’s blocked.

47 mins: So much of Leeds’ buildup play has been down their right, with Gray, Gnonto and Rutter all getting involved a lot. Firpo gets it on the opposite side but is robbed by Fatawu who tries to shoot … from 40 yards … it doesn’t go well.

Second half: We’re off again. Neither manager has made a change at the break. More of the same?

Leeds have a bench brimming with stars. So when does Daniel Farke introduce Daniel James, Patrick Bamford or Jaidon Anthony? If it’s not at the start of the second half, it won’t be much long after the hour mark, surely.

Elsewhere in the Championship, which as you know is officially sponsored by WTF scorelines …

Enzo Maresca appeared to get involved in an altercation with the fourth official as the half-time whistle sounded. It looks like he was booked for something, which I’m afraid I didn’t see.

Temper fraying already? About that break …

HT: Leeds 0-1 Leicester

Everyone take a breath. Grab a drink, and a kit-kat, other chocolate bars are available.

A breathless first half comes to a close with Leicester in the ascendancy, but with neither side giving a single inch. Leeds have played some cracking football without really testing Mads Hermansen, while the visitors took their chance through Wout Faes. That’s the difference after 45 minutes.

As it stands, Leicester would be surely en route to the Championship title, while Leeds’ automatic promotion hopes would be dealt a significant blow. BUT – and it’s a big but – you feel there are plenty more twists and turns for us in this contest.

Updated

We’re now into two added minutes. This has been an enthralling watch.

45 mins: Leeds have two players lying on the deck, amid appeals for a free-kick (or two) – which Pawson ignores. Leicester can’t get the right pass away to launch a counterattack and capitalise.

43 mins: Phenomenal stuff from Dewsbury-Hall there, just to glide away from the challenges and take his team up the pitch. Sensational feet.

42 mins: Rutter and Gnonto almost get in each other’s way … in fact it’s very messy from Leeds on the edge of the Leicester box and eventually an offside flag goes up. Farke puffs out his cheeks.

40 mins: The territorial advantage lies with Leeds, who have also had the bulk of possession and have not been without chances in this game. They’ve just lacked that clinical touch in front of goal, as Summerville exemplifies with a wild old shot that flies into the stand.

37 mins: No shots on target for Leeds yet … however, there’s a chance to conjure something up here as they win a corner. It’s tough-tackling stuff from Leicester to defend it, though, with Mavididi taking it clear.

36 mins: Leeds appeared to be building up a head of steam with some nice triangles down their inside-right channel, but Gray overhits his cross in the end.

34 mins: Rutter is looking to set Summerville off and running as Vestergaard, running back towards his own goal, buys a cheap free-kick. The Leeds fans don’t like that.

32 mins: “Where’s your famous atmosphere?” is the taunt from the travelling Leicester fans, who are clearly enjoying the current scoreline and maybe the fact the game has calmed down a touch.

An early contender for pun of the night, courtesy of Peter Oh:

Speaking of the middle of the pitch, any chance that the respective number 8s have locked horns, or at least eyes? [Winks at Kamara.]

30 mins: Leeds are enjoying a rare spell of low-tempo possession, with Leicester happy to sit in for the time being. The home side really do have some great ball-players: Gnonto, Rutter and Kamara are all impressive at the moment.

This is the goal that separates the sides as we approach the half-hour mark.

27 mins: It’s ice-cool from Firpo to chest it back to Meslier under pressure in his own box. Seconds earlier, Meslier hadn’t been so composed under pressure from Daka … he passed it out of play.

It’s becoming a bit stop-start with tackles flying in once more. Dewsbury-Hall is down clutching his ankle.

Updated

26 mins: Rutter was again the architect for Leeds in creating that latest Summerville chance. The home side look so dangerous on the transition, but their final ball and/or finishing has let them down so far.

24 mins: Summerville is denied by a last-ditch challenge by the sliding Vestergaard. This is chaos right now, but it’s absolutely brilliant to watch.

Crysencio Summerville of Leeds United has a shot blocked by Jannik Vestergaard of Leicester City.
Crysencio Summerville of Leeds United is denied by Jannik Vestergaard of Leicester City. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images

Updated

23 mins: The middle of the pitch seems to have become completely – and alarmingly – open in this game. It’s end-to-end stuff already.

22 mins: Oh, Gnonto, what have you done? Rutter has been sublime so far and plays the Italian into a lovely pocket of space in the Leicester box. But Gnonto’s touch is so poor, so heavy and it allows the visitors to shuttle back and block.

20 mins: A super run from Dewsbury-Hall ends with the midfielder taking a tumble in the penalty box … under very minimal contact. Nothing doing there.

19 mins: As Enzo Maresca receives treatment for an injury he’s suffered on the touchline, Pereira receives the first yellow card of the game. And it’s a poor decision by Craig Pawson. The Portuguese clearly won the ball.

18 mins: All the noise is being made by the Leicester fans now. That Faes goal has got them bouncing.

17 mins: A chance for Leeds to hit back immediately … and again Piroe has squandered it. Gnonto’s cross from the right found the No 9 in acres of space. It wasn’t the easiest header but it’s guided well wide.

GOAL! Leeds 0-1 Leicester (Faes, 15)

Faes scores from the resulting corner! Daka flung himself at the ball to flick it on at the near post – and the centre-back is there to nod it in at the back stick.

Elland Road is stunned.

Wout Faes (centre right) nods Leicester City ahead at Leeds.
Wout Faes (centre right) uses his head to put the visitors ahead. Photograph: George Wood/Getty Images
Wout Faes of Leicester City celebrates scoring the opening goal with Abdul Fatawu at Leeds United.
Faes is congratulated by Abdul Fatawu. Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

Updated

15 mins: Both managers are keen on the inverted full-back role, with Archie Gray stepping inside to play that for Leeds.

The hosts are caught this time, though, with Mavididi laying it back to Daka after winning it, with the shot forcing Meslier to fingertip over.

12 mins: Pereira finds his way into the Leeds box to latch onto a cross, but his header is lacking power and easily gobbled up by Meslier. The tempo has just slowed a tad now.

10 mins: Leicester want to pass it around. Leeds want to press high. It’s making for interesting – and frenetic – viewing.

Leeds United’s Georginio Rutter (right) battles for the ball with Leicester City’s Stephy Mavididi.
Leeds United’s Georginio Rutter (right) battles for the ball with Leicester City’s Stephy Mavididi. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

9 mins: We must have had half a dozen shots at goal already in this game, the latest of which comes from Harry Winks, who is Leicester’s midfield metronome but not known for his shooting. Aaaand that’s why. He was miles out and dragged it very wide.

7 mins: There’s a few tasty challenges going in. Gruev on Dewsbury-Hall, there, brings about a free-kick for Leicester. Moments earlier Choudhury had been on the receiving end of one, too.

Fatawu picks up the scraps after a half-clearance but he wallops over.

5 mins: Now a chance for Leeds after Gray overlaps from right-back and it falls quite kindly for Piroe … over the crossbar! A nice flick from Gnonto to set that up. But the finish was terrible.

Updated

4 mins: Despite Choudhury being a midfielder and Pereira being a right-back, Choudhury is playing right-back and Pereira looks to be playing in midfield. Leicester are getting themselves into the game, enjoying a spell on the ball. Dewsbury-Hall drills wide on his left foot.

2 mins: No shortage of impetus from either side in the opening minutes, as Leeds get it forward, Rutter turns nicely and darts down the left, winning the home side a corner.

Vestergaard heads it to safety.

Updated

1 min: A team all in white against a team all in blue. Ain’t that a sight for sore eyes. Farke and Maresca look rather more relaxed than the two sets of supporters.

KICK OFF

Let’s goooooooo!

The players are out and we’re good to go. Game faces on, everyone.

Leeds United’s Georginio Rutter (centre) shows a mascot the way to head off the pitch before the Championship match against Leicester.
Leeds United’s Georginio Rutter (centre) shows a mascot the way to head off the pitch. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

Updated

Daniel Farke tells the TV cameras “it’s important not to break the rhythm and use the momentum” of an eight-match winning run – although he says Leeds’ good results of late will not necessarily help them today.

“This atmosphere is second to none in this country,” he says of the Elland Road roar that awaits his troops. “It’s a good option for us to find another gear tonight.”

This song feels apt, given the venue and atmosphere tonight.

Let’s be honest, this should really be a Premier League fixture. It has all the hallmarks of one: lots riding on it, a bumper crowd, high quality benches on both sides. It’s a damn sight more interesting than Luton v Burnley (sorry guys, it just is). We’ve even got a Premier League ref gracing us with his presence. Welcome Craig Pawson!

These two sides will just hope this is a Premier League game in 2024/25.

If the Lionesses’ clash with Austria tickles your fancy, then that’s our other live football offering this evening and John Brewin is your man.

It does seem like Leeds have the stronger substitutes’ bench tonight. Farke truly has an embarrassment of attacking riches at his disposal, for this level.

Leicester are not in the best of moments, as modern managers like to say, despite being top of the league. Wilfred Ndidi is out long-term, Kelechi Iheanacho is still missing and it seems Jamie Vardy has an injury, too, which keeps him out of the matchday squad. Throw in the fact that the Foxes lost their previous game and you have a few wobbles for Maresca’s men to deal with.

That said, a win today would probably put the rubber seal on automatic promotion for them and only four Championship teams (Middlesbrough twice, Coventry, Leeds and Hull) have actually beaten Leicester this season. They’re still a formidable outfit.

Updated

Team news

Leeds: Meslier, Gray, Rodon, Ampadu, Firpo, Gruev, Kamara, Summerville, Rutter, Gnonto, Piroe

Subs: Klaesson, Cresswell, Cooper, Roberts, Shackleton, James, Joseph, Anthony, Bamford

Leicester: Hermansen, Pereira, Faes, Vestegaard, Justin, Winks, Choudhury, Dewsbury-Hall, Fatawu, Mavididi, Daka

Subs: Stolarczyk, Coady, Doyle, Nelson, Praet, Akgün, McAteer, Albrighton, Cannon

Updated

Preamble

Well. What a game this promises to be. The absolute best of the Championship, a game that will probably eclipse plenty of Premier League matches in terms of quality, stature and competitiveness. “This is a special game, this is why we started to play football,” said Daniel Farke earlier this week as he looked forward to a sizzling Elland Road atmosphere under the Friday night lights – it’s second versus first in the second tier.

With Leicester currently enjoying a seven-point cushion at the top, it’s probably a bigger game for Leeds tonight. They can feel Ipswich and Southampton breathing down their necks, and those teams in third and fourth respectively have fairly friendly home games tomorrow – in which they’ll be expected to capitalise on any Leeds slip-up.

Where’s your money, then? Leeds have won five on the bounce going into this one, while Enzo Maresca’s side suffered a surprise 2-1 home defeat to Middlesbrough last time out. The Whites were the victors by a solitary goal when the two sides faced off at the King Power in November.

It’s an 8pm GMT kick-off tonight and it should be a genuine cracker. Don’t miss out.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.