Barry Gilheany ⚽ After a penalty shoot out at the London Stadium, Leeds United went through to their first FA Cup semi-final for 39 years after a 2-2 draw with West Ham United.
However that bland statistic can never tell the whole story of yet another mad cap Leeds venture in which we oh so nearly grabbed defeat from the jaws of victory in Eleven nauseating minutes of stoppage time when a comfortable 2-0 lead evaporated within the space of three minutes to send the tie into extra time when only a linesman’s flag prevented the Hammers from completing the comeback.
Yet on this occasion, we showed real resilience and fortitude to come through 4-2 in that excruciating round robin event – the penalty shootout. It is an avenue of escape that will not be available to Leeds if they persist in failing to see away games out from winning positions. But let us forget such recriminations at least until the resumption of our Premier League survival campaign and savour a moment that almost two generations of Leeds fans will never have experienced – participation in the penultimate round of the greatest Cup competition in the world.
And the events of last weekend fully support this sobriquet. The last eight of the tournament saw the classic Cup upset as Championship side Southampton knocked out Premier League leaders Arsenal 2-1 with a winner from Shea Charles who hopefully has a great future with Northern Ireland ahead of him; the 4-0 evisceration by Manchester City of Liverpool for whom Mo Salah, the best forward to have graced the top flight in my lifetime, looked a sad, tragic shadow of his former self and the ending of League One bottom side Port Vale’s remarkable Cup run by a 7-0 defeat at Chelsea which does not close the book on the concerns about the performances and personalities of Liam Rosenior’s charges. But the piece de resistance was the encounter between two sides batting against relegation from the Premiership, though in truth demotion would be a much greater calamity for the Hammers because of their welter of debts.
The match took place on a very poignant date in Leeds United history; April 5th, 2000, was the day on which two Leeds fans, Kevin Speight and Christopher Loftus, were murdered in a mass stabbing in Taksim Square, Istanbul before a UEFA Cup semi-final with the Turkish side Galatasaray. Before kick-off, the Leeds team acknowledged the anniversary by laying wreaths at the away end where 9,000 Leeds fans were congregated. Respects duly paid, proceedings then got underway. I went into the match with my friend in the pub in a relaxed mood as vital Premier League points were not at stake and regarded it as a bit of R&R from the relegation struggle. Despite those who have sought to devalue the Cup by not fielding full strength sides, a Cup run is not just a welcome distraction of the relegation battle but can aid it as winning football matches always boosts morale and confidence if that does not sound too tautologous.
Leeds started the best and a fine effort by Noah Okafor (a serial Cup winner in Italy and Switzerland) almost put us ahead in the second minute. However, the hosts soon got into gear and only two brilliant saves by recalled Brazilian keeper Lucas Perri kept them at bay. But breakthrough in the 26th minute as Japanese midfielder Ao Tanaka began and completed a move with a swerving shot that put us in the lead. For the remainder of the season, Tanaka must be at the centre of our midfield. We should have been further ahead but were thwarted by yet another example of inconsistent officiating when a tackle by Maximilian Kilman on our German midfielder Anton Stach in the penalty area after he has shot for goal I (saved by Hammer keeper Areola) forced him out of the game. No spot kick was awarded despite the clear and obvious nature of the foul. At the end of the day, the injury sustained by Stach who has been such a vital cog in the midfield engine room has been this season matters much more than the decision not to award the penalty. Let us hope he recovers in time for the visit to Old Trafford next Monday evening.
So we went in a goal to the good at half time. We contained wave after wave of West Ham attacks powered by a triple substitution. And then what should have been the clincher when on this occasion Maximilian Kilman was correctly adjudged to have fouled Brenden Aaronson in the box, we were awarded a penalty. Up stepped Dominic Calvert-Klein who had come on in place of Nmencha and coolly converted it to make it 2-0. DCL showed real cojones in steeping up to the plate in this manner after his calamitous miss at Crystal Palace and his miss for England in the friendly against Uruguay which put paid to any chance of him boarding the plane for the World Cup this summer as Harry Kane’s understudy.
And the events of last weekend fully support this sobriquet. The last eight of the tournament saw the classic Cup upset as Championship side Southampton knocked out Premier League leaders Arsenal 2-1 with a winner from Shea Charles who hopefully has a great future with Northern Ireland ahead of him; the 4-0 evisceration by Manchester City of Liverpool for whom Mo Salah, the best forward to have graced the top flight in my lifetime, looked a sad, tragic shadow of his former self and the ending of League One bottom side Port Vale’s remarkable Cup run by a 7-0 defeat at Chelsea which does not close the book on the concerns about the performances and personalities of Liam Rosenior’s charges. But the piece de resistance was the encounter between two sides batting against relegation from the Premiership, though in truth demotion would be a much greater calamity for the Hammers because of their welter of debts.
The match took place on a very poignant date in Leeds United history; April 5th, 2000, was the day on which two Leeds fans, Kevin Speight and Christopher Loftus, were murdered in a mass stabbing in Taksim Square, Istanbul before a UEFA Cup semi-final with the Turkish side Galatasaray. Before kick-off, the Leeds team acknowledged the anniversary by laying wreaths at the away end where 9,000 Leeds fans were congregated. Respects duly paid, proceedings then got underway. I went into the match with my friend in the pub in a relaxed mood as vital Premier League points were not at stake and regarded it as a bit of R&R from the relegation struggle. Despite those who have sought to devalue the Cup by not fielding full strength sides, a Cup run is not just a welcome distraction of the relegation battle but can aid it as winning football matches always boosts morale and confidence if that does not sound too tautologous.
Leeds started the best and a fine effort by Noah Okafor (a serial Cup winner in Italy and Switzerland) almost put us ahead in the second minute. However, the hosts soon got into gear and only two brilliant saves by recalled Brazilian keeper Lucas Perri kept them at bay. But breakthrough in the 26th minute as Japanese midfielder Ao Tanaka began and completed a move with a swerving shot that put us in the lead. For the remainder of the season, Tanaka must be at the centre of our midfield. We should have been further ahead but were thwarted by yet another example of inconsistent officiating when a tackle by Maximilian Kilman on our German midfielder Anton Stach in the penalty area after he has shot for goal I (saved by Hammer keeper Areola) forced him out of the game. No spot kick was awarded despite the clear and obvious nature of the foul. At the end of the day, the injury sustained by Stach who has been such a vital cog in the midfield engine room has been this season matters much more than the decision not to award the penalty. Let us hope he recovers in time for the visit to Old Trafford next Monday evening.
So we went in a goal to the good at half time. We contained wave after wave of West Ham attacks powered by a triple substitution. And then what should have been the clincher when on this occasion Maximilian Kilman was correctly adjudged to have fouled Brenden Aaronson in the box, we were awarded a penalty. Up stepped Dominic Calvert-Klein who had come on in place of Nmencha and coolly converted it to make it 2-0. DCL showed real cojones in steeping up to the plate in this manner after his calamitous miss at Crystal Palace and his miss for England in the friendly against Uruguay which put paid to any chance of him boarding the plane for the World Cup this summer as Harry Kane’s understudy.
Cue an exodus of home fans and the wiping of all signs of exuberance from the visage of celebrity Hammer Danny Dyer who kept appearing with irritating regularity on our TV screens. It was all going so swimmingly and Wilfried Gnonto should really have put everything to bed but missed when yards from goal. But this is Leeds, remember, and another double calamity, perhaps engendered by the 11-minute stoppage time announcement, beckoned as West Ham rediscovered hope and familiar anxieties stirred in the minds of Leeds fans. Sure enough in the 93rd minute Mattheus Fernandes poked home a rebound from a volley from Jarred Bowen to reduce the deficit and three minutes later a panic stricken Leeds defence relinquished their advantage when after a cross by Adana Traore into the six yard box was met by Disasi whose overhead karate kick hit the net and was allowed to stand despite protestations from Leeds that Disasi’s high boot prevented Paschal Struijk from clearing the ball. Cue pandemonium and joy and frustration in equal measure by those Hammers fans who had deserted their team and who on learning of its resurrection tried to re-enter the ground but were prevented from doing so by stewards. They deserve no sympathy as games are never over at 2-0 as so many fans will attest.
While not on the scale of that of our relegations and Play Off Final defeats, the devastation felt by me and my friend whose life ambition was to see Leeds win a Cup Final at Wembley was raw and visceral at the snatching away of our dreams. I held out little hope of retrieving the situation in extra time and a minute into it the blade appeared to have dropped when after a rush of blood to the head on the part of Perri, Castellanos poked the ball into an empty net only for it to be almost instantaneously ruled offside. We could have regained the lead only for a last ditch clearance by Tomas Soucek and Gnonto blazing another effort over the bar. Perri again put his body, or more accurately his face, on the line by keeping out a shot from Castellanos. Bowen again rattled the woodwork, and Pablo was offside when he put the rebound into the net.
So it ended 2-2 and into the penalty or as I would put it the penance shoot out. The particular set piece drama was provided by the debut for the Hammers of 20-year-old goalkeeper Finlay Herrick who replaced regular keeper Alphonse Areaola injured in the dying minutes of extra time. By saving our first effort from Joel Piroe, he looked set to write himself into Cup and West Ham folklore. However Perri responded in kind by denying efforts from Bowen and Pablo Felipo. It was left to Pascal Struijk to send us through to the semis where we will meet Chelsea at Wembley; the historical resonance of this meeting is lost on no one of a certain generation.
While not on the scale of that of our relegations and Play Off Final defeats, the devastation felt by me and my friend whose life ambition was to see Leeds win a Cup Final at Wembley was raw and visceral at the snatching away of our dreams. I held out little hope of retrieving the situation in extra time and a minute into it the blade appeared to have dropped when after a rush of blood to the head on the part of Perri, Castellanos poked the ball into an empty net only for it to be almost instantaneously ruled offside. We could have regained the lead only for a last ditch clearance by Tomas Soucek and Gnonto blazing another effort over the bar. Perri again put his body, or more accurately his face, on the line by keeping out a shot from Castellanos. Bowen again rattled the woodwork, and Pablo was offside when he put the rebound into the net.
So it ended 2-2 and into the penalty or as I would put it the penance shoot out. The particular set piece drama was provided by the debut for the Hammers of 20-year-old goalkeeper Finlay Herrick who replaced regular keeper Alphonse Areaola injured in the dying minutes of extra time. By saving our first effort from Joel Piroe, he looked set to write himself into Cup and West Ham folklore. However Perri responded in kind by denying efforts from Bowen and Pablo Felipo. It was left to Pascal Struijk to send us through to the semis where we will meet Chelsea at Wembley; the historical resonance of this meeting is lost on no one of a certain generation.
⏩Barry Gilheany is a freelance writer, qualified counsellor and aspirant artist resident in Colchester where he took his PhD at the University of Essex. He is also a lifelong Leeds United supporter.
























