Memries of Leeds

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Kraft durch Freude
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Memries of Leeds Part 2

I’ll say it straight away – I hate Leeds. As a Blade fan first and a football-lover second, Leeds United have left an indelible stain of the game we all love.

I did ‘Memries of Leeds’ on October 24th,2017 and I like to think I’ve improved things since then, so here, I’ve refined the original and added the latest bits. Since then, we’ve met just once – in my opinion the second-best result of the season. On Friday 27th October, 2017 in a game live on Sky, the Blades won 2-1 with goals from Billy Sharp and a stunning winner from David Brooks. The crowd of 34,504 saw United lead with an early goal from Billy Sharp. Leeds equalised and – under as lesser manager who would probably settled for a draw, Chris Wilder’s Blades went on to see a stunning goal from David Brooks secure all three points.



Or a (very funny) alternative view!

And finally a long (21m 29s) but - as usual - superb vlog from Dem Blades:



Recent-ish meetings:

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Full history Sheffield United v Leeds United.


Starting in the 60s under Don Revie (Leeds manager from 1961 to 1974), Leeds often bent the rules to (and beyond) breaking point. Often indulged by referees and officialdom, thugs such as Bremner, Giles, Hunter etc. inflicted savagery on opposition players. I once saw Allan Clarke boot the ball into the back row of the John Street stand with no Blades player nearby. Naturally, he put his arm up appealing for the throw-in! Cheating is in Leeds’ DNA.

In Revie’s time, Leeds were employing every psychological trick in the book to gain the upper hand. In Hunter Davies’ superb book The Glory Game, he described how an FA Cup Quarter Final match on 18th March 1972 between Leeds and Spurs witnessed some remarkable scenes. Leeds entered the pitch in matching track suits with the names of the wearers on the back, they had (poncy) little blue tabs on their sock tie-ups with the players’ numbers on them and they performed carefully-choreographed warm-up routines. The effect? Most of the 43,937 crowd were whipped into a frenzy and Leeds won the game 2-1.

The 1974 Charity Shield (a generally good-natured pre-season game played at Wembley between the FA Cup winners and the Champions) was despoiled by Leeds and an unseemly brawl between Bremner and Kevin Keegan resulted in both players being sent off.



Brian Clough’s brief stint (44 days) was summed up in this clip from The Damned United:



What has made it worse is that United have consistently sold our best players to Leeds – Mick Jones, Tony Currie, Keith Edwards, Gary Hamson, Alex Sabella, Brian Deane, even Paul Beesley.

My first visit to Leeds was on 6th April, 1968. The week previously, we’d met there in the Quarter Final of the FA Cup and lost 0-1 in front of a crowd of 48,322. Times woz ‘ard and mi dad couldn’t afford both games, so he decided we’d go to the League game in the top-flight. We stood on the large, uncovered terrace behind the left-hand goal as you watch it on TV. Their ‘kop’ was behind the opposite goal, a shitty little corrugated iron dump call the ‘Scratching Shed’. This time the crowd had dipped to 31,059 and we lost 0-3. At the time we had a couple of useless lumps playing, the Wagstaff brothers – Tony and Barry. My one and only recollection of this miserable game was Tony receiving the ball on the penalty spot in front of us. He turned round (what seemed about three full turns) before nonchalantly blasting the ball over the bar. Just over a month later, we lost at home to Chelsea on the last game of the season and were relegated to the second tier.


The season of 1974/75 was a good one for the Blades. We finished in 6th place in the top flight and narrowly missed out on a place in Europe. Not so good was an early meeting with Leeds at Elland Road (21st September 1974) where we lost 1-5, our only goal coming from Bill Dearden in front of 33,739.



Only five media clips per post allowed, so gimme ten minutes so I can post two more bits!
 



Extended ‘highlights’ here from Sheffield United 3 v 2 v Leeds United in the second tier on 22nd April 1986.. Our goals came from Morris (p), Frain and Walshaw (me neither) The crowd for this local derby? 9,158.




On 19th March 1988, the Blades lost 0-5 at Elland Road in this second-tier game. Bassett’s Blades would end the season being relegated to the third tier via the play-offs in a two-leg game against Bristol City:



On Boxing Day, 1989 we drew at home with Leeds 2-2. This was the season we got ‘back-to-back’ promotions under Dave Bassett – from the third tier to the top tier (sounds familiar?) Leeds and the Blades finished the season on 85 points. We finished in second place, pipped for the champions title on goal difference... The first 4 minutes of this vid. covers it:



On Bank Holiday Monday, April 16, 1990 we met Leeds at Elland Road in a vital promotion clash that could decide who would go up to the top tier. As ever, Leeds bent the rules to ensure that as few Blades fans as possible would be there to support the Blades (as did Wednesday the other week). So just 1200 Blades were there for what would be a toxic atmosphere. I was one of them and hoped enough of ‘the lads’ would be there but, alas, a lot of our fans were dads and kids. I drove up incognito – parking well away from the ground and wearing no signs of my allegiances. What followed would be scenes I’ve rarely seen in English football. First off, a police helicopter was hovering overhead – utterly unknown at the time. Our tiny band was ushered in to a tiny, cramped and fenced-in area in the corner of the ground. On two sides, screaming spitting and snarling Leeds fans added to the atmosphere. A brief drizzle meant that a bag of sugar one of these scum had thrown at us had maximum stickability.

As kick-off approached the mood of the majority in the crowd of 32,697 reached fever-pitch. A huge white, blue and yellow flag was passed over the heads of the Leeds fans (again, something I’d never seen before), one of our players – John Gannon’s – girlfriend was hit by a flying bottle in the Lowfield Road stand and – as the players warmed up pre-kick off - our goalie Simon Tracy was loosening up by punting the ball downfield. As the balls entered the Leeds half, they refused to return them, meaning we soon had no football to warm up with. As I’ve said, pure scum. The Blades collapsed, lost 0-4 and it seemed our promotion dreams were over. However nineteen days later, we won famously 5-2 at Leicester and the Blades were going up!



A bizarre game on 26th April 1992 saw Leeds win 2-3 at Bramall Lane and cement their place as Division One Champions with some, er, bizarre goals including the winner by the Blades Brian Gayle. Stewards enquiry, anyone?



Nearly there!
 
More recently, we’ve had a couple of memorable cup games – both at home. A freezing cold night on November 6, 2002 saw us meet Leeds in the Third Round of the Worthington (League) Cup. 0-1 down at HT to an own goal by Steve Yates, the game was heading towards the final whistle. The crowd went wild when a sensational 35-yarder from Phil Jagielka in the 91st minute beat Paul Robinson in the Leeds goal and drew the scores level. ‘My voice has gone and I don’t care!’ said the commentator on Radio Sheffield. But more was to come! In the 94th minute Peter Ndlovu made it 2-1, the Blades had won and went on to beat Sunderland and Crystal Palace before losing a highly-contentious semi-final over two legs to Liverpool. As ever, the Leeds fans took defeat with good grace, ripping out the (extremely heavy wood and cast-iron) seats by the dozen in the BLUT and hurling them onto the pitch.




On 9th March 2003, we beat Leeds at home 1-0 in the Quarter Final of the FA Cup. What a good team we had then – Jags, Tonge, McCall, Pesch and KABAAAA!!! In the next round v. Arsenal in the semi-final, we lost thanks to the referee Graham Poll.




After these two Cup successes, we won two and drew two of our next four meetings, finally succumbing to a 1-0 defeat at Elland Road on 25th September 2010.


On 29th August 2004 at Bramall Lane in the second tier, Neil Warnock’s Blades would beat Kevin Blackwell’s Leeds 2-0 (Mitch Ward, Jon Harley):



Later in the same 2004-05 season, on 5th April, 2005, The Blades won 4-0 at Elland Road with goals from Danny Webber, Nick Montgomery and a brace from Andy Gray. This was the Blades first win at Elland Road for almost 19 years:



United had a more-than-useful lineup that day:

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And the Leeds lineup would include Matt Kilgallon, Shaun Derry, Rob Hulse and Marlon King.

Finally, to prove a leopard never changes its spots - on 8th May, 2001 Leeds travelled to Valencia in the Champions League semi-final. So how did the Leeds players mark this historic event? New club suits? Nah. This is Leeds we’re talking about. Almost the entire squad had their heads shaved…

Other things that stand out were (can’t remember which game) that odious little shit Gordon Strachan scoring against us and sitting on the perimeter advertising boards flexing his ‘muscles’. (Think he was taking the piss out of Vinnie Jones) And a game at Bramall Lane where we were utilising long throws (could have been Vinnie again) so – to try and negate these – Leeds put a man on the line preventing the thrower from following through. That man could have been Bobby Davison…


The stats:

To date, our League record v Leeds:

Home: P: 35 W: 15 D: 12 L: 8 F: 54 A: 45

Away: P: 36 W: 8 D: 10 L: 18 F: 39 A: 65

Form Guide:

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Before this Saturday’s game, United sit 12th in the form table (based on the last six league games – oldest first) and Leeds are rock-bottom. The sacking of manager Thomas Christiansen followed on Sunday 4th February. He was the ninth Leeds manager since June 2014 (eight if you include two stints in this period by the lamentable Neil Redfearn).

Full table.

As ever, Leeds’ disciplinary record is shocking and they have had four players sent off in their last five games. Their current suspension status is:

Liam Cooper was banned for four games after being sent off in Leeds’ 4-3 defeat to Millwall on January 20 and while midfielders Eunan O’Kane and Kalvin Phillips have completed three and two-match bans respectively, Gaetano Berardi, Cooper and Samuel Saiz are all suspended until February 20 and will miss the Blades game.


Top scorers:

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Current Table:

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Leeds have embarked on their now-traditional second half of the season slump but remain just two points behind The Blades.

That's all, folks!
 
A night game,the Dirties injured Hodgy on purpose,Woody went in goal,we won.


The Shoreham rang with this amusing ditty

Bremners on the western front,parlez vous
Bremners on the western front,parlez vous
Bremners on the western front,give me a gun and I'll shoot the chunt
Inky pinky parlez vous
 
I remember visiting Elland road a good few years ago wearing a white t-shirt with the old we all hate Leeds and Leeds and Leeds song on the front of it and then on the back of the t-shirt in big letters were the words we all F-----G HATE LEEDS. I was stood on the terrace and was asked by a local Pc plod to remove the shirt as it was winding up the Leeds fans!!!. Can't think why?. Utb
 
Game I remember was 1971, midweek against em. Best game for atmosphere. They tried to take the Shoreham but failed and we murdered them 3-0.

Charlton up to his usual and the Kop singing
"What's it like to be inside Jackie Charlton,
What's it like be inside Jackie Char arl ton!"

Fantastic night. About 40+ thousand in then.
 
Game I remember was 1971, midweek against em. Best game for atmosphere. They tried to take the Shoreham but failed and we murdered them 3-0.

Charlton up to his usual and the Kop singing
"What's it like to be inside Jackie Charlton,
What's it like be inside Jackie Char arl ton!"

Fantastic night. About 40+ thousand in then.
 
I remember visiting Elland road a good few years ago wearing a white t-shirt with the old we all hate Leeds and Leeds and Leeds song on the front of it and then on the back of the t-shirt in big letters were the words we all F-----G HATE LEEDS. I was stood on the terrace and was asked by a local Pc plod to remove the shirt as it was winding up the Leeds fans!!!. Can't think why?. Utb
You should have anticipated this and wrote it on your chest and back. Then removed your shirt
 

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