Irish Independent

No guarantees for Leeds with Bielsa but it will be interestin­g

New manager is revered for attacking style of football despite lack of trophies in his varied career in Europe

- Mark Critchley

ONE of the best-known stories about Marcelo Bielsa regards his evening in a Sante Fé hotel room in 1992, after a 6-0 defeat for his Newell’s Old Boys side, when he first seriously questioned the fundamenta­l principles of his footballin­g philosophy. He came to understand that night, he has said, the full meaning of the phrase: “I want to die”.

What price that some 27 years later, he suddenly finds himself reacquaint­ed with that same feeling all over again, only this time in a dimly-lit Premier Inn double overlookin­g a pawn shop in Rotherham? Certainly, if any club can drag their manager to the brink and back, making him question all he thought was good and true along the way, it is the modern day Leeds United.

The tenure of this most interestin­g coach at this most interestin­g club begins at Elland Road on Sunday, and the only guarantee is that it will indeed be interestin­g. More than likely, it will end in tears, with a fresh batch of bizarre anecdotes to add to the many Leeds have collected.

What if Bielsa is refused a signing due to his low rating on Football Manager, or if a director attempts to sack him at half-time while 2-0 down, or if, say, he elects not to travel on a post-season tour of a country implicated in, what the United Nations calls, “a textbook example of ethnic cleansing”?

If this experiment fails, he could always follow the path of Dave Hockaday and become a sixth-form tutor in Stroud.

But, then again, what if it works? There is a reason why Leeds were selling season tickets at ten times the usual rate a day after his appointmen­t was announced. This is a world-renowned coach, possibly the most influentia­l of his generation and a muse to the likes of

Pep Guardiola and Mauricio Pochettino. His uncompromi­sing belief in high-octane, possession­based, fluid attacking play promises football’s utopia.

At his unveiling five weeks ago, which lasted a touch over an hour and 20 minutes, the Argentinia­n (right) claimed that his new squad was 15 players too big. Thirteen senior players have since left, with Ronaldo Vieira’s move to Sampdoria this week the most surprising and perhaps disappoint­ing departure. The willingnes­s to jettison an England U-21 internatio­nal, one who had only featured sparingly in pre-season, indicates Bielsa’s prioritisa­tion of his system and style.

Lewis Baker, a loanee from Chelsea, will occupy what would have been Vieira’s position in Bielsa’s unusual 3-3-1-3. The system could extract the best out of the mercurial Samu Saiz. Patrick Bamford, a £7m capture from Middlesbro­ugh, will lead the line and hope to justify his price.

Will it work? Many words have been spent detailing Bielsa’s approach – none match the stereotype of second-tier English

football – but his philosophy is best understood by the four principles the man himself would outline: concentrat­ion, rotation, movement and improvisat­ion. His players are asked to play intricatel­y but quickly when on the ball, press heavily when off it and interchang­e positions while maintainin­g their shape.

If any of that sounds like a contradict­ion in terms, it is because it often is, and Bielsa’s teams sometimes crumble under the weight of them. Such a style carries other attendant risks too. Former players remember not only their physical exertions but also mental fatigue. To describe Bielsa as demanding would be an understate­ment, and the intensity of it all has been known to take its toll.

The drop-off at Newell’s after winning the 1990-’91 Apertura under Bielsa was sharp and sudden. Athletic Bilbao’s domestic form slipped on their run to the 2012 Europa League final. Marseille, in their one campaign under Bielsa, led Ligue 1 at the halfway mark then collapsed after Christmas and ultimately only narrowly qualified for Europe.

Elsewhere, and most notably at Lille last year, Bielsa has entirely failed to get his ideas off the ground. The Ligue 1 club was 19th at time of dismissal, which came after an unauthoris­ed trip to Argentina to visit a dying colleague Luis Bonini. Despite being held in such highesteem, he is yet to enjoy a major achievemen­t in Europe. His last prize at club level came last century, with Velez Sarsfield in 1998.

Clearly, his arrival at Elland Road is no hall pass to promotion, but that only makes it an ever braver appointmen­t. A Bielsa project has both a high ceiling and a low floor, but whatever happens, Leeds are due credit and it is sure to be interestin­g. (© Independen­t News Service)

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