Daily Mirror

JESSE’S LEEDING THE WAY

Coach winning over fans with tactics

- BY DAVID ANDERSON @MirrorAnde­rson

JESSE MARSCH is winning over the doubters at Elland Road after giving Leeds back their bite.

The Yorkshire side are snarling again under Marsch and they became soft touches in the final months of Marcelo Bielsa’s reign.

They blew Chelsea away with their high-pressing style to climb up to third in the Premier League for the first time since 2002.

Marsch (left) knew some fans would not like him because he replaced their beloved Bielsa and hopes they will appreciate the improvemen­ts he is making .

“There’s probably still a lot of doubt in me,” said the Leeds boss. “It’s OK, that’s normal.

“There are going to be people that like me and people that hate me. I just want the team to play with love, passion and belief.”

Marsch is reshaping Leeds and he has ditched Bielsa’s man-for-man press all over the pitch to press zonally.

The intensity is still the same – Leeds ran 10km more than Chelsea on Sunday – and Marsch wants his players to be in his opponents’ faces. But training has a greater emphasis on recovery to reduce injuries and it was noticeable that Leeds reported no knocks after beating Chelsea 3-0.

Marsch has switched from Bielsa’s 4-1-4-1 formation to 4-2-3-1 with Jack Harrison causing havoc on the left and Brenden Aaronson (celebratin­g his goal, below) on the right or as a No.10. Marsch has also plugged the team into the fans’ energy and hopes the supporters can see his vision for Leeds.

“I know the fans are intelligen­t,” said the American. “I hope they can see a little bit more what the tactics are and what we’re trying to accomplish. They learned in the past how Marcelo liked to play, now they are starting to gather more informatio­n about what my tactics look like.”

Perhaps Marsch’s greatest success has been bringing the best out of Rodrigo by employing the personal touch.

He speaks one-on-one to the Spain striker in stark contrast to Bielsa’s distant approach, the Argentine preferring to talk to the players as a group through his interprete­r.

Marsch’s arm-round-the-shoulder approach is paying dividends and Rodrigo became the Premier League’s top scorer with four goals with his effort against Chelsea.

“I’m happy to score goals to help the team and the most important thing is the team,” said Rodrigo.

“The energy the team showed over the 90 minutes against Chelsea was amazing.

“We know that with good teams, if you give them space, you’re halfway to losing the game because they have quality. So we have to press, we have to be brave, but we also have to have the personalit­y to play with the ball.”

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