Marcelo Bielsa eyes opportunity to 'redirect' Leeds United campaign after 'negative' self-critique

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Leeds United had plenty to smile about in 2021.

The second half of a season as a newly-promoted side and smooth sailing towards a superb ninth-placed Premier League finish.

There were wins at Manchester City, at Leicester City, a 3-1 beating of Tottenham Hotspur at Elland Road, all masterminded by Whites head coach Marcelo Bielsa.

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Yet as a new year dawns, United’s head coach is focused only on righting the wrongs of the last few months, providing a “negative” critique of his own performance and eyeing a big step back in the right direction against tomorrow’s visitors Burnley.

SELF CRITICAL: Leeds United head coach Marcelo Bielsa during the 4-1 defeat to Arsenal at Elland Road. Photo by LINDSEY PARNABY/AFP via Getty Images.SELF CRITICAL: Leeds United head coach Marcelo Bielsa during the 4-1 defeat to Arsenal at Elland Road. Photo by LINDSEY PARNABY/AFP via Getty Images.
SELF CRITICAL: Leeds United head coach Marcelo Bielsa during the 4-1 defeat to Arsenal at Elland Road. Photo by LINDSEY PARNABY/AFP via Getty Images.

Bielsa has not exactly had it easy of late, to put it mildly. Just as United’s injury woes looked to be coming to an end, key Whites trio Kalvin Phillips, Liam Cooper and Patrick Bamford all suffered hamstring injuries during the 2-2 draw at home to Brentford at the beginning of the month.

Two weeks later, four days after a 7-0 hammering at Manchester City, Bielsa found himself without 10 players for the Elland Road clash against Arsenal in which a 4-1 reverse condemned Leeds to an eighth defeat of the Premier League campaign.

The loss left Leeds 16th in the Premier League table and a small outbreak of coronavirus within the Whites squad then led to United’s festive fixtures away at Liverpool at home to Aston Villa being postponed.

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The Whites temporarily closed their Thorp Arch training base for two days, and preparing for games of late has been far from ideal.

“It’s common that, in a group, three or four players are missing,” said Bielsa.

“But when a group is missing 12 or 13 players, it is a lot more difficult to manage.”

Yet United’s head coach is not one to look for excuses and is instead critical of himself as he pauses to ponder the last 12 months and looks ahead to the new year.

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“The evaluation of my task in these last few months is negative,” said Bielsa, asked how he felt he had improved in 2021.

“The situations I have had to go through, I haven’t been able to resolve them as I thought I would.

"The majority of things that have happened, I thought could happen.

“I imagined resources would resolve them, but evidently those resources weren’t the adequate ones, even if there was a high percentage of injuries, and those are things that you can’t pre-empt, even less in the proportion that it was.

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“The rest of the things that defined the low in performance, I thought that they could happen, and I wasn’t able to resolve them.”

In his search for solutions, Bielsa can welcome back three options for tomorrow’s clash against the Clarets that he was deprived of when facing the Gunners.

Spanish international centre-back Diego Llorente tested positive for coronavirus ahead of the Arsenal fixture for which left-back Junior Firpo was forced to serve a one-game ban for amassing five bookings.

Leeds already had eight players injured but one of those absentees, winger Dan James, will be back available to face the Clarets who have problems of their own.