By Dominic Matteo
Published on *Friday 16 November 2012 13:15*

I’m struggling to know how to put Leeds United’s defeat to Watford into
words.

In every way it was a total disaster – injuries, suspensions, three points
dropped, six goals conceded. Dig the positives out of that. It was one of
those days when you almost felt like the club were in crisis.

That’s probably going a bit too far but the situation at Elland Road is not
at all good. It’s a mystery off the pitch and a worry on the pitch. On one
hand this alleged takeover is doing nobody any favours. But I can’t pretend
that the team is playing well either.

I was quietly hopeful of a result against Watford but my confidence drained
as soon as I saw the team. It didn’t fill me with optimism. That’s partly
because of the quality of the players, partly because of the system they
were in and partly because of the roles some of them were being asked to
play.

I’m not going to be too critical of Neil Warnock because his hands are
badly tied but some of what he’s doing strikes me as odd. Fielding Paul
Green at centre-back on Saturday made very little sense and proved a
mistake.

I also thought it was a gamble to abandon the formation that Leeds are
familiar with and go 3-5-2. I’m no expert when it comes to coaching and
tactics but I really didn’t expect it to work.

To be fair, injuries and a shortage of players are as much to blame as
anything but like a lot of supporters I’d prefer to see players used
regularly in their best position – Lee Peltier as an attacking right-back,
for instance, or Aidy White on the left side. So often when I pick up the
teamsheet before kick-off I can’t really guess how the 11 names are going
to shape up. It doesn’t feel like a settled side.

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That’s honestly the last thing I ever expected to say about a Neil Warnock
team. One of his many strengths as a manager is organisation. Whenever you
see his sides you automatically expect them to be solid and resilient. I’m
happy to forget the scoreline against Watford because Leeds had no chance
whatsoever in the second half but so far Leeds have kept two clean sheets
in league matches this season. Two. A lot was made of how bad the defensive
record was under Simon Grayson but bizarrely the same problem is still
there.

But for all that, any criticism I have of Warnock or the players at Leeds
is outweighed by the criticism I have of this takeover. If I hear once more
that it’s almost complete then I think I’ll go mad. I’m absolutely sick of
the whole thing and I doubt whether I’m alone.

The irony of the takeover was that it was supposed to help the club and
give Leeds the best possible chance of getting out of the
Championship<http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-hornets-clash-was-a-disaster-matteo-1-5137861#>.
It’s now the middle of November, the club are 18th in the league and the
crowds at Elland Road are falling below 20,000 on a Saturday afternoon.

If you’re asking me what this planned takeover has actually done for Leeds
United, the answer is not a lot. Yes, it might cross the line in time for
millions to be spent in January and if we’re lucky it might open the door
to promotion. But none of what’s been promised so far has actually
materialised. That’s the bottom line. Ifs, buts and maybes are more and
more worthless the longer this goes on.

The more I think about it the more I believe that this process has been
allowed to go on far too long already. For the sake of the club and as a
duty of care, it needed to end one way or the other weeks ago. It’s
unacceptable to let it drag on through a season which is going nowhere at
the moment. It’s overshadowing everything and still no-one can tell us
exactly when it will all end.

There are worse positions to be in than seven points below the play-offs.
But believe me, in this sort of shape and with the current atmosphere
hanging around the club, Leeds don’t have a chance of winning promotion.
Not a serious one. It pains me to say that because I had such high hopes
for this season but massive change is needed. And I still can’t say with
any confidence that it’s definitely coming.
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PETE CASS (1962 - 2011) Rest In Peace Mate

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