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Latest updates

  1. 'Farke must be as bold when Leeds are winning as when they are losing'published at 08:59 GMT

    Adonis Storr
    Fan writer

    Leeds United fan's voice graphic
    Dominic Calvert-Lewin of Leeds UnitedImage source, Getty Images

    The rigidity of Daniel Farke's use of substitutions came back to bite again on Monday night in Liverpool as Leeds snatched a draw from victory against a lacklustre Everton side who were there for the taking.

    It was massively frustrating to watch the Leeds manager take 40 minutes to react to David Moyes' half-time change in system. It is the German's one glaring and consistent fault – he is too slow and passive to react to opposition momentum when Leeds are leading.

    This frustration is compounded because when United are trailing and Farke needs to affect the game, he has proved capable of making aggressive decisions that have worked brilliantly.

    On a February night against Sunderland last year, Leeds were 1-0 down to their promotion rivals. Farke boldly took off Ao Tanaka and Illia Gruev and brought on Joe Rothwell and defender Pascal Struijk. Both substitutes combined twice to win the game.

    While 2-0 down against Manchester City in November, Farke made a double substitution at half-time and switched Leeds' base formation in perhaps the boldest gamble of his career – a move that didn't affect that game's result but has transformed Leeds' season.

    Farke is capable of calculated but aggressive moves to affect games, which is why it is so frustrating when he seemingly refuses to make changes when in the lead, in spite of a clear momentum shift.

    Everton's changes at half-time had such a spectacular effect they demanded a reaction.

    From enjoying the lion's share of the ball in the first half (53%) United's passing fell off a cliff in the second (31%). It was clear by the 60th minute that Leeds' players were tiring and Everton were building up so much momentum and belief that they would likely get an equaliser.

    United are very difficult to beat, but to convert these draws to wins, Farke must be as bold when Leeds are winning, as he is when Leeds are losing.

    Find more from Adonis Storr at The Roaring Peacock, external

  2. 'Bornauw proving to be a shrewd addition'published at 16:12 GMT 27 January

    Tom Gayle
    MOTD commentator

    Sebastiaan BornauwImage source, Getty Images

    Hot takes are commonplace in society. Thankfully hindsight is a wonderful thing. Back in October a publication ran with the headline '49ers wasted millions on Sebastiaan Bornauw investment, and it's backfiring for Leeds United.'

    To give the article context, it was written nine games into the campaign, with Leeds' new defender still yet to make a Premier League appearance for the club.

    An injury during pre-season, combined with manager Daniel Farke's then formational preference of a back four, featuring the experienced centre-half pairing of Joe Rodon and Pascal Struijk, surely contributed to the Belgian's lack of game time.

    In the here and now Bornauw has started three of the last five Premier League fixtures. From what I saw from the commentary box on Merseyside on Monday, he's proving to be a shrewd addition.

    His imposing 6ft 3in stature clearly fits in with a recruitment shift towards greater physicality. The 26-year-old has the technical ability to play both long and short when bringing the ball out from the back, and even more importantly, he can defend, as demonstrated by his standout moment being the block made to deny Iliman Ndiaye's goal bound effort.

    As is so often the case a player's patience for minutes needs to be balanced alongside the prospect of inevitable injuries to his team-mates. With Jacob Bijol set to remain sidelined until late February, on the evidence seen so far, Bornauw has a real chance to cement his place in the starting eleven.

  3. 🎧 Deadline day countdownpublished at 14:40 GMT 27 January

    Don't Go To Bed Just Yet podcast graphic

    The latest Don't Go To Bed Just Yet is here and, after Leeds picked up a point on their first trip to Hill Dickinson Stadium, BBC Radio Leeds' Jonny Buchan and Adam Pope are joined by Kaiser Chiefs' bassist Simon Rix to reflect on how the game went.

    The team also chat about the Whites' league position as they battle to pull away from the relegation spots and what can be expected in the final week of the transfer window.

    Listen to the full episode here

    Explore all Leeds United content on BBC Sounds

    The BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  4. Everton 1-1 Leeds - the fans' verdictpublished at 08:01 GMT 27 January

    Your opinions graphic
    Media caption,

    We asked for your thoughts after Monday's Premier League game between Everton and Leeds.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Everton fans

    Chris: Once again, we only seem to be able to play for one half at home. It's as if the team have no belief in the new stadium. Bigger crowd, better acoustics seem to scare them. It would make a refreshing change to see the team play a whole game the way they played the second half. It's so frustrating for the supporters that they play better away from our new stadium. They need to start believing in themselves. Goodison has gone.

    Jeff: A win against lower-placed Leeds would have put us on 35 points, three points below fourth placed Manchester United - a spot that qualifies us for next season's Champions League. But a win was never going to happen, as we played at home. A home that does not feel like home. We would be better off playing all our matches away. Better stadium names, better atmosphere, better results.

    Martin: The first half was terrible - particularly Dwight McNeil - but the changes at half-time worked. Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall filled a gap and with sharper play from Idrissa Gueye we could have got all three points.

    Kevin: First half wasn't good enough, and we can't keep dropping back in home games to let the away side get a foothold. Second half was better. The three centre-backs made it easier to control the ball, but it also took away an extra player in Leeds' third of the pitch. We could have won if we'd been more aggressive. Two points dropped at home, so not good enough!

    Leeds fans

    Chris: After a promising first half, the second half was a hard watch. We had no response to the Everton changes and were on the back foot most of the last 45. Daniel Farke's changes were so late it barely gave us a chance to fight for the win. A game we should have definitely taken three points from.

    Jonathan: I feel like Farke left it far too late to make the substitutions. It was clear from the start of the second half that something needed to change, so I'm not sure why it was left so late on. We should have won that game but nothing was done early enough to calm the tempo down and break their dominance in the second half.

    Jeremy: Great first half because it was played at tempo - but then couldn't match the levels and faded when Everton responded. I like the boss but he HAS to realise that subs can be brought on before the last 10. We continue to fail to make substitutions in sufficient time for any impact.

    Brendan: We're on a great run. We look like a Premier League side. But after a great first half, Farke completely failed to react in the second half when Everton took control. We should have won that but were lucky to get a point in the end.

  5. 'Farke and players will relish opportunity against Arsenal'published at 07:35 GMT 27 January

    Phil McNulty
    Chief football writer

    Daniel Farke, manager of Leeds United, alongside David MoyesImage source, Getty Images

    Leeds United's improvement was underlined by the obvious disappointment of manager Daniel Farke that they only left Everton with a point.

    Farke, whose position appeared under threat after struggling at the start of their return to the Premier League, has fashioned a significant improvement to make Leeds look at home in the top flight.

    Leeds were so much better than Everton in the first 45 minutes that a single-goal lead was nowhere near a reflection of their superiority.

    In the final reckoning, the key moment was when Dominic Calvert-Lewin struck the post with a relatively simple chance with Leeds one up and in control.

    The result leaves Leeds six points clear of the relegation places. On the evidence of this display, and others recently, they should not be harbouring any serious relegation concerns.

    Farke said: "It is a good result, to come away to Everton is tough. A bit disappointed as well though as we were not far off winning it. We perhaps could have buried the game with a second goal."

    The manager was under serious pressure earlier in the season, but he remained calm and has worked superbly to make Leeds United look like a Premier League team.

    Leeds may have lost to Manchester City at the end of November, but the manner in which they came from 2-0 down early on to only lose to a stoppage-time goal from Phil Foden set the platform for improvement.

    Farke switched to 3-5-2 at half-time, introducing Calvert-Lewin and Lukas Nmecha. It was a performance, even in defeat, that made Leeds suddenly feel comfortable in their own skin.

    Leeds have lost only one game in 11 since then, one in 10 in the league, to give them real optimism of survival.

    They face Arsenal at Elland Road on Saturday, a tough task for the Premier League leaders, who looked a bag of nerves in the home loss to Manchester United on Sunday.

    It is a fixture Farke and his players will relish.

  6. Everton 1-1 Leeds: What Farke and Justin saidpublished at 07:07 GMT 27 January

    Media caption,

    Leeds United boss Daniel Farke, speaking to BBC Match of the Day: "It's a tough place to go, especially without a few key players, and to come away with a point is a good result for us.

    "We were a bit unlucky that, out of our dominance and chances created in the first half, we did not score the second goal. In the second half, it was clear that at some point Everton would show up and have some chances. We didn't allow too many. I'm a bit disappointed - we could have defended the goal situation sharper.

    "I haven't checked the expected goals and shots against, but the gut feeling was that even in this moment we were the better side. There was not much missing at all to win this game.

    "We were dominant, we were brave out of possession, defensively well structured and brave on the ball. It was not to be to win it but we take a point and move on."

    On momentum: "It is a nice sign that we are moving one step closer to our goal. To come here and put in this performance is encouraging, but the job is not done yet. We have to keep going and need to win more points - and for that, it is important that we are competitive like this.

    "In seasons you have ups and downs. We have momentum and we want to ride the momentum further."

    On James Justin's performance and goal: "He embodies a lot of what we are about. Great team spirit, great character and great lad. Whenever, wherever I need him, he always delivers. I can count on him to be a reliable player and he is a top character. It's great we have him at Leeds United."

    Leeds goalscorer Justin, speaking to Sky Sports: "We started the first half pretty well. We played quite well and went a goal up and had a few chances to make it more. They're a decent side and coming away to a place like this, they'll have their spells. We'll take a point.

    "We had trust in the way we were playing and we had confidence coming into the game. It's ebbs and flows in football and you have to ride the wave when you can."

    On his goal: "I got a bit of stick from one of the coaching staff because he said I arrive in the box too quickly, so I hung back. Glad to get on the scoresheet.

    "It's a big step in the right direction for me. I've been playing recently and my body is feeling good."

    What changed for Everton? "They brought on my mate Kiernan [Dewsbury-Hall]. He was very good and finding space in the pocket. He was good when they brought him on - and the centre-half too [Jarrad Branthwaite]. That's the quality they have.

    "We're not afraid to talk about our goal and that's to stay in the Premier League - no matter what. We want to keep putting points on the board."

    Did you know?

    • No side has lost fewer Premier League games since the start of December than Leeds United's one, while only Aston Villa (22), Manchester City (21), Arsenal (20), Manchester United and Fulham (both 17) have collected more points in that time than their 15.

    • Justin has scored in two of his past three games, having netted against Derby County in the FA Cup - as many goals as in his previous 47 matches.

  7. Everton 1-1 Leeds - send us your thoughtspublished at 22:30 GMT 26 January

    Have your say banner
    Media caption,

    Whether you were at the game or following from elsewhere, we want to know what you learned.

    Have your say on Everton's performance

    What did you make of Leeds United's display?

    Come back on Tuesday for a selection of your replies

  8. Everton v Leeds: Team newspublished at 18:54 GMT 26 January

    Everton XI

    Everton boss David Moyes has made two changes to the side that won 1-0 at Aston Villa last Sunday.

    The injured Jack Grealish misses out and Merlin Rohl drops to the bench with Idrissa Gueye and Iliman Ndiaye back from the Africa Cup of Nations.

    Everton XI: Pickford, Patterson, Tarkowski, O'Brien, Mykolenko, Garner, Gueye, Armstrong, McNeil, Ndiaye, Barry.

    Subs: Travers, Beto, Dibling, Dewsbury-Hall, Coleman, Alcaraz, Branthwaite, Rohl, Aznou.

    Daniel Farke has also made two changes to the Leeds side that beat Fulham 1-0 last Saturday.

    Noah Okafor drops to the bench and Gabriel Gudmundsson misses out with injury. In comes Anton Stach and Sebastiaan Bornauw.

    Leeds XI: Darlow, Bogle, Ampadu, Struijk, Rodon, Bornauw, Justin, Gruev, Stach, Aaronson, Calvert-Lewin.

    Subs: Perri, Longstaff, Piroe, Nmecha, Okafor, Tanaka, Byram, Gnonto, Buonanotte.

    Leeds XI
  9. Sutton's predictions: Everton v Leedspublished at 08:58 GMT 26 January

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    I'm definitely adding Everton to my list of teams who are impossible to predict. They've had some brilliant results this season, and some really disappointing ones too.

    They will be without the injured Jack Grealish here but they were depleted against Villa last time out and they were brilliant in that game.

    Thierno Barry took his goal ever so well for their winner. I know it was close in but it was still a lovely finish.

    When you watch Barry closely, he is frustrating sometimes but he is a real nuisance and he is so good in the air. I was impressed by Harrison Armstrong and Merlin Rohl as well, and having Iliman Ndiaye back after winning the Afcon with Senegal will lift Everton too.

    Leeds beat Everton 1-0 at Elland Road with a late penalty at the start of the season, and this game will be just as tight.

    I was going to go for an Everton win by the same scoreline but then I thought about Dominic Calvert-Lewin coming back to his old club. He is bound to score, isn't he?

    Sutton's prediction: 1-1

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  10. Everton v Leeds United: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 13:32 GMT 25 January

    Matt Jones
    BBC Sport journalist

    Everton and Leeds United will both be out to put an end to their respective stuttering home and away records when they face each other at Hill Dickinson Stadium on Monday night (20:00 GMT) in the Premier League.

    The Blues have won just one of their last five top-flight fixtures at their new home, while Leeds have a solitary victory from their 11 Premier League games on the road since their promotion.

    The fixture also contains a fascinating subplot, as Dominic Calvert-Lewin is set to play against Everton for the first time since his summer exit. Following his switch to Elland Road, he has been one of the standout strikers in the league.

    Everton will look to Garner after Grealish blow

    Everton continued their excellent away form this season on Sunday as a depleted XI earned a 1-0 win at Aston Villa.

    Less than 48 hours later, Everton's enthusiasm was sapped. The club confirmed Jack Grealish has suffered a foot injury, and reports suggest he is set to miss around three months of the campaign.

    Given Grealish's creative talents – he ranks fifth in the Premier League for chances created this season – there will be a void for manager David Moyes to fill. Some of the burden could be taken on by Iliman Ndiaye, who is back from the Africa Cup of Nations along with Idrissa Gueye, as well as the potential return of Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall.

    But as those players get up to speed, it is likely the absence of Grealish will place more emphasis on James Garner. The former Manchester United man was excellent against Aston Villa and has been Everton's star performer this season.

    In addition to the glimpses of attacking class he has showcased lately, Garner has made a massive defensive contribution with the tireless Gueye unavailable. His all-round improvement this year has been substantial and he has been rewarded with a new contract.

    The image displays statistics for Everton's James Garner in the Premier League from the 2023-2024 to 2025-2026Image source, BBC Sport

    Calvert-Lewin can offer a painful reminder

    With some players and some clubs, things get to a point where a parting of the ways just makes sense. For Everton and Calvert-Lewin last summer, it felt as though that threshold had been reached.

    After nine years on Merseyside, the striker walked out on a free transfer. Leeds took a chance given his fitness and form in recent years, and they have been handsomely rewarded.

    The change of scenery has revitalised the striker. Already this season, he has nine goals in 20 Premier League matches, which is his best tally since the 16 he scored under Carlo Ancelotti at Everton in 2020–21; Everton forwards Thierno Barry and Beto have only six between them.

    It will be intriguing to see who Moyes picks at the back to combat the threat of the club's former number nine, with Michael Keane suspended and Jarrad Branthwaite edging closer to full fitness.

    Despite their problems at home, Everton have kept more clean sheets than any other Premier League side since the start of November.

    Calvert-Lewin, given his newfound confidence, is unlikely to be daunted.

    A graph showing Calvert-Lewin's improved form and fitness this season for Leeds after mixed fortunes at EvertonImage source, BBC Sport
  11. Wolves reject Leeds bid for Strand Larsenpublished at 10:53 GMT 23 January

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Jorgen Strand LarsenImage source, Getty Images

    Wolves have rejected a bid from Leeds United for striker Jorgen Strand Larsen.

    The offer fell well below Wolves' £40m asking price and came a number of days ago.

    Nottingham Forest, West Ham and Crystal Palace have shown an interest in the player this month.

    Wolves are also willing to let defender Emmanuel Agbadou leave Molineux and are in talks with Besiktas.

    The Turkish side's latest offer is £13m, with Wolves looking for £17m for the Ivory Coast international who joined from Reims for £16.6m last January.

  12. 'We just need to keep going' - Gudmundssonpublished at 09:11 GMT 23 January

    Timothy Castagne of Fulham battles for possession with Gabriel GudmundssonImage source, Getty Images

    Leeds United left-back Gabriel Gudmundsson says the team "just need to keep going" because they are in a strong position to achieve their goal of Premier League survival.

    Lukas Nmecha came off the bench to score a 91st-minute winner against Fulham last weekend, helping the Whites bounce back from their previous defeat at Newcastle.

    And there were more positives to take from this victory for manager Daniel Farke, who witnessed his side keep a clean sheet on home soil for the first time since their first two home games of the season.

    "We know the quality of this group and the coaching staff," said Gudmundsson to BBC Radio Leeds. "There's eight points between us and West Ham, but if we add eight points to our tally then we climb to about ninth position.

    "The goal for this season is to just stay up so I don't mind how far we are above the relegation zone.

    "We just need to keep going and showing our physical quality and recently we have shown our quality with scoring goals and not conceding too."

    Listen to the full interview on BBC Sounds

  13. Farke on Buonanotte, Okafor pressure and 'Rolls Royce' Ampadupublished at 14:52 GMT 22 January

    Flora Snelson
    BBC Sport journalist

    Leeds United boss Daniel Farke has been speaking to the media before Monday's Premier League game against Everton at Hill Dickinson Stadium (kick-off 20:00).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • There is "a little question mark" over Gabi Gudmundsson, who missed training on Thursday with an adductor issue. Anton Stach could be available, while Dan James is "pretty, pretty close". Both have been "part integrated" into team training with no problems, though it may take time for the latter to get up to speed having been out for two months.

    • Jaka Bijol is improving and could be back in team training in two to three weeks.

    • On David Moyes' Everton: "You always see his handwriting on his teams. A really good team spirit and togetherness, very compact against the ball. It is never easy to open one of David's teams and create chances."

    • Regarding January business, Farke is keen to "keep the group tight" unless the right opportunity comes along: "We'll be awake to give ourselves the best possible squad for the run-in, but we will only do something if we are 100% convinced that it is the right player."

    • On having an edge when you don't have the league's best players: "You need a good spirit - particularly when you don't have the best individual quality in the league. We prove this on a daily basis. As a newly-promoted side, we have to go over the line on our physical output."

    • On Facundo Buonanotte: "I'm not tempted to praise him too much otherwise he will think he is already Lionel Messi. I back him, he gets lots of trust, he will feel our support, belief, love - but it's up to him to prove that he can earn his spot, his minutes."

    • On the psychological benefit of the survival gap: "We always play with freedom but this doesn't take the pressure away at any point. It's not a free hit playing away or against big teams - we want to win every game."

    • On scoring freely: "It's proof of our DNA, that we will never be happy just to park the bus. We always want to be the protagonist and be proactive and score goals, home or away."

    • On Jack Harrison and the potential for more loan departures: "If a player is as professional as Jack, I'm open to listen to him. If a player tries to provoke something by being difficult, I will never sanction a loan."

    • He highlighted how Noah Okafor deserved "95%" of the credit for Dominic Calvert-Lewin's goal against Chelsea: "There is space for improvement [for Okafor]. He has to deliver otherwise there are others in the squad."

    • On Ethan Ampadu: "He is the glue between offence and defence, a role model who embodies what Leeds is about. His performances are more or less Rolls Royce performances over the last couple of years. Long may it continue."

    • On Lucas Perri's chance of reclaiming his spot: "There is always room for improvement, but the major stuff was spot on [by Karl Darlow, who got a clean sheet against Fulham] and for that, there is no need to question him at all."

  14. A season of injuries - how does your club rank?published at 08:33 GMT 22 January

    Matthew Hobbs
    BBC Sport journalist

    Injuries in the Premier League.
First number represents total days lost to injuries for a club.
Second number represents number of injuries for at least one day or more. Newcastle United
640
17
Fulham
377
14
Tottenham
625
19
Bournemouth
362
17
Arsenal
603
19
Liverpool
354
15
Chelsea
580
19
Manchester United
341
14
Brighton
514
17
Crystal Palace
339
15
Manchester City
512
16
West Ham United
302
12
Nottingham Forest
510
16
Everton
287
10
Aston Villa
432
16
Brentford
262
9
Leeds United
426
19
Sunderland
252
11
Wolves
380
14
Burnley
219
9

    From the Premier League's elite to the soggy pitches of Sunday league, injuries are part and parcel of football - but which top-flight teams have been worst affected so far this season?

    With help from injury expert Ben Dinnery, of premierinjuries.com,, external BBC Sport has examined which sides have been hit the hardest, the impact injuries can have on under-fire managers - and whether things are always as bad as they seem.

    Injuries in Premier League by club - source PremierInjuries.com Bournemouth
8
Brighton
4
Newcastle
7
Fulham
4
Crystal Palace
7
Arsenal
3
Tottenham
7
Leeds
3
Manchester City
7
Liverpool
3
Burnley
6
Manchester United
3
Everton
5
Nottingham Forest
3
Chelsea
4
Sunderland
2
Aston Villa
4
West Ham United
2
Brentford
4
Wolves
2
  15. Everything points to a drawn-out battlepublished at 11:09 GMT 21 January

    Pat Nevin
    Former footballer and presenter

    Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall of Everton runs with the ball while under pressure from Ethan Ampadu (L) and Daniel JamesImage source, Getty Images

    Leeds United and Everton have taken advantage of others' weariness.

    Their unheralded wins against Fulham and Aston Villa respectively were huge.

    Everton's win just about guarantees them safety from the drop now and I reckon they will pick up a few more wins with Iliman Ndiaye and Idrissa Gueye heading back from Afcon. ‌

    Leeds are edging ever closer to safety too, Daniel Farke knows this was one of the most important wins of the season, even if it wasn't a headline grabber. ‌

    His side is now a well-structured Premier League outfit who look like they belong back in the big time instead of just being fleeting visitors.

    Sign up to read more from Pat Nevin in his Football Extra newsletter

  16. 'I didn't think Darlow's distribution was very good'published at 07:31 GMT 21 January

    Karl DarlowImage source, Getty Images

    BBC Radio Leeds' Jonny Buchan says that Leeds United goalkeeper Karl Darlow struggled with his distribution during their 1-0 win over Fulham.

    Speaking on the latest episode of the Don't Go To Bed Just Yet podcast, Buchan believes other goalkeepers would have faced criticism for the errors Darlow made throughout the game.

    In the first half, Emile Smith Rowe came close to an opener for Fulham, but failed to hit the target despite Darlow being a long way off his line.

    "I didn't think that Darlow's distribution was very good," Buchan said.

    "There was a couple that he belted over everybody, straight to Bernd Leno by a long stretch as well.

    "Had Lucas Perri or Illan Meslier came out for the header that Darlow came out for, they would be getting hammered.

    "This isn't saying that Darlow should be getting hammered, absolutely not.

    "But Darlow is the one coming in, starting clean and fresh, whereas Perri has a season of slight discrepancies behind him.

    "I do think that maybe public opinion gets worse as time goes on and these errors stack up.

    "What will people be saying about Darlow in five or six games' time?"

    Listen to the full episode here

    Explore all Leeds United content on BBC Sounds

    The BBC Sounds logo against a black background
  17. Leeds sign Nigeria international Ngengepublished at 14:15 GMT 20 January

    Leonard Ngenge in actionImage source, Getty Images

    Leeds United have completed the signing of defender Leonard Ngenge, who will join the club's academy after agreeing a deal running until the end of the 2026-27 season.

    The 18-year-old arrives in West Yorkshire from Nigeria, having made seven appearances in all competitions this season for Remo Stars FC. Despite being recruited initially for the academy setup, Ngenge already boasts senior international experience.

    The centre-back has been capped twice by Nigeria, making his international debut against Senegal last year before also featuring in a match against Sudan.

    Ngenge will now begin his development within Leeds' academy structure, as the club continues to identify and invest in emerging talent with the potential to progress through to the first team.

  18. 'Exhausting, exhilarating, and completely Leeds United'published at 13:30 GMT 20 January

    Molly Whitmore
    Fan writer

    Leeds United fan's voice graphic
     Lukas Nmecha of Leeds United celebratesImage source, Getty Images

    As a Leeds fan you honestly could not script nights like that even if you tried.

    A point you would have taken, but what a thriller. That is what following this football club is all about.

    Right to the very last minute, heart in mouth, limbs ready, and then bang, chaos. The roar, the disbelief, the pure release when that goal went in is exactly why we put ourselves through the stress week after week.

    Supporting Leeds is never calm, never simple, and we would not have it any other way.

    Against Fulham it felt like one of those games where momentum swung every few minutes.

    We had spells where we looked sharp and aggressive, then moments where you feared we might come away empty handed. Fulham are no mugs and they showed quality, but the way the lads kept going summed up the spirit in this side.

    Even when it looked like we might have to settle, they kept believing, and that belief paid off in the most dramatic fashion possible.

    I have to say, back in summer I was all over the Harry Wilson signing, despite his Derby ties, but we have forgiven Bogle I guess.

    Football does strange things to loyalties and grudges. That said, seeing Wilson avoid what should have been a red card left a sour taste. If that is the way he plays, I am glad to see him nowhere near West Yorkshire.

    There is clever and then there is reckless, and it felt like we got the wrong side of that decision on the night.

    On a more positive note, it was great to see Bogle back in the side. The whispers of him going to Everton were scary at the time, and when injuries start circulating you always fear the worst.

    I am glad to hear it was just an ankle injury. Hopefully with the rest and medical care he has received, we get the old Bogle back, flying down the flank with confidence and energy. He gives us something different and you could sense the lift his presence brought.

    Big hats off to Farke for dropping Perri after the Newcastle heartbreak. From day one of signing Darlow, though he may not be as good as his prime days, I have shouted it from the hill tops that having an experienced player from who has played in multiple divisions brings more positives than negatives.

    Looking ahead, I am really looking forward to visiting the new Hill Dickinson on Monday. What a great weekend that would have been - a Saturday in Liverpool. Still, a new stadium, a fresh atmosphere, and Leeds taking their travelling support on the road is never a bad thing.

    Nights like Fulham remind you why you fall in love with this club in the first place. Drama, controversy, passion, and that feeling that anything can happen until the final whistle. Exhausting, exhilarating, and completely Leeds United.

    Molly Whitmore is a regular contributor on BBC Radio Leeds - find all their audio here