Mikel Arteta Patrick Bamford Leeds United Gabriel Magalhaes Jesse Marsch Usa Sporting Arsenal Mikel Arteta Patrick Bamford Leeds United Gabriel Magalhaes Jesse Marsch Usa

Jesse Marsch says Leeds United were better than Arsenal and questions officiating

metro.co.uk

Leeds United boss Jesse Marsch believes his side dominated Sunday’s 1-0 defeat at the hands of Premier League leaders Arsenal and felt the hosts were once again on the wrong end of refereeing decisions.Arsenal news, exclusives and analysisThe Gunners took the lead at Elland Road through Bukayo Saka but were forced to soak up an enormous amount of pressure, with Leeds laying siege to the north Londoners’ goal at times.Patrick Bamford had the chance to level the scores from the penalty spot but dragged his effort wide, while Leeds also had a second late penalty overturned – with Gabriel Magalhaes’ red card also rescinded.Afterwards, Mikel Arteta said Leeds had given Arsenal – who are now four points clear at the top of the table – their toughest test and Marsch felt his side deserved all three points.Speaking after the match, the American coach said: ‘A really good performance from us.

Discipline, concentration over the entire match even with the late start and everything that was strange on the day.‘A performance that showed when we play the way that we want to play, we can be very good.

Very good. So that’s the best team in the league right now, and today we were better. We were better.‘We’re making it hard on ourselves by not capitalising on moments when we’re on top of games.

We should be up in this match, even in the second half we could score four or five goals and we would walk out of here feeling like it was the perfect match.’He echoed that message in his post-match press conference, continuing: ‘We’ve had a number of games where we’ve been on top of things, been the better team and we don’t find ways to get the goals that we deserve in those moments.‘And then it keeps the opponent around or gives them the chance

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Almost 4,000 miles separates Leeds from Racine but the values Jesse Marsch absorbed as a child growing up in the Wisconsin factory town are arguably keeping him in a job at Elland Road just now. The midwest is a part of the United States noted for the striking humility and sheer “niceness” of its inhabitants and, at least away from the pitch, Marsch seems a typically empathic export.
Bobby Decordova-Reid and Willian scored second-half goals as Fulham won 3-2 at Elland Road to send Leeds spiralling into the Premier League's bottom three.

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