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Leeds still learning to love after Bielsa

Against Norwich, Leeds concede a stoppage-time equaliser and then go up the pitch and win the game all over again thanks to a goal from their teenage striker. Elland Road erupts. This is vintage Leeds, a moment to cherish.

At Wolves, the large travelling support see their team go two goals down at the break but continue to cheer them on. An improbable comeback is completed in the 91st minute, this time the long-serving Luke Ayling, after a man-of-the-match display, is the hero.

Had these moments come during the reign of Marcelo Bielsa - back-to-back stoppage-time wins in the Premier League for the first time this century - they might have entered the pantheon of his greatest hits, lauded as examples of El Loco at his best.

Instead, they were Jesse Marsch's first two wins as Leeds boss.

As a result, the mood among supporters is rather different. There is an unease. Some are happy to move on. They will say that the club is bigger than any one person. Staying in the Premier League is the immediate focus. Marsching on together and all that.

Others are reluctant to let go. They accept that there must be life after Bielsa but that does not mean they have to love it, not just yet. Expecting them to embrace it in the same way, to be imbued with that same sense of purpose when they were all in, is a lot to ask.

This is the problem facing Marsch. If circumstances were different those first two wins would have set the tone, ending debate about whether his style of play would bring an end to the Elland Road run. Instead, there has been chatter about the third win at Watford.

A 3-0 victory away from home, Leeds' biggest of the season, sounds emphatic. But the manner of it has been criticised. It was a stuttering performance, not

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