Date: Saturday, 20th September 2003.
Venue: Elland Road, Leeds.
Competition:
English Premier League.
Score: Leeds
United 0 Birmingham City 2
Scorers: Leeds
United: Nil. Birmingham City:
Savage (pen), Forssell.
Attendance:
34,305
Teams:
Leeds United: Robinson; Kelly, Camara, Roque Junior, Harte; Pennant, Morris, Olembe, Sakho (Lennon); Smith, Viduka.
Unused Subs: Batty, Radebe, Chapuis,
Carson.
Birmingham
City: Taylor; Johnson, Upson,
Cunningham, Clapham; Dunn (Morrison), Clemence,
Savage, Lazarides; Forssell
(Tebily), Dugarry (Cisse). Unuded Subs: John,
Bennett.
Referee: Mr D. Gallagher (Banbury, Oxfordshire).
Leeds were in
control of a scrappy affair, and with thirteen minutes to go, looked poised to
steal a valuable victory. But United’s usual refereeing
lucky charm, Dermot Gallagher, had an aberration in the dying minutes and the
Blues picked up an ill-deserved win. Gallagher adjudged Roque
Junior’s foul on Mikael Forssell
to have taken place just inside the box, initial contact was made outside, and
a penalty was awarded. Paul Robinson proved equal to David Dunn’s spot-kick,
but amazingly the penalty was ordered to be re-taken because Paul Robinson had
moved off his line. Robbie Savage scored the second spot-kick and Birmingham went on to win 2-0. Robinson
admitted, “I couldn’t believe it. I did the same the second time around and
nothing was said.”
Two blatant
acts of daylight robbery cost Leeds United dear against Birmingham City at Elland Road. The United revival was taking
shape quite nicely, following the humiliation at Leicester, when two scandalous decisions by
referee Dermot Gallagher and one of his assistants denied Leeds at least a point against the Blues.
First Gallagher awarded a penalty that never was, then
his assistant ordered the spot-kick to be re-taken after Paul Robinson had
pulled off a blinding save to deny David Dunn from 12 yards. It was as though
the fates were conspiring against Leeds to ensure Gallagher's golden streak, United
hadn't lost in their previous eighteen games with him in charge, would come to
an end. The two decisions were a complete travesty. The match officials left
the ground without an explanation, and changed the complexion of a game in
which Peter Reid's side had done everything bar score. It was hard to imagine
that such controversy would have reigned at Old Trafford or Highbury,
but this was Elland Road and United were no longer viewed as
one of the Premiership's protected species.
Why the
penalty was awarded in the first place is a mystery. Roque
Junior, who was given a second yellow card to ensure his home debut ended in an
early bath, made minimal contact with a sprawling Mikael
Forssell and that appeared to take place outside the
area. Amazingly Roque Junior appeared to have no
complaints, but what followed sparked fury at Elland Road. Paul Robinson pulled off a
tremendous save low to his left to deny David Dunn before the assistant referee
intervened and ordered the kick to be taken again, citing early movement by the
keeper off his line. This was a movement that happens every time a penalty is
taken and Paul Robinson repeated the process to the re-taken spot kick, but
this time Robbie Savage's strike was allowed to stand. It was pedantic to say
the least, but what followed was a throw back to 1971 when United were famously
denied by a linesman's flag in a championship decider with West Bromwich
Albion.
Peter Reid,
akin to Don Revie, looked up to the heavens before
berating the match officials, while programmes and plastic bottles were thrown onto the running
track from the normally placid West Stand paddock. Indeed, a supporter on
crutches was so incensed he even staged a one-man pitch invasion, but was
prevented from reaching the Birmingham dug-out by two stewards. All around
there was disbelief. And that transferred itself onto the pitch where United
looked visibly rocked by the decisions and immediately lost their impetus. The
penalty ruling came in the seventy-sixth minute and just eight minutes later
there was more controversy when Mikael Forssell was allowed to sneak in from an apparently offside
position to put the result beyond doubt. TV pictures suggested Mikael Forssell was probably
level when David Dunn played him in, but it was touch and go, and the fact that
the assistant referee gave the goal was more by luck than judgement given his incompetence moments
earlier.
It was a
goal that wouldn't have stood nine times out of ten, similar openings were
flagged at Old Trafford that weekend, yet it summed up United's
luck beautifully.
The players had given Peter Reid the response he was looking for after Monday's
nightmare at the Walkers Stadium. Ian Harte looked
rejuvenated in the left-back position, the defence
looked solid and Birmingham never looked like breaking them down, until
Gallagher's untimely intervention. Leeds had bossed proceedings in the middle of the
park and full debutant Salomon Olembe linked up well
with the busy Jody Morris at the heart of the engine room. Up front, Alan Smith
ploughed something of a lone furrow against a well-organised
Birmingham defence
and the only real worry for Reid was the lack of quality from United in the
final third. His side dominated in terms of possession, but only created two
clear-cut chances all afternoon.
Some of the
credit for that must go to Birmingham and Matthew Upson in particular who
had Blues defence well marshalled.
But Leeds were lacking the killer instinct required to finish sides off and,
had they taken their chances, the game would have been over before Dermot
Gallagher decided to offer Birmingham a helping hand and proved once and for
all that he was not a Leeds fan. United's best chance
in the first half came when Salomon Olembe played a
delightful ball to Lamine Sakho
just inside the box. Sakho delivered a lovely pull
back and, when Alan Smith and Mark Viduka failed to
get on the end of it, Jermaine Pennant was presented
with a golden opportunity to open the scoring, but he failed to control. The
second opening was after the break when Mark Viduka
held up an Ian Harte free-kick and Alan Smith turned Kenny
Cunningham. However, Smith's shot was straight at Maik
Taylor. While those were the only out and out chances, there were no doubts as
to who was the better side and Leeds dominated in terms of possession.
Salomon Olembe's passing and vision was a real asset while Lamine Sakho gave the sort of
determined display that he was becoming renowned for. Ian Harte
was also a thorn in Birmingham's side at set-pieces and the
Irishman did well for United. But, right from the fifth minute when Roque Junior went in the book for an innocuous challenge,
just seconds before Robbie Savage went unpunished for an awful tackle on Lamine Sakho, it was the referee
who made his intentions clear and the game will be remembered for the
performance of Dermot Gallagher. That wasn't how it was supposed to be.
Match Action:
The centre of controversy: Paul Robinson saves
David Dunn’s penalty attempt.
The linesman declares that Paul Robinson had
moved before the shot was taken
Referee Dermot Gallagher accepts his linesman’s
decision
Leeds players, led by Gary Kelly, Jody Morris,
Mark Viduka and Solomon Olembe,
question Dermot Gallagher’s decision
Paul Robinson makes a valiant attempt but
Robbie Savage scores from the retake, as Alan Smith, Lamine
Sakho and Ian Harte, and
David Dunn, look on
Robbie Savage scores from the spot
Robbie Savage celebrates his penalty success Mikael Forssell celebrates his
goal
Jermaine Pennant watches ruefully as a chance goes begging
Mikael Forssell powers past Roque
Junior
Jermaine Pennant loses out to Matthew Upson
Lamine Sakho is clattered by Damien Johnson Jody Morris disputes
possession with Kenny Cunningham
Players:
Mikael Forssell and Robbie Savage scored for the
visitors Paul Robinson saved a
penalty Ian Harte looked
rejuvenated
Peter Reid got the response Roque Junior was
sent off Salomon Olembe
liked well with Jody Morris
Lamine Sahko’s pass
was not used
Alan Smith lone furrow Jermaine
Pennant missed Mark Viduka missed also Maik
Taylor was in goal for Birmingham
Damien Johnson and future United loanee, Jamie Clapham were at
full-back Matthew Upson and Kenny Cunningham
were in central defence
David Dunn, Stephen Clemence,
Robbie Savage and Stan Lazaridis started in the Birmingham midfield
Mikael Forssell and Christophe
Dugarry were the strikers Future
United keeper, Ian Bennett, and Stern John were the
unused substitutes
Clinton Morrison, Aliou
Cisse and Olivier Tebily
were the substitutes used