Date: Saturday, 29th November 1997.
Venue: Oakwell, Barnsley.
Competition:
English Premier League.
Score: Barnsley
2 Leeds United 3
Scorers: Barnsley:
Liddell, Ward. Leeds United: Haaland,
Wallace, Lilley.
Attendance:
18,690.
Teams:
Barnsley: Leese; Eaden, De Zeeuw, Redfearn, Liddell (Hristov);
Bullock (Appleby), Bosancic (Moses), Tinkler, Barnard; Ward, Markstedt.
Leeds United: Martyn; Halle (Maybury),
Wetherall, Radebe,
Robertson; Kelly, Haaland (Molenaar),
Bowyer (Lilley), Ribeiro; Wallace, Hasselbaink. Unused Subs: Laurent, Beeney.
Referee: Mr M.Reed (Woking).
On George
Graham’s birthday, Leeds United were in benevolent
mood at Oakwell. The Trouble was, initially, that the
gifts they were handing out were going to Barnsley, and not to their birthday boss.
The United manager who turned fifty-three, had to look on in astonishment as
his side ‘gifted’ the Tykes a two goal lead inside the first twenty-eight
minutes of a rousing Yorkshire derby. It was only after Alfie Haaland headed his second goal in successive games, just
before half-time, that United began to get their act together sufficiently to
win through and make Graham’s birthday one to remember. In the end the
Premiership ‘Comeback Kings’, who had fought back from a three goal deficit
against Derby and then against West Ham United, after going a goal down, in
their last two league games, did it again to leave their fans singing in the
rain.
The soaking
that the United supporters, standing in the uncovered
section behind one of the goals, received was forgotten as they celebrated a
fight back crowned by a Derek Lilley winner, his first for the Elland Road club. The Scottish striker, a
£500,000 signing from Morton in the previous season, had not had the easiest of
times since his move and had not made the first-team starting line-up that
season. A few appearances as substitute had been his lot, but he certainly made
the most of his twelve minute outing at Oakwell and
could hardly have picked a better time to register his first United
goal. “Derek is honest and hard-working and he has a great appetite for the
game” a delighted United manager said.” He has not
shown very much when he has come on for us before but he was involved in the
build up to the second goal and then scored the winner”.
Lilley
challenged a Barnsley defender for Nigel Martyn’s huge clearance and though neither player seemed to
get a touch, the ball bounced on to Rod Wallace, who controlled it well and
hammered it past Lars Leese. Wallace had been a
lively competitor and his pace was a problem for defenders, especially so after
Barnsley had tired, after having put such a lot into their play in a pulsating
first half hour. His equalizing goal took his tally for the season into double
figures.
However,
Wallace was not finished and when he skipped away on a right-wing run leaving
one defender in his wake, Lilley anticipated the move and cut across towards
the near post and flicked the ball in from close range for the eighty-second
minute winner. That brought United a victory which lifted them into fourth
place. That lofty position was one that hardly seemed likely after twenty-eight
minutes when Barnsley, flourishing in the wet and greasy
conditions, were two goals up. The Premiership strugglers
shocked United by taking an eighth minute lead and had them clearly rattled
when they scored a second time.
Andy Liddell, who was born in Leeds and supported the Elland
Road club as a boy, caught United cold after only eight minutes when he stabbed
home the rebound after forcing an alert save from Nigel Martyn.
The visiting goalkeeper had been left unprotected by his uncertain defence, and Barnsley's second goal was a near replica as
Ashley Ward took advantage of more poor marking, twenty minutes later. Barnsley captain Neil Redfearn,
who had supplied the pass for Liddell’s goal, forced Martyn
to parry his fierce shot, and Ward nipped in to drive a shot into United's empty net. Redfearn was
in fine form, before he faded in the second half and both Liddell and Ward
caused plenty of problems for the United defence as Barnsley suggested their momentous win at Liverpool the previous game had been no
fluke. But United showed they had not lost their power of recovery and Graham’s
men re-grouped, stuck to the task and reaped the rewards again with another
heart stopping victory.
The United
boss, who had now seen his side win seven and draw one of their previous league
games, agreed Barnsley had started in great style. He said
“We did not seem to want to play in the first twenty minutes but we came back
well. These sort of matches are fine for the fans but
only if you win them, but I would rather be winning matches 3-2 than 1-0.”
Match Action:
Derek Lilley runs to celebrate Rod Wallace’s
goal
Derek Lilley scores the winner Derek Lilley and his bosses celebrate his
goal
Bruno Ribeiro tackles
Eric Tinkler Lucas Radebe is tackled by Neil Redfearn
Players:
Alf-Inge Haaland, Rod Wallace and Derek Lilley scored the goals that
gave George Graham a birthday present
Andy Liddell, Leeds-born son of former Leeds player Gary Liddell, and Ashley Ward scored for Barnsley. Nigel Martyn’s long clearance helped United’s second
Lars Leese was in
goal
Nicky Eaden and Darren Barnard were the
full-backs
Arjen De Zeeuw and Peter Markstedt
were the central defenders Georgi Hristov was a substitute
Martin Bullock, Neil Redfearn,
Eric Tinkler and Jovo Bosancic were the Barnsley midfield
Ashley Ward and Andy Liddell were the strikers
Matty Appleby and Adrian Moses also got a run as
substitutes