Leeds United’s season has begun to unravel in a way that feels all too inevitable with the club caught between two philosophies, neither of which is producing the required results. After returning to the Premier League under Daniel Farke, hopes were high that Leeds would build a stable foundation, blending Farke’s clear tactical identity with the club’s modern, data-driven recruitment model. Instead, what has emerged is a side that looks confused, disjointed and worryingly devoid of identity.
At the heart of Leeds’ problems lies a fundamental misalignment between the recruitment department and the head coach. Farke has always been a manager who relied on fluid attacking patterns. His teams at Norwich and Leeds in the Championship thrived on quick combinations, intelligent movement and controlled possession. Yet summer recruitment seemed to head in a completely different direction.
The club’s data-driven approach prioritised physical profiles, tall, powerful, athletic players thought capable of competing in the Premier League’s physical environment. On paper, this made sense, a different approach to the teams that fared so badly last season. Leeds had been accused of being too lightweight in their previous spell in the Premier League as well, too easily bullied in tight contests. But the players brought in to address that problem have not elevated the team and if anything, have dulled its attacking edge.
The analytics team’s focus on strength, speed and statistical durability has created a squad that might look suited to the modern Premier League physically, but lacks the technical and tactical qualities required to play Farke’s football. Farke needs midfielders who can receive the ball under pressure and dictate tempo, on full-backs who can overlap and forwards capable of subtle movement between the lines. Instead, Leeds now have a mismatch of functional, hard-working professionals who are strong but limited in possession. The result is a team built for two different styles but excelling at neither.
Farke’s frustrations were clear during the summer, his repeated requests for another attacking player were not met, leaving Leeds short of creative options and overly reliant on moments of individual brilliance rather than structured play. The problem, we don’t have enough players capable of those moments of brilliance, a lack of fluidity going forward is stark. Leeds look disconnected between defence and attack, with little cohesion in midfield. For a coach who built his reputation on clear tactical identity, this version of Leeds feels like a compromise, a hybrid of ideas that satisfies nobody, especially the fans.
It's even more frustrating when you compare Leeds to the progress of clubs like Sunderland, who have embraced a recruitment model that aligns perfectly with their coaching philosophy. Every signing fits a defined style of play, allowing for continuity even when results fluctuate. Sure they may be pushing the limits of PSR but what teams that have come up and thrived have not over the last few seasons, to be cautious feels like an acceptance of relegation. It may yet fall apart for the Mackems, especially when the Africa Cup of Nations starts, but they are all ready well on their way to winning enough points for survival.
Leeds, by contrast have pursued players who fit statistical models rather than the head coaches’ tactical requirements. The recruitment department may point to data and potential resale value, but football is not built on spreadsheets alone. The best data-led clubs such as Brentford and Brighton succeed because their recruitment is fully synchronised with the manager’s principles. Leeds, at present, seem to have built a team for an abstract version of Premier League survival, not one that matches the way their manager wants to play.
The outcome is a side with no clear identity. They are not aggressive pressers, do little with the possession they have and aren’t a threat on the counterattack. They drift between styles, uncertain of who they are or how they should impose themselves. It was clear on the pitch on Sunday, a starting line-up with one progressive player, gaps between the midfield and defence and a vulnerability at the back which was just not there last season.
As pressure mounts on Farke and calls for his sacking grow louder, Leeds fans must ask not only whether he is the right man for the job, but also whether the structure above him allows any manager to succeed. Sacking him would be an easy way out for the board, shifting the focus onto Farke’s failings rather than their own. But without proper alignment between recruitment and the coach, the same problems will resurface under a new face. Leeds’ ambitions of becoming a sustainable Premier League club depend on a clear, unified vision, one in which football philosophy and recruitment strategy work together, not against each other.