Good Morning. It's Tuesday 26th May, and here are the latest headlines from Elland Road…
Forest and Leeds fight it out over Hackney
Nottingham Forest are ready to move swiftly in their pursuit of Middlesbrough's Hayden Hackney, with the Premier League side eager to get early business done before the summer transfer window properly heats up. The 23-year-old midfielder has emerged as a top target for Forest as they prepare for their first full season under manager Vítor Pereira, who secured the club's Premier League survival with five points to spare despite finishing in 16th place. Pereira enters the new campaign with just 12 months remaining on his contract, though he at least has the security of planning for the 2026/27 season after an encouraging end to the current campaign that saw Forest reach the Europa League semi-finals.
However, Forest face significant competition for Hackney's Signature. Leeds United have long admired the Championship Player of the Year and possess several factors that could give them an advantage in the race. Hackney has lived in Redcar his entire life, meaning a move to Elland Road would require minimal disruption to his personal life, with the journey to Thorp Arch taking less than an hour by car. Perhaps more importantly, his former Middlesbrough captain and mentor Jonny Howson has returned to Leeds as a coach, creating a reunion that must appeal to him on a personal level.
Middlesbrough have made clear they will not let their prized asset leave cheaply, with the club set to demand around £25million from any interested party. The Championship side point to Alex Scott's move from Bristol City to Bournemouth in 2023 for the same fee as evidence that Hackney should command a similar valuation. No formal bid has been submitted yet, but Forest are prepared to accelerate talks having missed out on European football despite their cup exploits. Leeds could also use Joel Piroe as leverage. Boro identified the striker as their top priority this summer having failed to gain promotion.
Super computer reveals where Leeds should have finished
When you strip away the drama of last-minute goals, a clearer picture of Leeds United's Premier League campaign emerges; one that suggests the club's return to the top flight was even more successful than their 14th-place finish implies. According to Opta analyst's sophisticated supercomputer, which simulates each match 10,000 times based on expected goals (xG) metrics, Daniel Farke's side should have finished 11th in the table.
What makes this analysis particularly compelling is the context provided by those heart-breaking late goals that so often tilted momentum against Leeds throughout the season. When you factor in the 14 goals conceded after the 90th minute, a statistic that reflects both the aggressive nature of Farke's game plan and the unfortunate timing of opposition strikes, it becomes clear that Leeds were victims of cruel timings. These late collapses cost them precious points and a higher league position, yet the underlying numbers suggest their overall performance warranted a more favourable reward.
Perhaps the most satisfying narrative to emerge from this statistical deep-dive is the vindication of Leeds United's recruitment strategy, which faced considerable scepticism last summer. The club invested £100m yet the criticism was loud and persistent, with many questioning whether these signings possessed the quality required for England's most competitive division. The numbers speak resoundingly in their favour, seven of the ten summer acquisitions proved to be exceptional signings, delivering value far beyond their price tags and forming the backbone of a team that statistically outperformed its final position.
This convergence of statistical evidence and recruitment success tells us something important about the direction of Leeds United under both the ownership of 49ers Enterprises and Daniel Farke. The German has created a framework that maximizes the potential of his players while demanding enormous physical and tactical commitment. The recruitment department identified individuals suited to this demanding system, players who could both contribute to Leeds' ambitious style and develop into genuine Premier League talents. That seven out of ten signings exceeded expectations is a remarkable hit rate by any measure, particularly for a club operating under a strict transfer budget.
Jekyll at Home, Hyde on the Road
Leeds United's season defied logical explanation, finishing a respectable 14th place with 47 points while simultaneously presenting one of the most puzzling statistical paradoxes in recent Premier League memory. The Whites transformed Elland Road into a fortress where goals flowed freely and defensive solidity reigned supreme, yet the moment they ventured beyond Yorkshire's borders, the entire operation collapsed into chaos. At home, Leeds boasted a Goal Difference of +8, scoring 29 times while conceding just 21 goals, a record that would have looked perfectly at home among the league's upper echelons.
Away from familiar surroundings, however, that figure plummeted to a catastrophic -15, with Leeds managing a mere two victories on the road all campaign. To everyone's surprise, one of those was the 2-1 victory at Old Trafford where Leeds played Manchester Utd off the park. The true extent of their away day despair emerged in those painful leads that dissolved into defeat, none more devastating than their collapses at St James' Park, where Leeds somehow found themselves ahead on three separate occasions against Newcastle, only to witness the Magpies mount an improbable 4-3 comeback, with two goals coming in extra time.