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FourFourTwo
FourFourTwo
Sport
Joe Mewis

‘Replacing Marcelo Bielsa at Leeds was a big challenge. It’s a shame the club gave up on us, then paid the price of relegation’ Jesse Marsch on succeeding the Leeds United favourite

Jesse Marsch.

Succeeding a club legend in the dugout is never an easy task, not least a club where the fans are as passionate as they are at Leeds United.

In fact, the Elland Road club had some of the most infamous managerial succession sagas in football history, when Brian Clough lasted just 44 days as Don Revie’s replacement back in 1974.

Fast forward four decades and Leeds found themselves in the position of having to replace another iconic figure, who had quickly formed a strong emotional bond with the club’s loyal supporters.

Jesse Marsch on the challenge of succeeding Marcelo Bielsa

Marcelo Bielsa has led Leeds back to the Premier League after a 16-year absence (Image credit: Getty)

During his four-year tenure in West Yorkshire, Marcelo Bielsa had not only delivered Leeds back into the Premier League following a 16-year absence with an irresistible, relentless style of attacking football, but his humble, principled manner saw him quickly build a connection with the fans.

Leeds’ stuttering form in the team’s second season back in the top flight saw him relieved of his duty in February 2022, with American coach Jesse Marsch quickly hired as the Argentine’s replacement.

Marsch lasted less than a year at Elland Road (Image credit: Getty Images)

“It was a big challenge,” Marsh says as he reflects on his 11-month spell in charge at Elland Road to FourFourTwo.

“I had always coached teams that were higher in the food chain, instead of lower down, but I made some strong relationships within the community and the club. I learned a lot – there were challenges, from a leadership and a football perspective.”

Marsch was sacked less than a year after arriving in the Premier League, with Leeds sitting 17th in the Premier League table and in the midst of a relegation scrap which would eventually see them lose the top-flight status they had worked so hard to restore.

“I do believe we would have stayed up and then continued on a good path – it was a shame that the club gave up on it, then paid the price [by going down],” the former RB Leipzig boss continues.

“But I was happy to see they got back to the Premier League and I hope they continue to find a way to stay there.”

Marsch is now in charge of World Cup co-hosts Canada (Image credit: James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images)

Marsh also acknowledges that succeeding Bielsa also brought about its own unique pressures.

“Bielsa was a fan favourite there, but internally I think it was clear that the club were ready for something different.

“I tried to take some of the things that had been established by Marcelo and others at Leeds, and then turn it into something that I believed could be successful moving forward.”

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