Aaron Bower at Elland Road 

Matheus Cunha earns Manchester United draw as Leeds keep up unbeaten run

Manchester United drew 1-1 at Leeds as Matheus Cunha equalised shortly after Brenden Aaronson had put the hosts ahead in the second half
  
  

Manchester United's Matheus Cunha finishes smartly to peg back Leeds at Elland Road.
Manchester United's Matheus Cunha finishes smartly to peg back Leeds at Elland Road. Photograph: Danny Lawson/PA

Few of the near 40,000 that flooded the Elland Road terraces would have cared to admit it given the depths at which one of English football’s most intense rivalries runs, but it was hard to argue that this was anything but a well-earned point apiece that serves the intentions and ambitions of both Leeds and Manchester United well.

On first glance, a draw away at a ­ ­promoted side does little in terms of oozing positivity. But given Ruben Amorim selected a starting lineup with nine defensive-minded players and the visitors were facing a side now on their longest unbeaten run in the Premier League since 2001, they will view this as a point gained.

This latest instalment of this rivalry felt as vitriolic and hostile as historical encounters in the stands – you only had to witness the reaction to the visitors’ team bus arriving at Elland Road – but it didn’t quite feel that way on it; there wasn’t quite the bite of those matches of previous decades.

That was ­evident at full time, as the players embraced and debriefed each other after a fairly low-key and often low-quality contest.

To that end, there was perhaps no ­surprise the goals came ­ from mistakes with Brenden Aaronson opening the ­scoring just after the hour mark before Matheus Cunha levelled three minutes later.

Aaronson’s strike, a fine ­finish after Ayden Heaven misread a ­routine long ball over the top, had briefly given Leeds fans hope of a first league ­victory against their ­fiercest rivals since 2002. But Cunha’s ­finish, when he caught the Leeds­goalkeeper, Lucas Perri, in no man’s land, gave the visitors a point they probably deserved.

And for both teams? It was likely to feel like one point gained rather than two dropped. For Amorim and ­Manchester United, it keeps them in touch with the Champions League scramble while for Leeds, they are now seven unbeaten and eight clear of the relegation zone after West Ham’s implosion at Wolves on Saturday.

“We did well,” Amorim said. “We improved a lot of things ­compared to the last game. We ­controlled the hostility of the offence from Leeds.”

Questions remain over what is happening at ­Manchester United off the field, with the flames fanned further by some remarkable post-match claims over a possible internal clash on transfer policy once again.

As for Daniel Farke, his ­decision to switch to a 3-5-2 has been a ­masterstroke. But Leeds continue to look a side capable of pulling away from trouble, especially when you consider they were without Joe Rodon, Ethan Ampadu and Jayden Bogle, who have all been influential in their resurgence.

But with similar shapes and Amorim starting so many defensive-minded players, there was perhaps no surprise the sides cancelled each other out throughout a routine opening 45 minutes. Cunha thought he had opened the scoring before Benjamin Sesko was flagged offside in the buildup, and Manchester United’s only other chance was when Leny Yoro forced a save from Perri.

At the other end, Dominic ­Calvert-Lewin’s glancing header struck the post but neither side had done enough to stir their ­supporters into life, or threaten to take control of proceedings.

After the break, things came to life – ignited fully by Aaronson’s ­wonderful finish after Heaven’s ­mishap allowed the American to break through on goal. Suddenly, Elland Road had come alive, but it had been stunned into silence once again three minutes later.

Amorim called for Joshua ­Zirkzee immediately after the goal and his threaded ball allowed Cunha to finish well and level the scores. Sesko, whose own travails in front of goal continued here, struck a Zirkzee cross wide. He is still struggling in ­adjusting to the Premier League and while Amorim offered a firm defence of the Slovenian, two goals in 17 games is ­anything but a healthy return.

Leeds’s best chance of a ­winner came when the substitute Joël Piroe curled an effort just over Senne ­Lammens’s crossbar but a winner for either side would have been harsh.

“I’m proud of my lads,” Farke said. “To face a side of the calibre of Man United, it’s difficult and ­everyone tells you it’s the most important game for Leeds. So there’s lots of expectation and I’m very proud of the mentality of my players.”

 

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