Can it really get much much worse for Leeds?
Bottom of the Premiership, five defeats in a row, administration apparently
only two weeks away, mystical Sheikhs allegedly promising fools gold in the
background and a casualty list as long as a Crimea hospital.
And no luck at all in a thrilling grandstand finish when, after slipping two
goals behind, they made a late reply with Matthew Kilgallon's 75th-minute header
and then saw James Milner's cross deflected onto the inside of a post by Michael
Svensson with seven minutes left.
It seemed there might be some relief for Leeds against a Southampton side
badly out of salts themselves after just one goal in five games and starting
without benched top-scorer James Beattie.
But the Saints took the opportunity to expound hope that manager Gordon
Strachan might still grind out enough results to fulfil his wish of staying for
a dignified exit at the end of the season.
Indeed, with sharper finishing his team should have at least doubled their
tally long before some worrying late wobbles.
He knows though that in the previous 20 league encounters they had scored in
only nine - and that last season when cruising along 3-0 up against Leeds they
eventually had to settle for a nervous 3-2 success.
For 36 minutes Strachan's side, also missing injured key defender Claus
Lundekvam, looked just as inept up front as their visitors, who had been
relegated to the bottom of the table by Wolves' shock win over Manchester United
even before matters proceeded at St Mary's.
Strachan plumped for Brett Ormerod and the till-now disappointing Kevin
Phillips to fill Beattie's shooting boots but they had to watch a terrible
finish by Leeds' on-loan Jermaine Pennant to discover which way the goal
actually was.
After that, and another miserable blunder - this time in defence by Leeds'
Zoumana Camara, making his first start since November - it should all over by
half-time.
Zoumana tripped Anders Svensson and gained a booking for sheer clumsiness but
Pennant suggested he might have been kitted out by the same footwear
manufacturer with an appalling 33rd-minute miskick when he had only Antti Niemi
to beat from James Milner's marvellous run and cross.
Stop-gap defender Fitz Hall had already headed a Rory Delap long throw against
the Leeds crossbar and then Ormerod chipped over the angle of post and bar with
another good chance.
But when Jody Morris - also making his first Leeds start since November - was
just too high at the other end after a neat link between Milner and Alan Smith,
it just looked another of those typical Leeds' days.
And Leeds paid a heavy price when Ormerod gave Saints the lead just three
minutes later.
Smith lost possession and David Prutton broke intelligently away to set up
Ormerod, who smartly wrong-footed Kilgallon before driving his sixth of the
season beyond the helpless Robinson.
And it got even worse for Leeds when a blunder by Camara, who failed to make
an easy clearance, let in Phillips to slide home only his second league goal
since joining Saints, six minutes later.
There appeared no possible way back but somehow a fizzing Phillips drive
failed to find the target in the second half and then Ormerod struck the
junction of bar and post.
But Kilgallon's first Premiership goal from a piece of short-corner magic by
Irishmen Ian Harte and Gary Kelly finally inspired Leeds to a late rally that
had Saints defence looking a wreck.
When the brilliant Milner's cross came off Michael Svensson and hit a post
before bouncing into a relieved Niemi's arms seven minutes from time, you knew
the Leeds luck was right out again.
Teams
Southampton Niemi, Dodd, Hall (Kenton 80), Michael Svensson,
Higginbotham, Fernandes (Telfer 85), Anders Svensson, Delap,
Prutton, Ormerod, Phillips (Beattie 86).
Subs Not Used: Blayney, Pahars.
Booked: Anders Svensson.
Goals: Ormerod 36, Phillips 43.
Leeds Robinson, Kelly, Camara, Kilgallon, Harte, Pennant,
Morris (Bridges 65), Bakke, Seth Johnson, Milner, Smith.
Subs Not Used: Carson, Roque Junior, Barmby, Richardson.
Booked: Camara.
Goals: Kilgallon 75.
Att: 31,976
Ref: A Wiley (Staffordshire).