Det kommer vel etter denne kampen også, hvilken rolle hadde Koch etter at han kom inn?
Her er Leeds-Live, om hva som kanskje må til for at Koch skal få spille i nærmeste fremtid:
A glimpse into Koch’s future?
The route into Bielsa’s central defence is a traffic jam right now and we haven’t even discussed the Germany international biding his time either.
Robin Koch will know he is on the back foot and down the pecking order simply because of his knee injury and the match sharpness he still needs to hone.
Although, there was a glimpse of something different from Bielsa with him against Saturday’s visitors. When Koch was introduced for Tyler Roberts, he went in as a defensive midfielder.
This was not a huge surprise because we have seen fits and starts of him in there before, but it was strange to see someone come on and shunt Kalvin Phillips forward.
They even looked like a double-pivot at times in a fluid 4-2-3-1, but Phillips spent enough time pressing forward onto Fred for the system to retain a 4-1-4-1 outline.
Bielsa has regularly taken opportunities to stress Koch, Diego Llorente and Struijk’s abilities as defensive midfielders, with a nod to some of the widespread coverage the media gives the problem Phillips creates when he is absent.
Koch looked competent in the 15 minutes he had there and dynamic enough to move around the field, breaking up play.
Could Bielsa yet develop a hybrid formation with Phillips playing as a central midfielder in front of a Koch or Llorente holding? Time will tell.
https://www.leeds-live.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/leeds-united-fixtures-european-hopes-20464301