Manager: Daniel Farke

Started by Gufrias, July 04, 2023, 19:18:44

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ingve1960

I begge formasjoner uten ball bør vi forsvare oss i 4-5-1 evt i stedet for bijol inn trekke ampadu ned og ligge i 5-4-1..uansett vil det bli tøft men jeg gleder meg, i dag forventes det ikke poeng det er verre når du håper på tre poeng mot svak motstand og taper.
  MOT

Hallgeir *

Etter de tre vanskelige kampene mot topplag som skulle avgjøre Farkes skjebne i PL, har han på alle måter kommet styrket ut. Han har definitivt følt presset, men han har løst dette på en beundringsverdig måte.

Ikke mye erfaring på dette nivået, men det virker som om han utvikler seg i riktig retning. Jeg hyller det han gjør akkurat nå.
Super Leeds since 1968

stian

Quote from: Hallgeir * on December 06, 2025, 22:17:47Etter de tre vanskelige kampene mot topplag som skulle avgjøre Farkes skjebne i PL, har han på alle måter kommet styrket ut. Han har definitivt følt presset, men han har løst dette på en beundringsverdig måte.

Ikke mye erfaring på dette nivået, men det virker som om han utvikler seg i riktig retning. Jeg hyller det han gjør akkurat nå.

Godt sagt!

Det kan godt hende at vi rykker ned uansett, men jeg synes nesten Farke har fått et slags gjennombrudd som PL-manager med de ganske mange og litt «ville» grepene de siste kampene. Ut fra intet har vi fått flere strenger å spille på, og motstander har fått mer å gruble på med tanke på hva de møter fra Leeds. Jeg stiller meg bak hyllesten.

auren

Hatten av for Farke! Jeg hadde fått nok etter 1. omgang mot City og ville ha ham fjernet. Imponerende snuoperasjon som vel ingen hadde sett for seg etter den omgangen!

Men nå er jeg veldig spent på hvordan Farke og laget takler hvetebrødsdagene etter disse kruttsterke prestasjonene mot topp motstand. Neste ut er Brentford borte og Palace hjemme. Ingen enkle motstandere, men kanskje lett å senke guarden litt...? Jeg tenker 2-3 poeng er absolutt godkjent. Er vel litt typisk at vi ryker på et tap mot Brentford nå...

Så er spørsmålet hvilken formasjon som velges? Det viktigste er at vi finner tilbake til den fandenivoldske innstillingen og fighting spiriten. Mer kan man som fan ikke kreve!

auren
"Guardiola said: 'You know more about Barcelona than I do!'"
Marcelo Bielsa, 16.01.19, etter Spygate-foredraget sitt.

peacock

Quote from: Hallgeir * on December 06, 2025, 22:17:47Etter de tre vanskelige kampene mot topplag som skulle avgjøre Farkes skjebne i PL, har han på alle måter kommet styrket ut. Han har definitivt følt presset, men han har løst dette på en beundringsverdig måte.

Ikke mye erfaring på dette nivået, men det virker som om han utvikler seg i riktig retning. Jeg hyller det han gjør akkurat nå.

Et bevis på at man ikke skal tro på alt våset som skrives.
"Farke har mistet garderoben."
Vi har en spillergruppe som gir alt og står sammen. Hvorfor i huleste erstatte en god manager? Nå beviser han også at det kan tas grep for å snu et kampbilde.

leedslife

Han må jo være en fenomenal lagbygger.

Beste nivåene til både Norwich og Leeds er jo imponerende hvis man ser på overgangsbudsjett og kvalitet på spillere opp mot konkurrenter.

Kommer man litt til kort neste to kamper så kommer nok murringen igjen, men det er jo befriende og se en spillergruppe som alltid kommer tilbake og som legger ned alt tross av de fleste dømmer trener, prosjektet og klubb ned.

Som Farke har vært inne på så er vel også alt dette en del av jobben skriver du under som leder, trener eller spiller for Leeds.
Du får neppe slike spektakulære scener bla supporterne mot Chelsea og Liverpool uten og kjenne på baksiden av samme følelsesmessig engasjerte omgivelser.

For en klubb!

pedro

Opp i det hele er det ganske ironisk å tenke på at vi var etter Arne Slot den vinteren vi endte opp med Gracia ;D
Leedsomaniac

stian

Quote from: auren on December 06, 2025, 22:47:21Hatten av for Farke! Jeg hadde fått nok etter 1. omgang mot City og ville ha ham fjernet. Imponerende snuoperasjon som vel ingen hadde sett for seg etter den omgangen!

Men nå er jeg veldig spent på hvordan Farke og laget takler hvetebrødsdagene etter disse kruttsterke prestasjonene mot topp motstand. Neste ut er Brentford borte og Palace hjemme. Ingen enkle motstandere, men kanskje lett å senke guarden litt...? Jeg tenker 2-3 poeng er absolutt godkjent. Er vel litt typisk at vi ryker på et tap mot Brentford nå...

Så er spørsmålet hvilken formasjon som velges? Det viktigste er at vi finner tilbake til den fandenivoldske innstillingen og fighting spiriten. Mer kan man som fan ikke kreve!

auren

Kampene mot Brentford og Palace blir en syretest for om Farke 2.0 har kommet for å bli. Med gode resultater der har vi sannsynligvis fått litt luft ned til streken og kanskje også fått kontakt med flere lag over.

Jeg vil gjette på at 3-5-2 vil passe bra mot Brentford. To spisser som samhandler greit gjør at vi kan slå en del langt og spille med lav risiko. Tre sterke stoppere gjør at vi kan pakke Igor Thiago i en Rodon/Bijol-sandwich.

Så kan det tenkes at det blir like mye begrensninger i stallen som avgjør formasjon, som Farkes taktiske vurderinger. Okafor funket ikke som spiss på første forsøk. Hvis ikke Nmecha og DCL begge er spilleklare kan det hende 4-2-3-1 tvinger seg frem. Tror Farke må se litt på nytt på de spillerne han har til rådighet. Piroe kan komme mer inn i varmen, og Gnonto virker ganske hvass om dagen. Hvis Farke klarer å vaske ut en ny vellykket rolle for en spiller som allerede er i stallen begynner det å bli virkelig imponerende.

Hallgeir *

Jeg tar sjansen på å hevde at godeste Daniel Farke har knekt PL-koden. Ja, det er lett å si når man svever på en rosa sky, men jeg tror uansett at det er riktig å påstå.
Super Leeds since 1968

Blank_File

Quote from: Hallgeir * on December 20, 2025, 23:17:13Jeg tar sjansen på å hevde at godeste Daniel Farke har knekt PL-koden. Ja, det er lett å si når man svever på en rosa sky, men jeg tror uansett at det er riktig å påstå.
Han viste seg villig til å gjøre drastisk endring med kniven på strupen for første gang i sin engelske karriere (har ikke sett noe fra de andre lagene hans). Nå kan vi igjen håpe at nedrykk kan unngås. Det hadde jeg bare 5% tro på i forkant av City kampen.



TK20

Aaronson fra start mot Palace funket strålende. Veldig mange av Farkes grep har betalt seg i det siste.

raggen

Quote from: TK20 on December 22, 2025, 11:05:57Aaronson fra start mot Palace funket strålende. Veldig mange av Farkes grep har betalt seg i det siste.

jepp og all kred til ham for det. men synes det var en artig vri i tillegg med rodon som høyre vingback... virket som om det kom overraskende på glasner og alle andre
Forever Leeds United!!!!!!!!

Asbjørn

Tell me - I've got to know
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Dylan

Milou

Quote from: Blank_File on December 20, 2025, 23:45:34
Quote from: Hallgeir * on December 20, 2025, 23:17:13Jeg tar sjansen på å hevde at godeste Daniel Farke har knekt PL-koden. Ja, det er lett å si når man svever på en rosa sky, men jeg tror uansett at det er riktig å påstå.
Han viste seg villig til å gjøre drastisk endring med kniven på strupen for første gang i sin engelske karriere (har ikke sett noe fra de andre lagene hans). Nå kan vi igjen håpe at nedrykk kan unngås. Det hadde jeg bare 5% tro på i forkant av City kampen.

Det at Farke ikkje har vore smart nok eller villig til å gjere endringar i formasjon (eller spelarar) bygger nok på ein misforståing, sannsynlegvis på bakgrunn til at han generelt ventar lengre med å gjere innbytter i kampar enn gjennomsnittsmanageren. Eg hugsar godt ein kamp mot Norwich for eit par år sidan, der vi låg under med 2-0 etter første omgang. Farke la om til det som i praksis var 4 i angrep i andre omgang og snudde kampen til 2-3.

Det har også vore andre eksempel på at han har gjort liknande grep i dei to siste sesongane. Vi hugsar ikkje dette så godt, både fordi Leeds dominerte i dei fleste kampane i Championship (og det dermed ikkje var nokon grunn til å gjere endringar) og fordi det sjeldent var så effektivt som mot Norwich.


Hallgeir *

Marcelo Bielsa var jo helt ekstrem i det å få ut maks potensiale i sine spillere. Ayling, Phillips, Klich, Dallas, Alioski m.fl., gikk plutselig omtrent på vannet. Hvem hadde trodd ...?

Nå slår det meg at Farke egentlig har begynt å få veldig mye ut av en stall med navn som ikke akkurat får motstanderne til å skjelve i shortsen. Bornauw er siste eksempel på det i sin første PL-kamp fra start. En skulle tro at han hadde spilt mange kamper før den mot Liverpool.

For å få alle til å trekke "samme vei", må det være god stemning i garderoben. Alt tyder på at Farke er god på man management, for vi hører ikke noe fra spillere som får lite spilletid. (trenger ikke nevne navn). De må ha god tro på prosjektet til Farke.

Har noen et annet syn på dette?
Super Leeds since 1968

Asbjørn

Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
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Dylan

Russel_Doig

Utrolig at vi ikkje hyller denne mannen meir! 2 kanonsesonger i Championship, og nå leder han et av formlagene i PL. Enormt god på å få det beste ut av spillerene gjennom målretta «man management»

Må han snakke spansk og sitte på ei bøtte for å få den respekten han fortjener?

Josch

Quote from: Russel_Doig on January 09, 2026, 18:57:09Utrolig at vi ikkje hyller denne mannen meir! 2 kanonsesonger i Championship, og nå leder han et av formlagene i PL. Enormt god på å få det beste ut av spillerene gjennom målretta «man management»

Må han snakke spansk og sitte på ei bøtte for å få den respekten han fortjener?

Mange managere i Leeds har hatt en god periode på 7 kamper (11 poeng) i PL slik vi nettopp har sett. Det er ikke nok til å dømme ham. Mulig han har funnet trylle formelen nå, men jeg vil ikke hylle noen før det er gått 38 kamper. Vi må snart vinne igjen og få seier nr 6 i januar. Siste kamper er 0-3-1

Asbjørn

James Justin says it's the easiest dressing room he's ever F***ed into. Big admirer of Farke's management.
On that point Farke's name sung by crowd on full time. #LUFC
https://x.com/apopey/status/2010354721190715466?s=20
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

leedslife

Quote from: Asbjørn on January 11, 2026, 17:04:29James Justin says it's the easiest dressing room he's ever F***ed into. Big admirer of Farke's management.
On that point Farke's name sung by crowd on full time. #LUFC
https://x.com/apopey/status/2010354721190715466?s=20

Også kan vi endelig gravlegge den Eustace v Farke duellen.

Asbjørn

Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Asbjørn



Daniel Farke needs to be spoken about on a national football scale.

Embarking on the Premier League with Leeds United, questions were raised regarding his future at Elland Road before a ball was even kicked. Talks of a Norwich City repeat. Brutal. Yet, the board publicly backed the gaffer and he went about his business quietly.

The start of the season was tough. Defeats at relegation-threatened Forest and Burnley. Thrashed at Brighton. His days suddenly looked numbered. His future was plunged into doubt via the press.

Then though, a sudden swirl of form arrived. Switching to 3-5-2, Chelsea came to ER and left empty-handed. Liverpool followed and couldn't take the points home. A late point was salvaged again at Brentford, thanks to the resurgent DCL. What a signing. Crystal Palace were played off the park. Three draws followed, including keeping Arne Slot's side out at Anfield. Seven games undefeated in the Prem is to be celebrated.

Only then losing to Newcastle at St James' in the dying minutes after a game like ping pong, The Whites returned to winning ways with a last gasp goal to put Fulham to the sword.

Farke has gone from the bottom three to eight points clear of West Ham, and a major eleven points above the helpless Burnley.

He has defied the critics, defied the mass narrative that he couldn't hack it in the Prem and put Leeds in a very good position, in the matter of a couple of months. Kudos. #LUFC 🔵⚪


https://x.com/FootballJOE/status/2014702762605318332?s=20
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

leedslife

Litt trist at det alltid er det taktiske som poengteres.
Mest imponerende er hvilken prestasjonsgruppe han har bygget.
Det er kanskje det mest imponerende. De gir aldri opp. Det kommer alltid en reaksjon om det er PO tap, formtap eller innbyrdes kamper mot konkurrenter som går stang ut - det laget her slår alltid tilbake og det er på tredje sesongen.
Må være en unik gruppe som også har måtte se godt over 100 mill i talent forlate klubben.

Men godt og se at de endelig ser det i media og.

Asbjørn

Very good interview with Daniel Farke in
@thetimes
. His contract expires in 2027? May I suggest our manager would be a useful January signing?

Piece by
@JNorthcroft
.

#LUFC


https://x.com/jvarleymedia/status/2015155732153340054?s=20
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

Asbjørn

Quote from: Asbjørn on January 24, 2026, 22:09:40Very good interview with Daniel Farke in
@thetimes
. His contract expires in 2027? May I suggest our manager would be a useful January signing?

Piece by
@JNorthcroft


Jepp. Kjempegreier :)

Meet Daniel Farke: failed novelist, manager and '5% fire beast'
Once the 'slowest striker in all of Europe', Championship's most successful manager is finally finding success in the Premier League with Leeds

Daniel Farke, manager, gestures to the adoring crowd as Leeds United staff, players and coaches held an open top parade after getting promoted to the English Premier League as champions.
Farke landed his third Championship title with Leeds last season, making him the division's most successful manager

In his early twenties, Daniel Farke started writing a novel. He had long hair, a taste for books and like many young people believed that the world was desperate to know what was in his head.

"It was philosophical, my thoughts about life," he says, smiling. "Then I stopped and said, 'No one wants to read this crap anyhow.' "

An hour with the Leeds United manager on a grey afternoon at their training ground is not grey at all. A mix of brains and warmth and down-to-earth-ness, Farke takes his work very seriously, but not himself — and is a lot of fun.

Daniel Farke, manager of Leeds United, celebrates a victory.
The challenge of managing such a demanding club as Leeds is the principal motivating factor for Farke, whose four-year contract at Elland Road runs to 2027

Colleagues know how good he is. Admirers include Pep Guardiola but also Neil Warnock and Tony Pulis, and when Jürgen Klopp was asked which coaches he'd like to be stuck on a desert island with he replied, "Pep... and Daniel Farke."

Yet the wider world has not always seemed sure. Farke, 49, is the most successful manager in Championship history, winning three titles — two with Norwich and one with Leeds — while playing swashbuckling, dominant football, but a Premier League relegation led to clichés about being too idealistic for the highest level.


Never mind that the same was said about Vincent Kompany — who has rather disproved doubts at Bayern Munich — and never mind the actual detail of the season when Farke went down.

It was 2019-20 with Norwich, who spent just £10.9million to re-equip their squad for the top flight. Their sporting director, Stuart Webber, admitted, "we sent Daniel into war without a gun" and Farke reflects philosophically, "I can't help myself, I am the person I am.

"Sometimes in this business [people tell me] you should be more selfish and there were offers from the Bundesliga, Premier League but [owners] Delia [Smith] and Michael [Wynn-Jones] were begging me to stay.

"I wanted to give something back, I liked the club and for me the CV was not important. I never make career plans, I just do projects I'm convinced of and if I do something it really is 100 per cent and with my full heart."

He's all-in at Leeds. However, back in November, clichés about him were being bandied about again and at Elland Road, when his team suffered a fifth defeat in six games — to Aston Villa — his name was cheered at kick-off but booed at full time.


Next were Manchester City away. The Leeds hierarchy contemplated making a change. Yet, 2-0 down at half-time, Farke made a transformative tactical tweak, introducing Dominic Calvert-Lewin as a strike partner for Lukas Nmecha while going three at the back, and Leeds roared back to 2-2, losing only to a brilliant Phil Foden stoppage-time goal.

Since then they have been revelatory, beating Chelsea, drawing against Manchester United and Liverpool (twice), with Farke continuing to vary tactics, retaining the back three as a starting structure but moving in-game between different shapes to outflank opponents with an acumen that shows why, in the fraternity, he is so admired.

The statisticians at Opta have dropped Leeds' chances of relegation down to just 5.41 per cent and a Farke reassessment is rightly going on. He doesn't mind having been under such scrutiny. "I was 100 per cent aware that as a promoted side it's always tricky and that I work for such a passionate club and such a huge fan base. If you can't handle it, don't go into the kitchen," he says.

"I signed the contract for Leeds because I want to be part of it, knowing in the last three decades it was just one time possible to get promotion to the Premier League — under Marcelo [Bielsa] during Coronavirus with no supporters allowed. Then they played one fantastic season [in the top flight] no supporters around.

Leeds United manager Daniel Farke standing with arms crossed in front of a wooden slatted wall with the Leeds United logo.
Farke's future at Leeds had been the subject of discussion earlier in the season but after just one defeat since the end of November, the statisticians rate their chances of going down at little more than five per cent

"Once the stadium is full, it can be such an unbelievable, passionate club. They can be over the moon and dancing on the table if you win a game but even at Championship level, whenever there was a draw, it felt like the world goes down and we go down straight to League Two. Not just to League One. Relegated straight to League Two. This is how this club is about.


"But I don't want to change it one bit. You can't take things personally. It's because everyone cares so much about this club. It means so much. It's just important you keep your nerve, you don't think about the noise and you're a rock for the players."

He has found ways to flex tactically without losing core playing ideas. "My football is perhaps more made for playing for titles, because we like to dominate games, we are proactive and — while staying humble — I think I'm also quite good in building winning mentality. And it's a different set-up we have to play this season," he says.

"I'm a big believer if you want to win a league you need clarity, to be strict with your base formation then bring dominance from there and it's how we were last season — the best in the history of the club for points (100), goal difference (65), goals scored (95). But then you go up into the Premier League and, of course, you can't be dominant any more, so you need other patterns to bring your beliefs to the pitch and it's fair to say we don't have better individual quality compared to our opponents, so we need to be flexible, in some games mirror the opponent more, to take their strength away.

"This is why we often switch from 4-2-3-1 to 3-4-3 or 3-5-2. Sometimes we've played 3-4-3 against the ball, in the high pressing a 3-5-2, sitting deep a 5-4-1, then in possession switched to a four-man formation."

There are still outbreaks of classic "Farke-ball" — like a beautiful team goal at Sunderland, which involved playing from the back in a move that used all 11 Leeds players — but drilling into the stats you see the layers of detail added.


Leeds have become hard for opponents to pin down (for example, they're 17th in the league for long passes yet top for flick-ons) and excellent in categories that stem from game intelligence (such as being second behind only Chelsea for interceptions and having made the fewest errors leading to shots). They ride high in the set-piece metrics too.

Has Farke grown in repertoire? "Well, it's always important to improve and develop as a manager or you become a dinosaur. I hope I've developed this season but wouldn't say there are special lessons learnt. It's not like I've ever been naive about the Premier League."

The aim is to keep evolving Leeds. "I signed a four-year contract [which expires in 2027] and the last box to tick in the four-year plan is to establish this club in the Premier League and make sure we are back for good.

"In the mid-to-long term we should think about the top half and other targets, with this huge potential, this stadium, this unbelievable second-to-none fan base." He loves that being Leeds manager is challenging. "For me it was never a big motivation to be the 58th coach who wins the 146th title for a club, I always wanted to do something special."

Coaching was not always Farke's plan. He loved his playing career, taking it so seriously he didn't touch alcohol until he was in his thirties and it was over. This despite never making it out of Germany's lower leagues.


The grandson of a famous Borussia Dortmund No9, he always knew where the goal was. "I was the slowest striker in all of Europe, so not made for the top level. But if I could get the ball in the box, then mostly the next situation was kick-off," Farke says, laughing.

While playing, he completed a masters degree in economics, then a sporting director diploma. He feared the dugout was too precarious but when fifth-tier Lippstadt offered him a sporting director role they said he'd also have to coach the team until the end of the season. He won nine out of ten games and got hooked. "Once you realise how good it is to work with the players, be in the dressing room, it's much more fun than to negotiate budgets with the board or bloody agent fees."

Farke took Lippstadt up two divisions, continuing to combine the roles of sporting director and coach. He did everything: signed players, prepared tactics, booked buses, even oversaw the building of a new stadium. He attracted Dortmund, who appointed him reserve-team manager alongside their new first-team head coach — someone who quickly became a friend and kindred spirit: Thomas Tuchel. "He had a brilliant football mind," Farke says. "Our relationship was close."


Both love the human side of football tactics. Tuchel says that team connection and player "behaviours" come before any game plan and Farke agrees: "One hundred per cent. Football is not a chess game between managers. For me, it's still a players' game. We should be there to help them."

One of his favourite quotes is by Herbert von Karajan. "He was the most famous and skilful conductor, he was mind-blowing. Out of so many different instruments he could balance a perfect symphony. Someone asked his secret. His answer was, 'I don't disturb my musicians while they're playing music'.

"It's a bit like a football manager. You can have the most genius tactical idea, the most perfect tactics meeting, but if you don't reach the hearts and souls of the players it's nothing."

His coaching idol was Ottmar Hitzfeld, a man-management virtuoso who at Bayern Munich "had outstanding players but difficult characters, like Stefan Effenberg and Mario Basler — but these difficult characters had under him the best spell in their life".

How does Farke create player connections? "Well I don't believe in artificial team-building events," he says with a grin. "I've done this as a player. Like freefalling. 'Fall down and the hands save you, you just have to trust the group...' It's trivial."

He encourages more organic stuff such as all the players and their families going for meals together but the biggest thing is "to lead by example. I want them to have the feeling here it's an honest atmosphere and a demanding atmosphere but they are protected like a family. In families you can be brutally honest, but it's also, 'Us against the world.' "


He says that Leeds are second in the Premier League's running stats (to, surprisingly, Manchester City) and it stems from culture. "Players have to invest and earn their place."

Calvert-Lewin's renaissance continues Farke's knack with forwards. At Norwich he turned Emi Buendía from a £1.5million signing to a £40million Argentina international, and Teemu Pukki from Celtic flop to reliable Premier League marksman. At Borussia Mönchengladbach he kick-started the career of Marcus Thuram and at Dortmund B, Marvin Ducksch.

"I have a soft spot for strikers and creative players," he admits. "I can still feel how those players feel, they are a special breed. They need trust.

"Dominic is a top, top striker, better level than I ever was, I don't have to tell him how to score a goal. But perhaps understanding what is important for those players helps sometimes."

The novel writing? Farke is a bit shy about his intellectual life. He's a film buff too. At school he was outstanding, earning offers of various bursaries but football was "always my first love".

He smiles that it's funny how in England he was painted as too romantic because in Germany, after winning an award for being the country's top Pro Licence student, he was suspected as being "too theoretical and pragmatic" as a young coach.

We finish with his exploits at Leeds' promotion parade. Farke promised he would celebrate like "a fire beast" — and footage suggests he did. Yet his normal post-match routine is to go home and chill out with coffee and cake. So which is the real Daniel Farke?

"I'm more coffee and cake, definitely. If you work as a coach on this level it's pretty demanding, it sucks energy out of you, and on a day off what I really like is a bit of time for myself, or with the family. The best thing is the sofa, a good book.

"But I am not dead, and I could still go out. So I would say, as a percentage 95 [coffee and cake] to five [fire beast]. There are some days during the year where you can prove that you're still alive."

https://www.thetimes.com/article/b188a80e-29ea-433a-aef1-78ae017e416a?shareToken=43594749eab322105537a462821a31bc
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

jaho

Fantastisk intervju. Vi er heldig som har en fyr som Daniel Farke.  :D

leedslife

Kom over denne.

I Leeds sin historie er det vel bare Don Revie (managere med min 50 kamper) som har høyere PPG enn Farke.

Don Revie 1.90 (649 kamper)
Daniel Farke 1.82 (130)
Grayson 1.73 (168)
O`Leary 1.72 (201)
Monk 1.70 (53)
Bielsa 1.61 (170)
Wilkinson 1.59 (340)
Armfield 1.59 (182)

@tranfermarkt


Asbjørn

Quote from: leedslife on February 05, 2026, 13:11:09Kom over denne.

I Leeds sin historie er det vel bare Don Revie (managere med min 50 kamper) som har høyere PPG enn Farke.

Don Revie 1.90 (649 kamper)
Daniel Farke 1.82 (130)
Grayson 1.73 (168)
O`Leary 1.72 (201)
Monk 1.70 (53)
Bielsa 1.61 (170)
Wilkinson 1.59 (340)
Armfield 1.59 (182)

@tranfermarkt



...eg lurte litt på om managere før internett fikk lov å være med så søkte litt. Kom over denne, der cupkamper også er inkludert. Stort sett samme lista men McAllister er på 6.plass (cupkamper spiller inn når en bare har 50 kamper). Ellers er Raich Carter øverst av de før Revie med 12.plass.

https://leedsunitedteamsheet.altervista.org/managers.html
Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan