16-08-2024, 06:55
Mixed returns from the season's first week, as a surprise Josh Maja hat-trick last Saturday brought home the points from West London before a typically hapless League Cup showing from the kids at Fleetwood sent us crashing out of that competition with serious cause for concern about our strength in depth. All in all, it might not be the ideal time to open our account at home against promotion rivals Leeds, but Baggies can't be choosers.
Last season we acquitted ourselves pretty well against United, beating them at Christmas and holding them to an early-season draw at Elland Road, making us one of just four teams Leeds failed to beat in that campaign. They've won only one of their last five at the Hawthorns (though that was a 5-0 thrashing in December 2020), and have been somewhat out of sorts as they get stuck into the new season, barely scraping a draw against newly-promoted Pompey and then exiting the cup courtesy of Middlesbrough. They'll also be without 22-year-old forward Georginio Rutter, whose £40m release clause has been triggered by Brighton this week, sowing further uncertainty in an already chaotic camp.
But for all that, they remain a potent force in the division who like to dominate the early stages of games and try to get on the front foot with a goal or two before the opposition can hit back. That they've shipped six goals in two matches so far suggests that sides who can hit back are liable to wreak havoc against a shaky defence, so Maja might just be able to get himself on a roll. Jed Wallace and Grady Diangana will hopefully be fit enough to make the bench for Albion, but in the absence of any enforced changes there's really no great need for Corberan to tinker with the line-up that took QPR apart. That win also gave the Baggies a bit of early breathing space, so a draw on Saturday wouldn't be the end of the world, but Leeds have enough problems right now that we should absolutely be hunting for victory in this one.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley