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  1. Chelsea 2-2 Leeds - the fans' verdictpublished at 10:44 GMT 11 February

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    We asked for your thoughts after Tuesday's Premier League game between Chelsea and Leeds United.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Chelsea fans

    Nick: Two more points surrendered at home. Two more points dropped from a winning position. Two more points gift-wrapped to the opposition by Chelsea forgetting matches last 90 minutes. Essentially, 60 minutes of controlled, totally dominant, attractive play undone by switching off for six minutes. Intensely frustrating.

    Kazuki: Again, our naivety cost us the game. This concept of a young and exciting team is fine as a presentation to the world, but when it's really young from the management to the coach to the players we don't have to stick to the concept as much and could bring in some steel with experience in defence. Please, please, I beg you Chelsea.

    James: Leeds is always a tough test but from such a commanding position the game should be seen out. Sloppy in defence second half and it is dropping points like this that could prove costly at the end of the season.

    Simon: Poor management, not reacting to the changing game. Desperately need a new keeper as well. Lots of work to be done.

    Leeds fans

    AC: Apart from the gifted pen Bijol was a welcome return. Credit Daniel Farke as he subbed Okafor for Bornauw, tweaked the setup and we got the ball forward quicker. Dodged a bullet at the end with Palmers miss. Very happy to take a point from the game.

    Darren: It's the first time this season I can honestly remember Leeds getting a slice of luck and maybe a result they didn't merit. However, a few more of these will be required to even out the times when the exact opposite is true.

    Ian: I'm not quite sure how Leeds pulled that off. When Bijol had a rush of blood to his arms I thought we were dead and buried. A never say die attitude rattled the Chelsea defence and a vital point with another two top-five sides to come.

    Jason: Bogle was phenomenal in the Championship last season and he has excelled in the Premier League. Why don't I hear him being touted for an England call up?

    JPL: How on earth did we pull that off? Still, we got a very valuable point and we'll take it. No one said this first season back was going to be easy. Every point counts. Can't help feeling a tad sorry for Palmer - that will take some forgetting.

  2. Farke deserves credit for fightbackpublished at 08:37 GMT 11 February

    Sean Kearns
    BBC Sport

    Daniel Farke celebrates with his fist clenched in the airImage source, Getty Images

    Only Daniel Farke and his players will know how they got back into that one.

    They barely laid a glove on Chelsea before Lukas Nmecha's spot-kick and it looked as though their dismal away form - one win on the road this season - would continue.

    But their fightback from two goals down was exactly the type of gutsy, spirited display that has epitomised Farke's men in recent weeks.

    It didn't come about because of great play or tactical innovation, but through sheer perseverance and refusing to believe that the game was done.

    Farke has earned plenty of plaudits since moving to a back three in December, but this was a victory of a different kind.

    "We've shown this throughout the season and we've proved we are a proper Premier League side and we want to earn the points to play in this league for longer," Farke told TNT Sports.

    "We want to be an established Premier League side in a few years and we are on a good path to achieving that this season."

    After West Ham's draw with Manchester United, Leeds remain six points above the relegation zone.

    That gap says more about the Hammers' recent revival in form than it does any lingering fears that Farke's side are still contenders for the drop.

    They'll feel that, with 12 matches to play, 10 more points to reach the coveted 40-point mark is more than achievable.

  3. Chelsea 2-2 Leeds: What Farke saidpublished at 23:07 GMT 10 February

    Media caption,

    Leeds manager Daniel Farke speaking to TNT Sports: "The boys did us proud. Chelsea, of course, were the dominate side and created more chances and won the statistics - but I think we fought so hard for this point. It's a well-deserved point and I'm very proud of the lads."

    On Jaka Bijol's performance: "Overall, really good. Let's be honest we are praising ourselves for being the 'toughest' league in the world - it was a very, very soft penalty. But you can say that he shouldn't give the referee a decision to make, of course. It was not the smartest decision to touch him with both hands."

    On Leeds fighting spirit: "We've shown this throughout the season and we've proved we are a proper Premier League side and we want to earn the points to play in this league for longer.

    "We want to be an established Premier League side in a few years and we are on a good path to achieving that this season."

    Hear more from Farke on BBC Sounds

    Did you know?

    • Leeds have avoided defeat home and away in a Premier League season (W1 D1) against Chelsea for the first time since 2000-01.

    • Leeds avoided defeat having been two goals behind in a Premier League away game for the first time since March 2022 (3-2 win against Wolves).

  4. Chelsea 2-2 Leeds - send us your thoughtspublished at 21:28 GMT 10 February

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    Whether you were at the game or following from elsewhere, we want to know what you learned.

    Have your say on Chelsea's performance

    What did you make of Leeds' display?

    Come back on Wednesday for a selection of your replies

  5. Follow Tuesday's Premier League games livepublished at 18:25 GMT 10 February

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    There are four games in the Premier League on Tuesday and BBC Sport will bring you every moment.

    • Chelsea v Leeds

    • Everton v Bournemouth

    • Tottenham v Newcastle

    • West Ham v Manchester United (20:15)

    Kick-off times 19:30 GMT unless stated

    Follow all of the action and reaction here

    And listen to Around The Grounds on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds from 19:00

    Find out more about how to listen to Premier League football on BBC Sounds

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  6. Chelsea v Leeds: Team newspublished at 18:22 GMT 10 February

    It's two changes from Chelsea from the side that beat Wolves convincingly on the weekend.

    Estevao and Josh Acheampong come into the side, with Pedro Neto and Wesley Fofana making way.

    Captain Reece James, who Liam Rosenior said was ill during his pre-match news conference yesterday, doesn't make the squad.

    Chelsea XI: Sanchez, Gusto, Acheampong, Chalobah, Cucurella, Andrey Santos, Caicedo, Enzo, Palmer, Estevao, Joao Pedro

    Subs: Sharman-Lowe, Badiashile, Fofana, Sarr, Hato, Garnacho, Neto, Delap, Guiu

    Chelsea XI: Sanchez, Gusto, Acheampong, Chalobah, Cucurella, Andrey Santos, Caicedo, Enzo, Palmer, Estevao, Joao Pedro

Leeds XI: Darlow, Justin, Rodon, Bogle, Bijol, Gudmundsson, Ampadu, Gruev, Nmecha, Bornauw, AaronsonImage source, Premier League

    There is no place for Dominic Calvert-Lewin in Leeds' matchday squad.

    The former Everton forward's hit 10 goals this season and has been one of the biggest drivers behind the side's revival in recent weeks.

    Leeds XI: Darlow, Justin, Rodon, Bogle, Bijol, Gudmundsson, Ampadu, Gruev, Nmecha, Bornauw, Aaronson

    Subs: Perri, Byram, Longstaff, Tanaka, Buonanotte, James, Okafor, Gnonto, Piroe

  7. Are Leeds safe?published at 14:56 GMT 10 February

    Dominic Calvert-Lewin celebrates a goalImage source, Getty Images

    BBC Radio Leeds' Adam Pope thinks a tally in the "late 30s" will be enough for Premier League survival.

    Leeds sit on 29 points in 16th place, with West Ham in the relegation places in 18th on 23 points.

    "I still think something in the late 30s will do it," Pope told BBC Radio Leeds' Don't Go To Bed Just Yet podcast.

    Kaiser Chiefs bassist Simon Rix says he is feeling "a bit cocky" given the Whites' recent form.

    "If you think we only need nine more points from 13 games it seems mad," he says.

    "West Ham need 18 more from their 13 games. When they only have 23 from the first lot of games, it seems, practically, like they can't do that.

    "People are scared of us getting 42 points and still getting relegated. West Ham are in a great run of form but in their amazing run they've caught up with Leeds by two points. To me, it's very hard for them to catch us basically."

    Listen to Don't Go To Bed Just Yet in full

  8. 'Leeds fans don't know how good this team could be'published at 12:30 GMT 10 February

    Adonis Storr
    Fan writer

    Leeds United fan's voice graphic
    Ilia Gruev of Leeds United passes the ball Image source, Getty Images

    When Leeds United's starting line-up was announced in a social media post from the club's account before kick-off last Friday night against Nottingham Forest, the most notable topic in the comments was disappointment that Ilia Gruev was starting.

    The general sentiments can be summed up by one tweet: "Gruev wasn't good enough for the Championship, but they let him start every Premier League game."

    While the Bulgarian is a defensive midfielder, his four assists and zero goals in the previous 67 league appearances before Friday night's 3-1 victory over Forest had not got everyone enthused.

    But after being kicked in the head by team-mate Dominic Calvert-Lewin in the 65th minute, it was Gruev's name ringing out around Elland Road. At that stage, Leeds were 3-0 up, Gruev had two assists and was having his best game in a Leeds shirt.

    But the Bulgarian midfielder didn't just play well last Friday, his performance was statistically one of the all-time great individual efforts seen at Elland Road.

    Gruev became only the third player in the Premier League since 2003 (when Opta began tracking these metrics) to complete over 25 passes, have a passing accuracy of 98% or more and register two assists., external

    "It's not that often that he shines in the offence with goals or assists, so it's even better that he has done that on Friday night," Daniel Farke said of Illia at the pre-Chelsea news conference.

    One of the things the Leeds manager perhaps hasn't been given enough credit for, is improving players; and Gruev's performance has shown that even Leeds fans don't know how good this team could be.

    When asked if Gruev was OK after a game in which he was kicked in the head, Farke said "Ilia is tough" and in that sense the Bulgarian is representing Leeds in more ways than one.

    Find more from Adonis Storr at The Roaring Peacock, external

  9. Chelsea v Leeds: Key stats and talking pointspublished at 08:26 GMT 10 February

    Noel Sliney
    BBC Sport senior journalist

    In-form Chelsea are seeking a seventh successive home league win over Leeds United, whose most recent victory at Stamford Bridge came in December 1999.

    Nonetheless, Leeds won this season's reverse fixture 3-1 and are looking to complete their first league double over Chelsea since the 1991-92 title-winning campaign.

    Chelsea making most of favourable fixtures

    Seven wins in nine games has been an impressive riposte by Liam Rosenior to those who questioned his appointment as Chelsea head coach five weeks ago. On Saturday, aided by Cole Palmer's club record fourth Premier League hat-trick, he became just the second English manager to win his first four matches in charge in the competition.

    The first, Craig Shakespeare, went on to win his first five with Leicester City in 2017 but was sacked six months later. Rosenior will be well aware how quickly fortunes can turn.

    Rosenior's lack of experience at a top-level club means he is considered by some to be a gamble. The odds have been in his favour so far thanks to a kind run of league fixtures; Leeds and Burnley are up next, meaning Chelsea will have played five top-flight games in a row against sides in the bottom six at the time.

    Their record against teams in the lower part of the table is the third best in the division. The greater test for Rosenior and his players will be to sustain their form in the games that follow, starting on 1 March with a trip to Arsenal.

    Table which shows Chelsea's record this season against the current bottom 8 teams and current top 12. 
They have the third best record against the current bottom 8, averaging 2.3 points per game, but only the eighth best record against the rest, averaging 1.3 points per game.

    Whites flag on the road

    Leeds United are one of two sides, along with Brighton, among the current bottom eight to have beaten Chelsea this season. That was a 3-1 victory for the Whites under the lights at Elland Road in December, and they made it five wins from five in night games at home this season by beating Nottingham Forest on Friday.

    Manager Daniel Farke, who was understandably delighted with "a massive performance and a massive win", took four points from his two previous meetings with Rosenior when the latter was in charge at Hull City in the 2023-24 Championship season.

    However, Leeds have only won two of their past 25 Premier League away fixtures – both against Wolves, in March 2023 and September this season.

    They have seven away points this season from 12 games. Only Wolves and Burnley have a worse away record, and Leeds have earned a lower proportion of their points on the road than any other side in the division.

    Bar chart showing the teams with the lowest proportion of Premier League points earned in away games this season. Leeds United are bottom, with 24.1%, followed by Sunderland on 27.8%.
  10. Sutton's predictions: Chelsea v Leedspublished at 07:16 GMT 10 February

    Chris Sutton smiling on a yellow and black background with 'Sutton's predictions' written below his face

    Leeds turned Chelsea over at Elland Road in December but they are not the same force away from home and this game smells of Chelsea revenge to me.

    The Blues have made a good start under new boss Liam Rosenior, with four wins out of four in the league. Cole Palmer has hit form too, and they should win this fairly comfortably.

    Sutton's prediction: 2-0

    Read the full predictions and have your say here

  11. 🎧 Not predicting the run-inpublished at 16:22 GMT 9 February

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    The latest Don't Go To Bed Just Yet episode is available!

    The Whites picked up a huge win against Nottingham Forest last Friday and face Chelsea on Tuesday evening in a game you can hear live on BBC Radio Leeds.

    Jonny Buchan, Adam Pope and Kaiser Chiefs' bassist Simon Rix ask if they can afford to start looking up the Premier League table, rather than down it, and they delve into the fine form of Ilia Gruev.

    Pope said: "Gruev has got to be one of the first on the sheet – he is so consistent. He has added something to his game. It is a hard case to remove him out of that side."

    In his 78th appearance for Leeds in all competitions, Gruev provided two assists in a game for the first time.

    Rix also supported Pope's view and said: "He has made a case for himself to always be in there."

    Listen to the full episode here

    Explore all Leeds United content on BBC Sounds

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  12. Farke on Buonanotte, Struijk injury and staying calmpublished at 12:24 GMT 9 February

    Leeds United boss Daniel Farke has been speaking to the media before Tuesday's Premier League game against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge (kick-off 19:30 GMT).

    Here are the key lines from his news conference:

    • Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Ilia Gruev should be fit but Pascal Struijk and Anton Stach will miss out.

    • Offering more detail, Farke said: "Dominic was struggling with illness but I hope it's not too bad. Pascal Struijk will definitely miss this game, he has problems with his hip flexor. Stach will be back probably just for the Villa game. Apart from this I hope to have everyone available."

    • On Struijk, Farke added: "You miss a player with red-hot form. Pascal was a rock in the last weeks. He is the only left-footed centre-back. If you play with three at the back it makes a difference. A right-footed player has different passing angles. Also his strength in the air, in the last game he won so many headers. It is not ideal to not have him available."

    • On travelling to one of the big-name clubs on the road, Farke offered: "It is still the same game, same rules, 11 v 11. You feel more comfortable at home but it's still the same game. We travel with confidence, belief and if we perform well we know we have a chance on the road."

    • Farke reflected on the win over Chelsea in December - a result which started a superb upturn in form for Leeds: "Each time we win it's a pivotal game. There was no turning point. We had wins before, at home and on the road. One thing is for sure, it was a top performance and fully deserved win. Days like this don't come that often that you are able to dominate one of the big names. To win in this way, this is why we worked so hard for two and a half years to be back on this level. This result won't help us tomorrow. They may want to show a reaction and we maybe need to be more on it."

    • On a points tally needed to stay in the Premier League: "It doesn't matter if I change my assessment of how many points we need. It's not like if we achieve 38 points we want to stop winning points. In general, the data and stats say one point average per game you will stay up. If it's one out of 20 seasons or whatever where you need more points, then we need more points. I am not too concentrated on doing maths. I am concentrated on winning football games."

    • Facundo Buonanotte was left out against Nottingham Forest and asked if he has impressed since, Farke said: "We had the session on Saturday morning with a smaller group - Sunday a light one. It wasn't that you could impress too much in the session. He is a top guy and reacted in the way we expected."

    • Farke was asked about the form of Gruev and praised his consistency, stating: "He was always a very reliable player for us. You always get a seven-out-of-10 performance from him. He has a really good defensive awareness, tactically spot on, covers more than 12km every game and helps us with reliability in passing. He is an important player for us and going forward."

    • On the return of Dan James: "It's good we have him back. He was out for eight and a half weeks, relatively long. Even before it was on and off for him in terms of injury. He is a very experienced player, knows his body and what he has to do. He came back in good shape. Right now, each day, with us on the training pitch is beneficial. He looked sharp in training and was involved in the matchday squad. So it's good to have him back. Hopefully now he can stay fit."

    • Farke was asked how he stays emotionally level when his side come up against the Premier League's big-name teams and suffer setbacks: "The fire is burning inside and I am a pretty emotional person. If you want to be a manager at this level you can't jump around on the sidelines or in a press conference. The players need a proper leader who they know they can trust, who stays balanced and calm. I can't allow myself to burst out too often with my emotions. After the game, before the game, you are concentrated and focused. The players are emotional anyway. For such a passionate club, it never works if you can't handle the heat. Against the big teams you have mixed results. You can't always beat Man City, Liverpool, Man Utd, Chelsea, whatever."

    Listen to more from Daniel Farke on BBC Sounds

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  13. 'Outstanding' Leeds thump 'massively poor' Forestpublished at 10:00 GMT 9 February

    Nottingham Forest players and Leeds battle for possessionImage source, Getty Images

    Former Premier League striker Clinton Morrison reacting to Friday's result as Leeds beat Nottingham Forest: "It was bad for Forest. Credit to Leeds, they were outstanding. The players they have brought have done ever so well. The likes of Okafor and Calvert-Lewin look a threat.

    "Leeds have a great chance to stay up as Elland Road is one of the hardest places to play.

    "Forest were poor - massively poor. They need to be better than that. Pressure will mount on them. I still think they will stay up but it is going to go down to the wire. That was a six-pointer and Leeds were fantastic."

    Telegraph journalist Luke Edwards on Nottingham Forest hosting Wolves on Wednesday: "Must win. Simple. The optics of it are terrible if you lose at home to the worst team in the league. They have that dilemma with Europe too. It will be emotional and will capture the attention of the players being in the knockout round.

    "We praised Sean Dyche when he came in for making them hard to beat. I'm not so sure they are that hard to beat at the moment. That's when you're in trouble when that is a manager's philosophy - being hard to beat but you aren't."

    Listen to Football Daily on BBC Sounds

  14. Leeds 3-1 Nottingham Forest - the fans' verdictpublished at 12:17 GMT 7 February

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    We asked for your thoughts after Friday's Premier League game between Leeds and Nottingham Forest.

    Here are some of your comments:

    Leeds fans

    Olivia: It was a great game to watch. Leeds showed so much flare and discipline. Really well managed and players giving everything for each other. I like the way James Justin stood up for Brenden Aaaronson when there was a bad tackle - no violence, just 'what do you think you're doing?' to the Forest player. The Leeds team is obviously enjoying their football. It's great to see Dan James back. Could have scored more and were creating lots but three is plenty... for now. Loved the crowd atmosphere. Bring on more evening games!

    Peter: A superb result which was so very important. The attitude of every Leeds player was fantastic as always, working their socks of for each other. Played excellent football and it was a well-deserved result. We can't relax though as there's still a long way to go. In Daniel Farke we trust. MOT.

    James: Farke has a point to prove after his previous experience taking Norwich City into the Premier League didn't end well. This time round with Leeds, he's hungry to show he's got what it takes and he's instilled a confidence in these Leeds players, who are also out to prove they have what it takes to be in this division. On current showings, it looks like they have.

    Andy: Taking into account last week's result and the magnitude of Friday's game, I thought every player managed the occasion and pressure fantastically and left everything on the pitch, showing the fight and composure you need to survive in this brutal league. Special mention to our manager, who continues to impress, learn and evolve into a very astute and clever tactician. Roll on, Chelsea!

    Forest fans

    Tom: Stefan Ortega should never have started. Angus Gunn should have been between the sticks from the start. Don't understand starting Morato when the guy is clearly a liability in defence. Should have taken the £15m for him. And not starting Omari Hutchinson or Lorenzo Lucca when that partnership created our goal? Something needs to change on Wednesday, for sure.

    Peter: Forest were inept and woeful. No plan on how to win the game, no fight or ingenuity on how not to lose the game. Sean Dyche looks out of ideas and we appear determined to be relegation candidates at all costs. Something needs to change.

    Bob: Absolutely dreadful performance. Second best in every aspect of the game. Forest made Leeds look like world-beaters. No passion, urgency or energy. Embarrassing.

    Simon: Forest had an off day and missed Neco Williams and Murillo. Morato gives possession away far too easily and I think it's time up for him. On the plus side, Lucca looks an interesting addition up front. He scored on his debut and he's a big distraction to the opposition defenders just because of his height. Let's see what the next couple of matches bring.

  15. Analysis: Calvert-Lewin quality on show as England calls growpublished at 23:07 GMT 6 February

    Nick Mashiter
    Football reporter

    Dominic Calvert-Lewin wheels away after scoring for Leeds against Nottingham ForestImage source, Getty Images

    Chants of "England's number nine" rang around Elland Road as Dominic Calvert-Lewin's 10th goal of the season wrapped up the crucial win.

    The relief was palpable.

    He is the Premier League's top English scorer and his goals look as if they will fire his side to safety.

    Calvert-Lewin's clever chested effort emphasised his confidence at a club which has helped him rediscover his form following his summer arrival on a free transfer.

    He had scored just 13 goals in three seasons at Everton - last netting double figures in 2021 - but has revived his career in impressive fashion.

    Few would have expected such a turnaround, but Daniel Farke has tapped into a scoring touch which looked to have deserted the 28-year-old.

    It is the perfect time too, with England boss Thomas Tuchel having just one camp next month before this summer's World Cup.

    Calvert-Lewin has not played for his country since 2021, but the clamour to add to his 11 caps will grow greater if he continues this impact and stays injury free.

  16. Leeds 3-1 Nottingham Forest: What Farke, Calvert-Lewin and Justin saidpublished at 23:04 GMT 6 February

    Media caption,

    Leeds manager Daniel Farke, speaking to BBC Match of the Day: "Proud of my boys. An important game for us. A sign of a great mentality, a great spirit. Also a winning mentality when you are asked to deliver and you deliver in this way. Emphatic fight from my boys, great performance. We showed the other side of us, the fighting edge and the steal. A perfect win.

    "We didn't allow them to develop the game - they have so much quality up front and in counter-attacks. We were very dominant. We started the second half strongly, but after a few injuries and getting a bit tired, they scored. We then showed so much maturity to bring it over the line."

    On their home form: "As a promoted side, it's always important to have your home stadium as a fortress and Elland Road is a fortress. We edge three points closer. We are happy tonight but tomorrow we go again.

    "Perhaps we should apply to always have a kick-off here on a Friday evening. It's then also up to the boys to deliver. It's important we use this atmosphere for emphatic performances."

    On Dominic Calvert-Lewin: "Perfect goalscorer. A proven goalscorer at this level but also a guy who leads our lines. A great character in the dressing room and now he delivers."

    On being on 29 points: "The other teams also have a game in hand. I don't think 29 points will be enough to stay in this league so we need to keep going. We are on a good path and if we deliver performances like this we will also have a good chance."

    Hear more from Farke on BBC Sounds

    Leeds striker Calvert-Lewin, speaking to Sky Sports: "Everything came together. An all-round performance from the team. We had good discipline and managed the game well. Things went our way on the night. The conditions were difficult and we knew what they were going to bring. We knew we would have to have our tin hats on at times, and we did. We battled well and won the game.

    "We've just done today what we have been doing for the past few weeks, executing our gameplan, on the ball and off the ball, trying to dominate possession and manage the game. We are trying to mature as we go through the season. Again we are not getting carried away. It is a massive three points for us and one we can take confidence from."

    Leeds' James Justin, speaking to Sky Sports: "It's always nice to take the three points back to the training ground. We deserved it. We had to bounce back from last week against Arsenal. The lads put in a great shift and it's a massive three points."

    On not dwelling on the defeat by Arsenal: "Some games in the Premier League, a team just blows you away, especially a team of their quality. If you don't turn up at your absolute best then things like that will happen. It was swept to one side and we had to focus on the big game tonight, and we did the job."

    On whether he'll be focusing on this weekend's games: "We'll be recovering for Tuesday [against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge]. It's another chance to get points and get another result to keep us ticking over in the table. There's a lot to play for."

    On competing with teams higher up in the table: "We're not afraid of anyone in this league and that's the way we like it. We'll fight in every game, give it our all and see what happens. Some of the football we played tonight was some of the best of the season. To put in a performance like that is a big one."

    Listen to Jayden Bogle talking about his goal on BBC Sounds

    Did you know?

    • Leeds have earned 76% of their Premier League points this season at Elland Road (22/29), the highest proportion at home of any side in the division.

    • United's Dominic Calvert-Lewin has scored 10 or more goals in a Premier League season for only the third time, after 2019-20 (13) and 2020-21 (16). Eight of those goals have come since the start of December – the most of any player in the division in this time.

  17. Leeds 3-1 Nottingham Forest - send us your thoughtspublished at 21:58 GMT 6 February

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    Whether you were at the game or following from elsewhere, we want to know what you learned.

    Have your say on Leeds' performance

    What did you make of Forest's display?

    Come back on Saturday for a selection of your replies

  18. The Commentators' View on 'consummate professional' Milnerpublished at 19:55 GMT 6 February

    James Milner in action for BrightonImage source, Getty Images

    James Milner has been described as the "consummate professional" on BBC Radio 5 Live's The Commentators' View podcast, as he closes in on Gareth Barry's record for most appearances in the Premier League.

    If Milner features for Brighton against Crystal Palace on Sunday, he will reach 653, the same number Barry finished with when he retired in 2020.

    Speaking on the podcast, BBC senior football reporter Ian Dennis said: "I did spend a lot of time with him when I covered the England under-21s. There was a tournament in Holland in 2007 and then I remember him in Sweden in 2009 and spoke a lot to him when he was an England international at various England camps. And the way he has conducted himself, he is the model pro, isn't he? He is the consummate professional."

    BBC commentator Alistair Bruce-Ball added: "The other thing when we're talking about being the consummate professional, 40 years old, he gets on for a minute or two at the end of that game [last weekend] and annoyingly when he's on, Everton equalise.

    "You've got to do all the running after the game because you've only played a couple of minutes of football, but when you're in your 24th season of Premier League football, and you're still prepared to do all of that, that says something in itself."

    BBC football correspondent John Murray touched on how much Milner will have had to look after himself to sustain the longevity he has had, saying: "It can't be a coincidence that he's kept himself fit over the years, which I think attests to himself being a professional. He's clearly had to look after himself to be able to do that."

    Listen to the full podcast here