Leeds United will be frustrated as they failed to secure all three points against Bournemouth in their final league game.
They acknowledged a critical slow goal. This is a situation that reflected the collapse of Fulham a while back. White people would have created the most opportunities in the entire game and could have easily won the contest.
Bournemouth first drew the first blood when Antoine Semegno changed his free kick. Leeds responded through Joe Rodon’s equalizer, with Sean Longstaff’s incredible strike passing on a 2-1 advantage.
However, Leeds was unable to defend the set pieces at the dying stage of the game, leaving Fark and Ellandroad loyal frustration.
“First of all, for me, it was by no means a free kick. It’s too soft,” the Leeds boss told BBC Radiolyz.
“This is the first time this foul has been given as a free kick at the Premier League level and in the most dangerous position.
“Yes, you can argue that there’s no need to make a decision on the referee as the player was away from the box and Anton put a hand on his back. But for me, it was by no means a free kick.”
“I want them to jump to the wall and put the players on the ground. But to the right-footed player (Semenyo), players need to lie more centrally, and they have to lie to the corners too much.
“As a right footed player, when he goes under the wall, he doesn’t always do that and enters the corner on the outside of his foot.
“So Brenden’s position was not perfect. At this level, these small mistakes are punishable.”
Set piece defense has been a problem for Leeds this season. Semeño curled the ball into the net, passing the goalkeeper despite Leeds setting a wall. Addressing the post-match issue, Fark highlighted the error that a positioning error from Brenden Arson led to goals, and admitted that his part had paid the price for the lapse of concentration.

