Veli Maljalla on pointti niin kuin jutun kirjoittajallakin. Näin ei voi jatkaa tai kausi päättyy katastrofiin ja ollaan se eka joka putoaa kun yhdeksän ottelun jälkeen on 11 pistettä. En nyt heti muista mutta Red Bull Leipzigin ex saksalaiskoutsia huhuttu Farken tilalle kuten Brendan Rodgersiakin. Jollei ihmeitä tapahdu niin Farke on työttömänä vuoden loppuun mennessä.
Edit. Marco Rose ex Leipzig boss
Leeds currently 'sleepwalking to disaster'published at 17:26 GMT
17:26 GMT
Molly Whitmore
Fan writer
IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
For the first time in all my years supporting Leeds United, I genuinely dreaded what to say about my feelings this week. It feels like we're heading down a dark and dangerous path that could easily end in relegation.
You only have to glance at our upcoming fixtures to feel the chill: by the time the Christmas decorations go up, we could well be sitting in the bottom three.
It is hard to know where to start when it comes to assigning blame. Do you look at the players? The manager? The ownership? Truthfully, all three deserve a share of the responsibility.
But my biggest frustration against
Nottingham Forest lay with Daniel Farke. His decision-making was baffling.
Playing Jack Harrison out of position was questionable enough, but the lack of tactical flexibility and late substitutions made things even worse.
Why wait so long to change things? Why bring on a left winger and ask him to play at left-back? Farke's time may well be up. Perhaps it has been for a while.
That said, I cannot blame him completely. The lack of backing from the owners has been an issue for months. There is no real strength or depth in this squad, and there is little belief we can pick up anything from our next run of fixtures. I would be surprised if we manage even a point from the next 24 available.
In the away end on Sunday, the mood said it all. Nervous. Quiet. Lifeless. When we did score, there was not even enough time to enjoy it. The celebrations barely began before the opposition struck back. It was embarrassing, and it summed up the state of this football club right now.
You only have to look at the teams around us to see what proactive management looks like.
Wolves, for instance, have already acted and changed their manager, though still are possibly doomed.
West Ham and Nottingham Forest are showing signs of life, picking up crucial points under fresh leadership. Meanwhile, Leeds are stagnating, watching the same problems repeat every week.
Some will say: "We're only a point behind Newcastle United." But that comparison does not hold up. You look at Newcastle and see where the goals are coming from. You can point to players who will dig in when it matters.
With Leeds? Apart from Brenden Aaronson - and I say that with hesitation - no-one truly stands out right now. There s no spark, no drive, no leadership on the pitch.
If things do not change quickly, it is going to be a very long and painful second half of the season. The owners must act - not tomorrow, not next week, but now. Because unless they do, this club is sleepwalking toward disaster.
Leeds United: spineless, clueless and inept. Harsh words? Maybe. But, right now, painfully accurate.
Molly Whitmore is a regular contributor on BBC Radio Leeds