Leeds United return to Premier League action on Monday night carrying the euphoria of a Wembley semi-final booking and the anxiety of a survival battle that refuses to ease, especially after West Ham?s Friday night victory over Wolves. Three weeks have passed since the last league game, a period that has felt at once like a blessing and a curse. The FA Cup shootout win over West Ham on Easter Sunday was one of the great evenings of this remarkable season, but it has come at a brutal cost. Anton Stach and Joe Rodon were both forced off with ankle injuries at the London Stadium, and Farke's early prognosis suggests both could realistically be out until May, raising the grim possibility that two of Leeds' most important players this season may miss not just Old Trafford but the Wembley date itself. The cup dream lives on but the squad that must now sustain it and the Premier League run-in feels significantly depleted.

The Stach situation is particularly frustrating, because not only did it result in an injury, but it reminds us of yet more poor officiating this season. Stach was in on goal when Max Kilman slid across and cleaned him out well after the ball had gone. A VAR check deemed it a "natural coming together" and no penalty was awarded, a call that had Farke furious at full time. Stach was then spotted in a protective boot on crutches in the dugout and later responded to those who accused him of play-acting by posting a photo of his badly swollen ankle on Instagram with the words "stop acting". Stach has been the heartbeat of this Leeds midfield, and Daniel James compounds the problem further with an adductor strain. Farke confirmed all three Stach, Rodon and James will definitely miss Monday, with Bijol, Okafor and Gudmundsson all doubts who will be assessed across the weekend.

Manchester United's team news doesn?t make for good reading for Leeds fans either. Mason Mount has returned to training after two months out, while Bryan Mbeumo and Benjamin Sesko are back in the squad having withdrawn from international duty. Lisandro Martinez is in contention to come back into the defence after missing five matches with a calf problem, which is timely given Harry Maguire's suspension following his red card at Bournemouth. The break has worked in their favour with players recovered, sharpness restored during a training camp in Dublin. Manchester United are unbeaten at Old Trafford since Everton won there in November and are on a five-match home winning run. As ever the biggest threat comes from Bruno Fernandes, who has registered 16 Premier League assists this season. He will be the conductor, Leeds must disrupt him.

Farke's tactical message ahead of this game was clear. Parking the bus is not an option, "it won't be possible if you park the bus", and the manager spoke of needing bravery, pressing intensity and a proper defensive structure simultaneously. That is a demanding brief when your first-choice central midfielder and your most experienced centre-back are both hobbling around on crutches. Ampadu and likely Gruev will need to cover enormous ground, and there will be a big focus on Bornauw, praised warmly by Farke for his versatility and his points-per-game average. Tanaka, who was superb against West Ham, would be the first name on the team sheet for many fans, offers creativity and press-resistance in equal measure but is yet to be seen if he will play from the start. Farke spoke with genuine enthusiasm about the Japanese midfielder in his press conference, insisting there is no ceiling on what he can achieve and that what he has seen in training has been very good. Old Trafford on a Monday night feels like exactly the stage he needs to reignite his season further.

The league table adds urgency to every minute. Leeds have failed to score in their last four Premier League matches and now sit just two points above the relegation zone. Leeds have not won a league match at Old Trafford for more than 45 years. Those are facts Farke's squad are aware of but cannot afford to be paralysed by. Pascal Struijk, speaking ahead of the game, kept it straightforward: "We have to show great team spirit, quality on the ball and very good solid defensive behaviour." There is a blueprint in there. Leeds have drawn away at Chelsea, held on at Palace with ten men, and taken points from grounds that should have swallowed them. This group knows how to suffer and stay in a game. The question is whether, without Stach pulling the strings and Rodon organising the backline, they can do it again.

Yet there are genuine reasons for optimism that go beyond blind faith. The FA Cup win was dramatic, chaotic, yet ultimately glorious has injected a confidence into this squad that a flat draw or a quiet defeat would have immediately drained. Calvert-Lewin is fit and motivated to prove his doubters wrong after being vut from the England squad. The reverse fixture ended 1-1, with Aaronson giving Leeds the lead before Cunha cancelled it out is proof this Leeds side can live with the old enemy?s quality. Farke has been right about this group all season: their unity, their resilience, their refusal to fold. "We know what we want to achieve," he said. "If we are at a top performance level, we have a top chance."

On Monday night, under the Old Trafford lights, in front of a full away end of Leeds fans who have endured and believed all season, it is time to find out if that chance is enough.

Credit motforum.com.

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