Northern giants clash with PL return in sight
It will be a Premier League game
in all but name when Newcastle United face Leeds United at St James'
Park on Friday, with two of the traditional powers of northern English
football seeking a return to the top flight.
Newcastle, relegated from the
Premier League last season, are second in the Championship and well
placed for an immediate return, while Leeds, in fifth place, will look
to get through the play-offs and end their 13 years in the lower
divisions.
The two clubs have histories that make them known well beyond their passionate local support bases.
Both are both former champions
of England, with Leeds having won the last title before the creation of
the Premier League in 1992.
They have both won European
trophies - Leeds twice capturing the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, the
forerunner of today's Europa League, while Newcastle won the same
competition in 1969.
In more recent years, the clubs
have featured in the Champions League, which Newcastle's Spanish manager
Rafa Benitez won as manager of Liverpool in 2005.
While Benitez and Newcastle have
quickly healed the pain of relegation with a strong challenge for
direct promotion this season, life outside the Premier League has been
tough for Leeds.
The financial troubles which
caused the team's relegation from the top flight in 2004 were also to
blame for a slump into the third tier (League One) for three seasons,
until they returned to the Championship in 2007.
It has hardly been smooth
progress since, with instability at both boardroom and managerial level
reflected in lower half finishes in the past five campaigns.
But manager Garry Monk has
succeeded this year in keeping the team well within the play-off
positions throughout the campaign, even if he is wary of raising
expectations of promotion this season.
"That will always be the
ambition of the club, it's a huge club. The ambition will always be to
get this club back in the Premier League. But it doesn't just happen,"
he said this week.
"That's what we are trying to
do. But we are not thinking about that, we are only thinking about this
weekend. Overall we have exceeded expectation, the group has improved
massively."
Newcastle won the corresponding
fixture at Elland Road in November 2-0 thanks to two goals from their
impressive striker Dwight Gayle, who misses Friday's match due to
injury.
The match drew the first sell-out crowd for Leeds in several years and Monk believes his team were overawed by the occasion.
"Maybe we played the occasion a
little bit and didn't have our full focus on the football. We want to go
up there and make sure we don't make the same mistake," he said.
Newcastle are well used to
playing in front of their capacity 52 000 home crowd and their squad
still has plenty of top-flight experience.
Benitez knows the job has to be finished off but believes Newcastle have a bright future ahead of them.
"The fans are incredible, the
stadium is superb, the staff, everything is in place to allow this club
to achieve great things," he said recently.
"But first we have to reach the target, we have to remain focused on only one thing and that is securing promotion".
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