Marcelo Bielsa thanks fans for the love as Leeds revel in promotion party
Bielsa #Bielsa
© Provided by The Guardian Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images
Social distancing was suspended outside Elland Road on Friday night as Leeds United fans celebrated the club’s long‑awaited return to the Premier League.
The moment the final whistle blew at Huddersfield, where West Brom’s 2-1 defeat meant Marcelo Bielsa’s team were guaranteed a top-two place in the Championship, supporters began congregating outside the famous old ground exiled from the Premier League for the past 16 years.
© Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images Leeds United supporters gather outside their Elland Road ground to celebrate the club’s return to the Premier League after a gap of 16 years.
As flares and fireworks illuminated a cloud-streaked evening sky, beer was drunk by the Billy Bremner statue and banners emblazoned with “In Bielsa we Trust” were brandished.
Car horns blared and chants of “Bielsa is God” were interspersed with: “Are you watching Manchester?”
The manager was finally spotted outside his home in Wetherby saying: “Thank you, thank you,” to fans declaring: “We love you,” before exchanging elbow bumps and posing for selfies.
Meanwhile Bielsa’s players celebrated inside the stadium, from where Pablo Hernández and Patrick Bamford waved enthusiastically from an upstairs window and the injured Kalvin Phillips briefly stepped outside to greet fans through a gate near Elland Road’s main reception.
Phillips said: “We’re ecstatic. Promotion means everything. There’s no manager I’d rather be under than Marcelo Bielsa. He’s the best in the world.”
The goalkeeper Kiko Casilla encapsulated the team’s collective excitement with an emotional tweet: “We are BACK !!!! We are In premierleague !!!! Yessssssssssss!!! We are Leeds !!!! LUFC. Many days dreaming of this Day!!! We deserve it! Proud of this TEAM, proud of our supporters! I can not describe this moment! Yesssssss!! Thanks for your support, Imposible without you!”
Howard Wilkinson, the manager who steered Leeds to their last top-tier title in 1992, was quick to predict his old club could “grace” the Premier League. “Marcelo Bielsa’s dared to be different,” he said.
Related: Unity, trust and tactics, tactics, tactics: how Leeds made it back
In Bielsa’s native Argentina, broadcasters had taken the unprecedented step of screening Huddersfield v West Brom. Normally the only Championship matches shown live involve the Leeds side coached by the brilliant, ultra-intense and invariably idiosyncratic 64-year-old, whose previous roles include the Argentina and Chile national teams.
Meanwhile in Poland, the front of the family home belonging to the Leeds midfielder Mateusz Klich was covered by a giant banner declaring: “Premier Klich.”
As the party spread to Leeds city centre, Twitter seemed in danger of crashing under the volume of congratulatory messages from former Leeds players including James Milner, Rio Ferdinand, Nigel Martyn and Vinnie Jones.
The former Leeds goalkeeper Paul Robinson, relegated in 2004 amid the club’s financial meltdown, told Sky Sports: “It’s been long-awaited and very long overdue.
“When I played that last game in 2004 you never envisaged Leeds would be out of the top flight for so long, and even drop to the third tier of English football. But Bielsa’s been fantastic; he’s an oddball, a scientist, a professor. Love Leeds or loathe them they’re back. A Premier League with Leeds United in it becomes much more attractive.”