- Patrick Bamford’s brilliant strike helped Leeds see off Peterborough
- Ethan Ampadu scored his first goals for the club in a resounding FA Cup win
- IAN LADYMAN: Premier League clubs are so wrapped up in their own self-interest. They want what suits them and that’s not FA Cup replays – It’s All Kicking Off
Patrick Bamford almost resembles a Brazilian star with his bleach blond hair. The stunning goal he scored here to help ease Leeds into the FA Cup fourth round was definitely in the samba class.
In days of yore, you’d say ‘wait until Match of the Day’ to watch a goal of such quality. In the social media age, thankfully you can catch a quicker glimpse.
However you saw it, Bamford’s 25-yard volley to put Leeds in control of this far-from-straightforward tie was certainly pleasing on the eye.
That Bamford scored it warmed the heart, too. When the 30-year-old, born not too far away from here in Grantham, was handed his England debut by Gareth Southgate in September 2021, it seemed there were no limits.
But Bamford has endured so much injury hell in the interim – the groin surgery, the painful plantar fasciitis, the hamstring issue that saw him miss the start of this season – that moment does seem a lifetime ago.
Patrick Bamford’s brilliant strike helped Leeds United see off Peterborough United
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With so much competition for the attacking places in Daniel Farke’s side, this was only Bamford’s second start of the season.
But when Ethan Ampadu, himself excellent with the other two goals, pinged a ball out of defence, Bamford didn’t hesitate.
Controlling the ball on his chest, he swivelled around Peterborough defender Josh Knight, and struck a perfect volley that rose and then dipped beyond keeper Fynn Talley into the top scorer.
It certainly rivalled – maybe surpassed – the goals scored by Tottenham’s Pedro Porro and Brighton’s Pervis Estupinan over the third round weekend.
‘The whole world will place it as a world class goal,’ said Farke. ‘There are no other words.
‘I am happy and delighted for him. But it is more important for me he is back to his fitness levels, back in a good rhythm and also to find his confidence back.
‘I would have even taken a rebound from two yards today because goals are always priceless for the confidence of the strikers.
‘But if he scores in such a world class manner, that’s even better.’
Peterborough, third in League One and 10 matches unbeaten, had every chance of joining Histon, Sutton United, Rochdale and Newport on the lengthy list of lower-league opponents who’ve dumped Leeds out in recent years.
That was especially true when Farke decided to make six changes but Leeds set about their task in a business-like manner, early chances falling to Bamford twice and Archie Gray.
But Ampadu, given the captain’s armband for the day, broke the deadlock after 35 minutes. He fired home beyond a static Peterborough defence after Bamford chested down Jaidon Anthony’s free-kick.
It was contentious, with Peterborough believing Anthony swung the ball in before referee Sam Allison blew his whistle. Josh Knight was booked for his protestations but they did switch off.
Leeds screamed for a penalty when Knight brought down Willy Gnonto but Allison neither pointed to the spot nor booked Gnonto for diving.
Ethan Ampadu netted his first goal for Leeds 11 minutes before the interval on Sunday
Ampadu sealed victory for the visitors with 90th minute header from Dan James’ corner
Bamford’s goal, seconds after the restart, took the wind from Peterborough’s sails. Their best first-half chance came when Hector Kyprianou was left unmarked but headed wide.
Ephron Mason-Clark looked dangerous throughout, with Ampadu blocking one goalbound effort.
Leeds ultimately had control though and they wrapped up the win when Ampadu glanced home a header from a Dan James corner in the last minute.
‘It is a flat dressing room which might not be the worst thing in the world for them to have that feeling,’ Posh boss Darren Ferguson as his team re-focused on their promotion push.
‘If you lose a game to Bamford’s goal you hold your hands up and say ‘world class finish’ but the first and third goals were not good enough.’