The #LUFC Breakfast Debate (Friday 6th March) Will Farke go all out to reach the FA Cup quarter finals
Good Morning. It's Friday 6th March, and here are the latest headlines from Elland Road...
Will Farke go all out to reach the last 8 of the FA Cup
It has been over twenty years since the Whites last graced the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, but are well placed to do so, when Daniel Farke's former side Norwich City come to Elland Road this weekend. The drought goes back to the 2002/03 campaign when after wins against Scunthorpe Utd, Gillingham (after a replay), and a controversial win over Crystal Palace that Leeds last reached the last eight, only to lose the next round to Sheffield Utd.
On paper, it looks like a golden opportunity. Leeds have had a relatively easy run so far, edging past Derby County and Birmingham City in previous rounds to set up another potential Championship scalp, but it poses a massive dilemma. Leeds would likely steamroll Norwich with a full strength side, bringing a sense of nostalgia back to Elland Road. However, in the high-stakes world of modern football, sentimental glory often clashes with harsh reality.
Leeds are currently walking a relegation tightrope. With a notably thin squad and the heavy fog of fatigue setting in, every minute played in the cup feels like a gamble against their Premier League survival hopes. Back-to-back defeats have left the club hovering just three points above the drop zone, with nine massive league games remaining, including a potential "winner-takes-all" finale against West Ham.
It’s the ultimate footballing dilemma: do you chase the romantic dream of a quarter-final, or protect your weary stars to ensure the club’s top-flight future remains intact?
Will the new Championship play off format help or hinder relegated clubs
The EFL is overhauling the Sky Bet Championship play-off format, expanding the race for the Premier League from four teams to six. Starting in the 2026/27 season, the battle for that final promotion spot is set to become a even more of a lottery.
Under this new structure, the promotion dream stays alive for clubs finishing as low as 8th. While the top two teams still celebrate automatic promotion and those in 3rd and 4th earn a crucial bye to the semi-finals, the real tension begins with the new quarter-final-style knockouts. 5th will hosts 8th, and 6th hosts 7th, in one-legged, winner-takes-all nail biting scenario. The survivors then advance to the traditional two-legged semi-finals before the grand finale at Wembley.
Should the worst happen this season, and Leeds find themselves in the Championship next time round, you'd like to think that a top eight finish would be almost guaranteed, but the play-off's have never been kind to the Whites. They have competed in six Football League play-off campaigns and failed to earn promotion in every single one. Furthermore, the Whites have lost their last three matches at Wembley without scoring a single goal (2008 and 2024 play-off finals, plus the 1996 League Cup final).
EFL Chief Executive Trevor Birch believes this expansion will "further strengthen" the league by keeping more clubs in the hunt until the final whistle of the season. However, not everyone is sold on the idea. Some Premier League clubs have expressed concerns that allowing an 8th-placed side a path to the top flight might "dilute" the league’s quality.
Whilst giving an 8th placed team a shot at the "promised land" would undoubtably make a superb underdog story, it does little to compensate the club who finishes third. the 3rd-place team has won the play-offs roughly 38% of the time. In contrast, the the 6th-place team has only been promoted in approximately 17% of seasons since its introduction in 1988.

