Technology

Leeds pay penalty as Habib Diarra fires Sunderland to victory

2026-03-03 22:52
489 views
Leeds pay penalty as Habib Diarra fires Sunderland to victory

Leeds 0-1 Sunderland: The Black Cats end a four-game winless run in the league

  1. Sport
  2. Football
Leeds pay penalty as Habib Diarra fires Sunderland to victory

Leeds 0-1 Sunderland: The Black Cats end a four-game winless run in the league

Mark Walker Tuesday 03 March 2026 22:52 GMT
  • Bookmark
  • CommentsGo to comments

Bookmark popover

Removed from bookmarks

Close popoverHabib Diarra scored the winner for Sunderland (Danny Lawson/PA)open image in galleryHabib Diarra scored the winner for Sunderland (Danny Lawson/PA)The Adam Clery Football Column

Get the Adam Clery Football Column. A newsletter that unpacks the absurdities and oddities of the beautiful game

The ACFC newsletter: unpacking football’s absurdities

Unpack football’s oddities with the ACFC newsletter

The Adam Clery Football ColumnEmail*SIGN UP

I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our Privacy notice

Habib Diarra’s second-half penalty snatched Sunderland a 1-0 win at Elland Road and dealt Leeds’ Premier League survival fight a blow.

The Senegal midfielder converted from the spot in the 70th minute as the Black Cats clinched their first win in five league matches and their third on the road this season.

Leeds missed the chance to put clear daylight between themselves and the bottom three on another frustrating night for their fans, slipping to back-to-back home league defeats after Saturday’s loss to Manchester City.

Daniel Farke’s side remain six points above the bottom three, with relegation rivals West Ham and Nottingham Forest both in action on Wednesday, while Sunderland leapfrogged Brighton into 11th place.

Leeds controlled the opening exchanges without troubling Sunderland’s debutant goalkeeper Melker Ellborg due his team-mates’ committed, deep defending.

Recommended
  • Wolves sabotage mission continues but Liverpool’s woes go beyond one cruel momentWolves sabotage mission continues but Liverpool’s woes go beyond one cruel moment
  • James Tarkowski and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall score in Everton home win over BurnleyJames Tarkowski and Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall score in Everton home win over Burnley
  • Bournemouth and Brentford share points after stalemate on south coastBournemouth and Brentford share points after stalemate on south coast

Ellborg, signed from Malmo for £3m last month, incurred the wrath of the home faithful in the 19th minute when he went down off the ball to receive treatment, allowing Sunderland’s players to gather in front of the dug-out for an impromptu team-talk with boss Regis Le Bris.

Leeds continued to probe, but after 30 minutes neither side had had an effort on target.

Anton Stach’s dipping free-kick three minutes later forced the first save of the match, with Ellborg at full stretch to turn the ball away for a corner.

Dark arts were at play again before half-time when Leeds substitute Sean Longstaff, warming up on the touchline, was spoken to by referee Stuart Attwell after pinching the ball-boy’s towel before Sunderland skipper Luke O’Nien took a long throw.

After another Stach free-kick struck Sunderland’s wall, a forgettable first period came to a close.

The second half began in similar fashion. Sunderland forward Eliezer Mayenda went down in his own box after colliding with Ellborg, while play was halted by a succession of fouls.

Sunderland’s Granit Xhaka made his 250th Premier League appearance as a 56th-minute replacement for Lutsharel Geertruida before two crucial VAR decisions.

Joe Rodon headed home Stach’s free-kick in the 64th minute, only for VAR to rule the goal out for offside, and six minutes later Leeds skipper Ethan Ampadu was deemed to have handled after Attwell had been asked to check the pitchside monitor.

Diarra converted, but only after Leeds goalkeeper Karl Darlow appeared to have saved the spot kick, with the ball rebounding over the line off his hip.

Habib Diarra's goal proved the difference at Elland Roadopen image in galleryHabib Diarra's goal proved the difference at Elland Road (Action Images via Reuters)

Ellborg kept out Jayden Bogle’s shot and after Leeds sent on Willy Gnonto and Daniel James, the home side laid siege on the Sunderland penalty area in a bid to salvage a point.

Jaka Bijol’s deflected effort shaved a post and fellow substitute Joel Piroe’s shot was blocked by Omar Alderete, but Leeds rarely looked like rescuing a point as Sunderland sealed their first win at Elland Road in nearly 20 years.

More about

LeedsPremier LeagueSunderland

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Most popular

    Popular videos

      Bulletin

        Read next