Dominic Calvert-Lewin scored in the 90th minute to hand Leeds a stunning 1-0 victory over Brighton at Elland Road on Sunday, in a result that defied every meaningful statistical measure of the match. Brighton controlled the game from start to finish, registering 19 shots and an xG of 2.70 against Leeds’ 0.76, yet walked away empty-handed. Karl Darlow made seven saves to keep the Seagulls at bay, and Calvert-Lewin did the rest with a clinical finish when it mattered most.

Key Moments
- 60′, Leeds manager Daniel Farke made a triple substitution, withdrawing Daniel James, Ao Tanaka, and Brenden Aaronson to reinforce the shape and inject fresh legs into a side under sustained pressure.
- 65′, Fabian Hürzeler responded for Brighton, replacing Danny Welbeck and Joël Veltman in an attempt to sharpen the Seagulls’ final third movement as Leeds continued to sit deep.
- 90′, Dominic Calvert-Lewin scored the only goal of the match with a normal finish in the 90th minute, completing a massive smash-and-grab for Leeds. He was then booked for delay of game immediately after the celebration.
Tactical Breakdown
Brighton were the dominant force for virtually every minute of this contest. Fabian Hürzeler’s side held 66% possession, completed 457 of 542 passes (84% accuracy), and generated an xG of 2.70 to Leeds’ 0.76. With 15 of their 19 shots coming from inside the box, the Seagulls created the kind of volume and quality that should have resulted in at least one goal. The problem was Karl Darlow, who was outstanding between the posts, making seven saves to single-handedly keep Leeds level heading into the final moments.
Daniel Farke’s triple substitution at the 60-minute mark was the key tactical pivot of the afternoon. By bringing on fresh bodies and compacting the defensive shape, Leeds managed to absorb Brighton’s growing pressure through the second half. The 3-5-2 formation gave Leeds numerical security in central areas, and while Brighton’s corners (eight) and shots (19) kept coming, the hosts never looked like breaking completely. The move to withdraw Aaronson and Tanaka, two more attack-minded contributors, signaled that Farke was content to stay organized and wait for an opportunity.
Brighton’s inability to convert proved fatal. An xG of 2.70 represents a significant overperformance in terms of chance creation, yet the Seagulls managed just one shot on target that troubled Darlow more than the rest of the seven he faced. The substitutions of Welbeck and Hinshelwood did not shift the dynamic enough, and when Leeds broke late through Calvert-Lewin, Brighton had no answer. A team that had so thoroughly controlled the match left Yorkshire with nothing.
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Verdict
This was a result that numbers simply cannot explain. Leeds produced one of the more unlikely wins of the Premier League season, holding out through an intense Brighton bombardment before Calvert-Lewin broke hearts at the death. For Fabian Hürzeler’s side, it is a damaging and baffling defeat given the level of control they demonstrated. Leeds, meanwhile, pick up three points that do their end-of-season position no harm at all, in what stands as a testament to defensive organization and opportunistic finishing.