Fulham secured a dramatic victory over Leeds as Gabriel Gudmundsson's stoppage-time own goal gifted the hosts all three points.
A drab affair at Craven Cottage looked to be petering out into a draw before Gudmundsson inadvertently diverted the ball into his own net in the 94th minute.
Leeds boss Daniel Farke admitted it was a 'heartbreaking ending' to the match as Marco Silva's side stole the win.
Daily Mail Sport's AADAM PATEL picks out the main talking points from the clash in west London.
Fulham's subs make an impact
The 17 goals scored by Fulham’s substitutes last season was the most ever by a Premier League side, with almost a third of their goals coming off the bench.
When Marco Silva rolled the dice first, turning to Emile Smith Rowe and Adama Traore off the bench, it felt as if Fulham’s quality would make the difference. That looked more likely after new signing Kevin came on in the 76th minute for his debut and instantly showed a different level of class. Fulham’s substitutes failed to get on the scoresheet this time around but they were a better side after and the pressure eventually told. Kevin’s long-range effort resulted in a corner and from the set-piece, Gabriel Gudmundsson inexplicably headed into his own net. ‘Our tempo was different in the second half,’ said Silva. ‘Kevin and the others made a massive impact.’
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Gabriel Gudmundsson scored a calamitous own goal to hand Fulham victory over Leeds
Emile Smith Rowe was among the Fulham substitutes to make an impact off the bench
Leeds' attacking woes continue
With Joel Piroe injured and Lukas Nmecha on the bench, Dominic Calvert-Lewin was given his first start for Leeds. He showed glimpses of why he could have such a big part to play in Leeds’ bid to stay up but those moments were few and far in between, with a header straight at Bernd Leno and another header down to tee up Sean Longstaff, who struck the crossbar.
Either side of Calvert-Lewin, Daniel Farke opted to start Brenden Aaronson and Noah Okafor ahead of Dan James and Wilfried Gnonto, and both put in impressive shifts but yet again, Leeds failed to score. It’s early doors but their lack of killer edge in the final third is seriously worrying. Across 360 minutes of Premier League football, they’ve scored once and it came from the spot. It’s the fewest they’ve scored after four games of a league campaign in their history.
Wilson shows Leeds what they're missing
There were a few boos from the Fulham fans at half-time and it was easy to see why. Their xG in the opening 45 minutes was zero. Leeds deserved credit for making it hard for the home side to break through but Marco Silva’s side simply failed to ask enough questions initially. For Karl Darlow, making his first Premier League appearance in almost four years, he could hardly have asked for a more comfortable return to the top-flight. It took just under an hour for the home side to test Darlow and he made a brilliant stop to keep out Harry Wilson’s free-kick. Wilson was close to moving to Leeds on deadline day before Fulham pulled out of the deal and despite a relatively quiet display, that effort was an example of the quality that Leeds are dying out for.
New Fulham signing's impressive cameo
The first glimpse of Kevin certainly got tongues wagging among the Craven Cottage faithful. In his 15-minute cameo, the club record signing, who arrived for £34.6m from Shakhtar on deadline day, looked lively down the left flank and nearly got the winner as he forced a brilliant save from Darlow with a superb right-footed strike. ‘In this type of game, you need something with a different profile and Kevin has that. It’s not easy to find. The profile of a player like Kevin can boost the crowd,’ said Silva, who revealed that the 22-year-old winger only met most of his teammates for the first time on Friday.
Daniel Farke described the defeat as 'heartbreaking' after a dramatic end to the match
Kevin, Fulham's new £34.6m signing, gave an impressive cameo after being introduced
MATCH FACTS AND RATINGS
FULHAM (4-2-3-1): Leno 7, Tete 7, Andersen 7.5, Bassey 7, Sessegnon 7, Lukic 6.5, Berge 7 (Cairney 84), Wilson 6.5 (Traore 60, 6), King 6 (Smith Rowe 60, 6), Iwobi 6.5 (Kevin 76, 7.5), Rodrigo Muniz 6.5 (Jimenez 84)
Subs unused: Lecomte, Castagne, Diop, Robinson
Goals: Gudmundsson OG 90+4
Booking: Berge
Manager: Marco Silva 6
LEEDS (4-3-3): Darlow 8, Bogle 6.5, Rodon 6.5, Struijk 6.5, Gudmundsson 5.5, Longstaff 6.5, Ampadu 6.5, Stach 6.5, Aaronson 6 (James 77, 6), Calvert-Lewin 6.5 (Nmecha 68, 6), Okafor 6.5 (Harrison 68, 6)
Subs unused: Meslier, Bijol, Tanaka, Justin, Gnonto, Gruev
Bookings: Stach, Okafor
Manager: Daniel Farke 6
Referee: Craig Pawson 7
Attendance: 27,327
Farke rings the changes
Leeds played well against Newcastle last time out so it was interesting to see Farke make five changes to his starting line up, though some were forced due to injuries. Darlow came in for first-choice keeper Lucas Perri, who was out with a quad injury and was superb while the return of skipper Ethan Ampadu made a difference too with Leeds’ midfield trio of him, Sean Longstaff and Anton Stach all putting in solid shifts.
Leeds have made 23 changes to their starting lineups so far this season - with the majority of those coming around their Carabao Cup defeat to Sheffield Wednesday - but it’s still the joint most after five matches in the history of the club. That’s hardly ideal but at least Farke will have a better idea of his strongest team by now. ‘I’m heartbroken for the players because that was an excellent away performance,’ the Leeds boss insisted.