Managers are fond of saying the season is a marathon and not a sprint but, whatever the length of the race, it helps to get off to a good start.For new Swansea City boss Graham Potter, this dramatic victory secured through 19-year-old substitute Yan Dhanda's 85th-minute strike was sweet beyond surely his fondest imaginings.The Swans could have easily buckled when Sheffield United wing-back George Baldock finished off a neatly-crafted move in the 62nd minute to rewards the home side's dominance. They did not. RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next West Brom 1-2 Bolton: Yanic Wildschut scores last-gasp... 'It is never a difficult decision to leave out a player who... Bournemouth and Leicester compete for Brentford star Chris... Burnley have £15m bid for Ben Gibson accepted by... Share this article Share MATCH FACTS AND LEAGUE TABLE Sheffield United (3-5-2): Henderson; Basham (Duffy 87), Egan, O'Connell; Baldock, Lundstram (Sharp 79), Fleck, Evans, Stevens; Clarke, McGoldrick (Woodburn 72)Unused subs: Moore, Lafferty, Stearman, LeonardGoal: Baldock 62 Swansea City (4-2-3-1): Nordfeldt; Roberts, van der Hoorn, Fernandez, Olsson (Grimes 72); Fulton (Dhanda 85), Carroll; Asoro (Montero 63), Celina, McKay; McBurnieUnused subs: Mulder, Amat, Rodon, DyerGoals: McBurnie 71, Dhanda 86Referee: Jeremy Simpson (Lancashire) Season at a glance Live tables Fixtures Scores Championship Premier League Championship League One League Two Scottish Premiership Scottish Div 1 Scottish Div 2 Scottish Div 3 Ligue 1 Serie A La Liga Bundesliga More tables More fixtures More scores Nine minutes later, striker Oli McBurnie, a Yorkshireman from Leeds, struck from close range to draw Swansea level.It got better for Potter and Swansea – much better, in fact – as Dhanda's assured finish with his first touch of the game and on his senior debut led to more wild scenes in the away end.Attacking midfielder Dhanda, Birmingham born and of Indian descent, was signed during the summer after being released from Liverpool.Potter's own arrival at Swansea came after a remarkable seven-year stint in Sweden with Ostersunds, who he led from the fourth tier all the way to the top flight. He said: 'All credit to the players – they were amazing and kept going. To turn the game around at somewhere like this shows their character and determination. I'm very proud of them.'The 43-year-old is Swansea's fifth manager in less than two years and is facing a mountainous task; over a dozen players have gone since last season's Premier League relegation and less than a handful of new signings have been made.Nevertheless, his men showed commendable spirit to keep United at bay with some obstinate defending for the first hour before pilfering the points late on.In the 61st minute, United led when John Lundstram's low left-wing cross was expertly dispatched by Baldock's sweetly-struck right-foot shot into the bottom corner. Yet Swansea steadied themselves