Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

How Leicester became the perfect storm for their Premiership triumph

MANCHESTER — How did a humdrum team like Leicester City which were nearly relegated last season managed, and was in administration seven years ago, overcome the mega-rich giants of the Premier League to win the title?

Leicester City fans celebrate winning the Premier League. Photo: Reuters

Leicester City fans celebrate winning the Premier League. Photo: Reuters

MANCHESTER — How did a humdrum team like Leicester City which were nearly relegated last season managed, and was in administration seven years ago, overcome the mega-rich giants of the Premier League to win the title?

Here are a few reasons:

TEAM SPIRIT

The seeds of Leicester’s charge to the title were sown at the end of last season, when the team pulled off the greatest escape from relegation ever seen in the Premier League.

Seven wins in their last nine games lifted the Foxes from last place to safety, demonstrating the togetherness and ability in the squad.

The team spirit was in place - now it just needed a few changes in personnel and, as it would transpire, a change in manager.

RECRUITMENT

Leicester’s recruitment in the 2015-16 offseason proved inspired. The hiring of Claudio Ranieri to replace popular manager Nigel Pearson was heavily criticised at the time - mainly because of Ranieri’s woeful recent reign as Greece coach - but Ranieri was happy to build on the base created by Pearson. Guided by the club’s scouting network, Ranieri oversaw the signings of defenders Robert Huth and Christian Fuchs, midfielder N’Golo Kante and Japanese striker Shinji Okazaki. That quartet has been a mainstay in the team and crucial to its title triumph.

TACTICS

Ranieri’s tactics have been a throwback: a basic 4-4-2 formation, defenders who defend, central midfielders who run and run, wingers who stay out wide, and attackers with an eye for goal. Leicester has mastered the art of the counterattack and winning despite a lack of possession. Opponents only started treating Leicester seriously when it was too late - and still couldn’t find a way to beat them.

SPRINKLE OF STARDUST

Every title-winning team needs a sprinkle of stardust up front and that has been provided by top scorer Jamie Vardy and star winger Riyad Mahrez. Vardy, who was playing non-league football four seasons ago, became the first player to score in 11 straight Premier League games and has scored 22 league goals this season. Mahrez has achieved a breakthrough season, with the Algeria winger scoring 17 goals - four of them winners - and being named Player of the Year by his peers. They are now among the most sought-after players in world football.

TOUGH DEFENCE

Leicester’s defensive structure - a mixture of top-team rejects (Danny Simpson, Robert Huth, Danny Drinkwater), formerly lower-league journeymen (Wes Morgan and Kasper Schmeichel) and an unheralded foreigners (Christian Fuchs, Jeffrey Schlupp, N’Golo Kante) - has come into its own in the second half of the season, helping the team keep 15 clean sheets in title.

KEY WINS

Leicester will look back on some telling moments of the season: Robert Huth’s late winner to beat Tottenham 1-0 away in January; catching Manchester City cold with a 3-1 win at Etihad Stadium to go five points clear in early February; four straight 1-0 wins across March/early April that showed the team had the resolve of champions; and a battling 2-0 win at Sunderland last month, which finally made any lingering skeptics realise that Leicester is the real deal.

NO INJURIES

Leicester’s players have been remarkably free from injury this season, allowing Ranieri to play his first-choice team most games. Goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel and captain Wes Morgan have been ever-presents, eight other players have played 30 games or more. Consistency in selection meant Leicester’s players have formed a formidable bond and trust.

SCHEDULE

Completing the perfect storm, Leicester has been able to focus solely on the Premier League because of no European football and getting eliminated from both domestic cup competitions early (League Cup in the third round and FA Cup in the fourth round). It gave Ranieri at least a week to prepare for each game and his players time to recover from games. Liverpool was faced with the same scenario two years ago, but couldn’t go on to clinch the title. Leicester has managed to seal the deal. AP

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.