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Leicester City - Champions of England

Claudio Ranieri and Kasper Schmeichel celebrate. The 2nd of May 2016 will be
remembered for many, many years. This was the day that one of the biggest shocks in
football, or any sport, finally happened: Leicester City became Premier League Champions.
Many football fans are still rubbing their eyes in disbelief that this has happened in the
biggest league in world football. Leicester City had never won a top division title before, their
best result before this season was second, in 1929! Only seven years ago, Leicester were
playing in League One, the third level of English football. Last season, Leicester were bottom
of the table for most of the year and only seven wins in their last nine matches saved them
from relegation. At the beginning of this season, Leicester City were given odds of 5000-1 to
win the Premier League, there was a stronger possibility of Elvis Presley being found alive
(2000-1) or the Loch Ness Monster being discovered in Scotland (500-1). How did Leicester
City win the Premier League?

Was it the manager?

Everybody loves Ranieri in Leicester! Claudio Ranieri was named Leicester City manager at
the start of this season. Before he came to Leicester, he managed many top clubs in Europe
and had finished second with Monaco (France), Juventus and Roma (Italy) and Chelsea
(England) but had never won a top division title. When he arrrived at Leicester many people
thought that it was a bad decision and that at 64 years old his best days were behind him. He
had just been fired as the manager of the Greek national team after they lost a home match
against the Faroe Islands (World Ranking: 187) and he was the favourite to be the first
manager to lose his job this season. Leicester's most famous fan, Gary Lineker (the Golden
Boot Winner for the 1986 World Cup), said that Claudio Ranieri was an 'uninspiring choice'.
As it turned out, Ranieri's appointment was inspired. Ranieri's team has played positive
counter-attacking football all season and have shown that having possession of the football
is not the most important thing. Ranieri has kept the pressure off the players and his relaxed
style has helped his players concentrate on football. Ranieri has had fun with the players;
one example was giving them pizza for keeping clean sheets. When he was manager at
Chelsea he was called 'The Tinkerman' because he changed his team so much but at
Leicester he has made fewer changes than any other Premier League manager. Is it a
settled unchanged team that has won Leicester the title?
"I am very happy to win because when you start as a manager you hope you can win a
league. I won the most important league in Europe, I think, not just Europe but the
world!" Claudio Ranieri.

Was it the players?

Mahrez is the PFA Player of the Year. At the start of the season, Leicester had no
superstars, not many people knew about Riyad Mahrez, Jamie Vardy or N'Golo Kante,
maybe they knew Schmeichel, but that was Peter Schmeichel, Kasper's dad, from his time at
Manchester Utd. N'Golo Kante was one of the few changes that Ranieri made to last
season's Leicester team, signing him for 5 million from Caen in France. Mahrez was playing
in the French second division when Leicester paid 400,000 for him when Leicester were
also a second division
club.

Did Kante make the difference for Leicester? Nobody had heard of Mahrez and he hadn't
heard of Leicester either. He thought Leicester was a rugby club! Jamie Vardy's arrival at
Leicester is even more unlikely than Mahrez's. At 23, Vardy was working in a factory and
playing non-league football and Leicester was his first professional club when he signed for
them in 2012. Now, all three players are superstars, all three are part of their national teams
with France, Algeria and England, and all three were named in the PFA Team of the Season.
Mahrez won the PFA Player of the Year Award, which is voted for by players, and Vardy won
the FWA Player of the Year Award, voted for by professional journalists.

Vardy is the FWA Player of the Year. Maybe there is one other person that has been part of
Leicester success story. Steve Walsh is head of recruitment at Leicester City and he took the
decision to bring these three players to the club, in addition to players such as Danny
Drinkwater, Robert Huth, Danny Simpson and Marc Albrighton who were unwanted at other
clubs.
"It was brilliant, all the lads were together when it happened and it kind of sums us up as a
group of lads. Ive not known a bond like it, and I think the rest of the lads would say the
same. Its a special moment for us lot." Danny Drinkwater, Leicester midfielder.

Was it the fans?

The atmosphere has been fantastic at the stadium this season. Leicester City winning the
Premier League has sent shock waves around the football world but Leicester fans have
been sending their own shock waves around the city of Leicester. A team from the University
of Leicester have installed a seismometer, a device that measures the strength of
earthquakes, near the King Power Stadium, the Foxes home ground. Following a goal in the
89th minute by Leonardo Ulloa, which gave Leicester a 1-0 win against Norwich City, the
team measured an earthquake at 0.3 on the richter scale. Leicester's support at the King
Power has been fanatical this season. The atmosphere has been improved by the club giving
out 30,000 cardboard clappers at every home match, which costs the club 12,000 but they
make a lot of noise. The atmosphere has also been helped by the chairman giving the fans
free drinks and doughnuts at some matches. Leicester have the best home record in the
Premier League this season, but they also have the best away record!
"The clappers allow the supporters to make a big difference on match day. They can all join
in and make as much noise as they want to support their team." Anthony Herily - Leicester
Spokesperson.

Was it something else?

Was King Richard III a Leicester fan? Leicester


have had an unbelievable season but can their success be explained by a manager who did
everything right, a group of players who performed better than ever before, or even an
amazing atmosphere at the stadium? Maybe there are other reasons for Leicester's success
this season? Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha is the Thai chairman of Leicester City and he is a
believer in the power of karma, which is the belief that whatever you do comes back to you in
some way. He invited a group of Buddhist monks to Leicester, from Thailand, and they have
been visiting the King Power Stadium for the last three years and blessing the pitch and
giving lucky charms to the players. Another reason for Leicester's success might be King
Richard III (1452-1485), King Richard's body was found under a car park in Leicester
in

Have Buddhist monks brought Leicester luck?2012. His remains were removed last year and
the old king was buried at Leicester cathedral in March last year. Since last March, Leicester
have only lost three out of forty five Premier League matches. Could this be the reason for
Leicester's improved results?

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