Global Times - Weekend

Ranieri sacking stuns soccer world

Leicester manager fired only 9 months after winning league title

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The sacking of Claudio Ranieri as Leicester City manager just nine months after guiding the unfashiona­ble club to a sensationa­l Premier League title stunned the soccer world on Friday and brought widespread condemnati­on on the owners.

The Thai owners axed the Italian barely two weeks after giving Ranieri “unwavering support” despite disastrous results that have left the team just one point above the relegation zone.

Players, managers and commentato­rs expressed dismay at the move and nearly all backed Ranieri, who only last month was named FIFA’s coach of the year for scripting one of the most unbelievab­le stories in soccer.

British media aimed wither- ing criticism at Leicester’s Thai owners, who said they had no choice but to oust Ranieri.

The owners were “snakes,” “brutal,” and “cruel,” commentato­rs said.

“I shed a tear last night – I shed a tear for Claudio, I shed a tear for football and I shed a tear for my club,” former Leicester and England striker Gary Lineker, now a TV commentato­r, said on BBC radio.

“It is inexplicab­le to me, it’s inexplicab­le to a lot of football fans who love the game and I suppose you can explain it in terms of a panic decision and for me a wrong decision and it is very sad.”

Bournemout­h boss Eddie Howe spoke for other managers when he declared himself “shocked” at the sacking.

However, Leicester insisted they had to act to save the club from the threat of an unpreceden­ted relegation one year after winning the title. Relegation could cost them more than 100 million pounds ($125.6 million).

“Claudio, appointed City manager in July 2015, led the Foxes to the greatest triumph in the club’s 133-year history last season, as we were crowned champions of England for the first time. His status as the most successful Leicester City manager of all time is without question,” the club said in a statement.

“However, domestic results in the current campaign have placed the club’s Premier League status under threat and the board reluctantl­y feels that a change of leadership, while admittedly painful, is necessary in the club’s greatest interest.”

Leicester Chairman Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha, who bought the club seven years ago, went onto Instagram to defend his actions.

“We have done our best as a management,” he said in a statement before closing his account on the site.

Leicester have won just five of their 25 league games this term and are yet to score a league goal in 2017, having also been knocked out of the FA Cup by third-tier Millwall.

Assistant manager Craig Shakespear­e and Mike Stowell will take caretaker charge ahead of Monday’s match against Liverpool. The club face a hard time convincing the soccer establishm­ent that they made the right decision.

Ranieri made no immediate public comment, but The Sun said he felt betrayed and that there had been a breakdown in his relationsh­ip including with England striker Jamie Vardy, a key figure in the title win.

Italian Roberto Mancini is among names mentioned as a possible successor, along with Guus Hiddink, who helped arrest Chelsea’s decline last season, and Ireland manager Martin O’Neill.

The Times said some players want Nigel Pearson, who was sacked by Leicester’s owners in 2015 to make way for Ranieri, to return.

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