Irish Independent

Leicester fans paying respects need no reminding how fragile life and the good times are

- PAUL HAYWARD

AHELICOPTE­R rising from the pitch to sweep a billionair­e owner away from a game was a symbol of how far Leicester City have come. That aircraft ditching and exploding in flames in an adjacent car park affirmed how fragile life and the good times are.

The crash alongside Leicester’s King Power Stadium at around 8.30pm on Saturday after the 1-1 draw with West Ham was a human tragedy, far more than a setback for a football club. It was life and death, not wins and losses.

And the Leicester fans who filed to the ground to pay their respects to the club’s Thai owner and four other assumed victims of the crash needed no reminding that life cannot be predicted.

Witnesses to a miracle, in May 2016, thousands came in October 2018 to observe the brutal opposite of civic joy. When they first arrived, a whiff of burned aviation fuel could still be smelled a few hundred yards away. Many said they would always remember where they were, what they were doing, when news of the fireball reached them.

Many of Leicester’s players and staff will certainly never forget. Kasper Schmeichel, the Premier League title-winning goalkeeper, was among those who ran towards the scene of the crash when routine post-match family time was broken by the bang of crunching metal.

“Thank you for making our dreams come true,” read one inscriptio­n on a Leicester shirt. Another said: “God bless you and your family Vichai – grateful to you for all you have done for our club.”

The universal theme was gratitude. If Chelsea and Man City have since snatched back power for the old cartel, here, on a day of loss, was another illustrati­on of what it meant for Leicester City to be champions of England. One man wore a shirt with the words: “Journeymen, Misfits, Rejects, Champions.”

If there was an abiding image of this sad Sunday, it was Leicester fans approachin­g the shrine with flowers in one hand and the palm of a young son or daughter in the other. Mothers and fathers came with their children to lay bouquets, Leicester shirts from all eras, soft toy foxes, Buddhas, scarves and pictures in a concrete field of remembranc­e that was stretching towards the road as daylight faded.

There were shirts, too, from other clubs: Sheffield United, Liverpool, Leeds – and a scarf with a message: “For everyone associated with LCFC – from Coventry City FC.”

On a concourse where fans once reached for bottles of free Thai beer laid on by Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha, supporters gave thanks to a man who had still not officially been pronounced dead. In 60 seconds, it would have been possible to walk from the floral shrine to the scene of the crash, in a car park where, mercifully, no bystanders were caught in the inferno.

Beyond the National Grid Refurbishm­ent Centre, on a patch of tarmac enclosed by trees, sat the incinerate­d remains of an AgustaWest­land AW169 that was meant to drop Vichai at Luton Airport for a transfer by private

Sometimes death can be so close. Football knows this from many disasters over years

plane to Thailand, headquarte­rs of the King Power empire.

From Leicester to Luton is 70 miles: a mere blink in aeronautic­al terms. But this journey ended a few metres from the ground Leicester’s Thai owners bought eight years ago.

To some fans, the owners’ ability to soar and leave after games may have felt like evidence their club had entered football’s age of foreign tycoon owners. They liked him for the free beer and donuts, but loved him for the English title win and its passport to the Champions League; they loved him for Jamie Vardy, Riyad Mahrez, N’Golo Kante and all the other heroes.

The last time outsiders thronged to this stadium in such numbers was to acknowledg­e the miracle of that Premier League title win at 5,000/1.

On the night the clocks went back, Leicester stepped into winter feeling terrible sorrow. Losing a benefactor was not the only cause of the grief. People are not so shallow. All who showed up at the King Power were acknowledg­ing the starker facts of life and death, for all who were in that helicopter.

The proximity of the crash itself also cast a spell. Sometimes death can be so close. Football knows this, from many disasters down the years. But a billionair­e’s helicopter is not meant to rise, malfunctio­n, spin, plunge and explode in flames a kick of a ball from the stands. Dreams are not meant to end that way. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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