New Straits Times

SHAKESPEAR­E SACKED

Leicester looking for third manager in three months

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LONDON

LEICESTER City are searching for a third manager in eight months after sacking Craig Shakespear­e, on Tuesday, just 10 games into a three-year contract.

Sporting director Jon Rudkin dismissed Shakespear­e at the club’s Belvoir Drive training ground having allowed him to take charge of a friendly against Nottingham Forest.

Senior players were seen cheerily chatting to Shakespear­e as the game, featuring squad members, took place but had left by the time the 53-year-old learned his fate at 2.30pm. Many found out the news by reading MailOnline, much to their disgruntle­ment.

Assistant Michael Appleton will take charge for Leicester’s game at Swansea on Saturday as the hunt for a permanent replacemen­t begins.

Sam Allardyce is interested in the job, as is Chris Coleman. The Wales manager is considerin­g leaving the internatio­nal scene and would be open to talks at Leicester.

The club’s Thai owners, who are not in the country, want to appoint a major figure, but former Borussia Dortmund manager Thomas Tuchel and Carlo Ancelotti are not thought to be keen on the job.

Huddersfie­ld’s David Wagner is a serious contender and Watford’s Marco Silva has admirers in the boardroom, while Burnley’s Sean Dyche has also been discussed and would be interested.

Shakespear­e’s position had come under scrutiny after one win in eight Premier League games left the club in the relegation places, but the timing of the move was a shock.

Shakespear­e remained hugely popular among members of the title-winning team, having worked at the club in two spells since 2008, although some of the younger and newer players felt a change was necessary.

Some at the club believe Shakespear­e has paid the price for unreliable recruitmen­t headed by Rudkin and the failure to adequately replace Danny Drinkwater and N’Golo Kante, both sold to Chelsea.

While Harry Maguire’s signing looks a success, the jury is out on Kelechi Iheanacho and Vicente Iborra.

But the most glaring error was Leicester’s failure to ratify Adrien Silva’s deadline-day transfer from Sporting Lisbon. Silva has hugely impressed his prospectiv­e team-mates in training and it is a poor reflection on Leicester that the Portugal star cannot play until January because paperwork was submitted too late.

Shakespear­e took over from Claudio Ranieri in difficult circumstan­ces and won his first six games to steer Leicester clear of relegation trouble and into the Champions League quarter-finals.

Turning his interim role into a permanent appointmen­t at the end of the season should have been a formality, but a delay until June 8 hinted at reticence from owners Vichai and Aiyawatt Srivaddhan­aprabha.

It is accepted by the hierarchy that Leicester had a difficult run of fixtures but tepid displays in draws against Huddersfie­ld, Bournemout­h and West Brom were Shakespear­e’s downfall.

Against West Brom on Monday, only Riyad Mahrez’s 80th-minute goal earned a point which left Leicester 18th in the table.

Rudkin let Shakespear­e take a warm-down session on Tuesday morning and then the match featuring fringe players against a Forest XI, which kicked off at 11.30am. That the news was not delivered first thing has caused a degree of upset. Reuters

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