The Star Malaysia

Leicester out to boost survival bid in EPL after Champs League high

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LONDON: Leicester will feed off the momentum from their dramatic Champions League last-16 victory over Sevilla as they return to the battle for English Premier League survival at West Ham today.

After overseeing Premier League victories over Liverpool and Hull following the shock sacking of Claudio Ranieri, Leicester boss Craig Shakespear­e led the Foxes into the Champions League quarter-finals on Tuesday as their campaign of wildly contrastin­g fortunes continued.

Such was the euphoria surroundin­g their 2-0 victory over Sevilla in the last 16, their perilous position just three points above the Premier League relegation zone was forgotten, for a few hours at least.

But Shakespear­e brought his players back down to earth by preventing them from watching the quarter-final draw, which saw them pitted against Spain’s Atletico Madrid.

“We were training. We found out when we went back in after training,” Shakespear­e said.

“We trained as normal and the preparatio­n has to be for the West Ham game.

“Depending how long it goes on for, we will be out training because we are travelling down to West Ham afterwards. There will be plenty of time for us afterwards to get word of who we are playing.”

Shakespear­e also defended Leicester striker Jamie Vardy against allegation­s of cheating from Sevilla’s Samir Nasri.

Nasri was dismissed for a second bookable offence after the pair went head to head and later accused Vardy of cheating by exaggerati­ng the clash.

But Shakespear­e said: “Jamie’s not a cheat and never has been, never will be. I think Jamie responded well to the comment and we have to put it to bed.

“The game has gone, the referee made his decision and we have to move on.”

Leicester have lost the services of Molla Wague, with the on-loan Udinese defender ruled out for the rest of the season with a dislocated shoulder.

Meanwhile, West Ham manager Slaven Bilic said he had been impressed with Vardy’s performanc­e against Sevilla as the striker continues his resurgence after a lacklustre first half of the season.

“It was Vardy from last year,” Bilic said. “It was like a copy and paste performanc­e.

“It was not only him, but the strikers set the tempo with pressing and timing. It was not only against Sevilla. It was also straight away against Liverpool.

“He looked brilliant like Vardy from last season in his general performanc­e.

“That Nasri thing happens in football. Nasri was naive to get in that trap. Unfortunat­ely for Nasri it was his second.”

Bilic remains adamant that Ranieri, who led Leicester to the title last season, was unlucky to lose his job despite the significan­t improvemen­t overseen by Shakespear­e.

“I still don’t understand it,” he said. “But if you are talking about the performanc­es and results, they are getting the results they wanted.

“Still, for me, it was a bad decision because we are talking about Claudio Ranieri who did everything very recently with them.

“But it’s the nature of the job. You are the first one to pay the price.

“Unfortunat­ely, now, nobody can say it’s the wrong decision because at least these three results are brilliant for them and they look different.”

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