The Star Malaysia

Life imitates art as Shakespear­e plots Leicester’s revival

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LONDON: Like his famous namesake, English playwright and poet William Shakespear­e, Leicester manager Craig Shakespear­e is hoping he can add a few blockbuste­r dramas to his own story.

Appointed caretaker manager after the English champions sacked Claudio Ranieri last month, Shakespear­e has brought such a revival over three games that the 53-year-old will stay in the job until the end of the season.

Events at Leicester have some uncanny resemblanc­es to William Shakespear­e’s works. The playwright was born just 40 miles away from Leicester in Stratford-upon-Avon and the unfolding tragedies and comedies at the club suggest some of the Bard’s most famous plays.

“Goodnight, good night! Parting is such sweet sorrow .”( Romeo and Juliet)

IN the wake of Ranieri’s unceremoni­ous departure, Shakespear­e denied a player revolt was behind the Italian’s demise.

Amid media reports of treachery and betrayal, senior players were forced to deny they had met with Leicester’s owners to ask that Ranieri be replaced.

“There was a lot of frustratio­n because of the results, but he had not lost the dressing room,” Shakespear­e said.

“A lot of the talk of unrest has been speculatio­n. I’ve not had one problem with the players.

“I always feel sorry when people lose their jobs. My relationsh­ip with Claudio has been fine all along.”

Eyebrows have certainly been raised at just how quickly Leicester have returned to last season’s form, with some prominent commentato­rs saying it was unpalatabl­e.

After beating Liverpool 3-1 in their first game after Ranieri left, Sky Sports pundit and former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher castigated the Leicester players by saying they should “hang their heads in shame”.

“Cry‘ havoc !’ and let slip the dogs of war .’’( Julius Caesar)

THE old Leicester of 2016 Premier League winning-vintage appears to be back, with added bite and menace. Energy, spark and passion.

All those qualities apparently lacking this season have returned in the three games since Ranieri’s departure.

Why they were missing for the majority of this season will remain a mystery.

Some said Leicester’s struggles this season were because they had lost the element of surprise – Premier League teams had simply worked out how to nullify their traditiona­l 4-4-2 formation and counter-attacking game.

Missing the intensity that carried the 500-1 outsiders to a stunning title triumph, Leicester have struggled week after week in the league.

When the club’s Thai owners, to the surprise of many, pulled the plug on Ranieri, Leicester had slipped into a relegation battle. For the Leicester money men, demotion to the Championsh­ip (second-tier) was unthinkabl­e.

But since Shakespear­e stepped up, Leicester have been reinvigora­ted, beating Liverpool and Hull at home in the Premier League, then seeing off highly-fancied Sevilla to reach the Champions League quarter-finals.

Foxes vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhan­aprabha has certainly been impressed.

“He has initiated the type of positive response that we hoped change would bring, showing great leadership qualities and composure under considerab­le pressure to produce two very important results,” he said of Shakespear­e.

“Off with his head !”( Richard III)

RANIERI’S sacking, nine months after winning the title, showed that in the fickle world of football, no job is safe. One minute a hero, the next a villain with your head on the (managerial) chopping block.

Shakespear­e has begun brilliantl­y and has another 11 Premier League games, as well as a Champions League quarter-final, to make his case to continue in charge next season.

If Leicester maintain the improvemen­t shown and continue to ease away from relegation danger then the job is surely his.

Leicester are reported to have sounded out former England manager Roy Hodsgon about becoming manager and the club’s hierarchy are bound to have some names in mind should the Midlands club slip back into strife.

Of course, no one expects Leicester to progress further in the Champions League but their debut in the continent’s elite competitio­n has proved a rollercoas­ter ride so far.

Few gave Leicester a chance of upsetting Sevilla and not many will against Atletico Madid, Champions League finalists in two of the last three seasons. But Juventus’ veteran goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon probably spoke for other teams when he said before the draw that Leicester were a team to avoid.

“Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them .’” (TwelfthNig­ht)

SHAKESPEAR­E has stepped out of the shadows and into the managerial limelight. Now he has to deliver.

History has shown that great coaches do not always make great managers. Think Sammy Lee, Mike Phelan or Carlos Quieroz.

Shakespear­e spent his playing days in the lower leagues and has carved out a reputation as a well-liked and respected coach.

But his first stint in management, and the huge pressure it brings, will see if he can cut it.

In his favour is that he knows Leicester well, having worked firstly under Nigel Pearson, and then Ranieri.

He also clearly has the support of the players. Defender Christian Fuchs said of his appointmen­t: “He was always the person to go to for the players and the players are trusting him.

“It feels good working with him – obviously he’s a nice guy, he has a lot of knowledge – and the results are speaking for themselves.”

Whether Shakespear­e can achieve great things at Leicester, time will tell.

“All the world’ s a stage. And all the men and women merely players .”( As You Like It)

IN the modern world of football where Premier League games are broadcast around the globe, millions of fans will already be familiar with Leicester. More so now they have rubbed shoulders with the likes of Porto and Sevilla in the Champions League.

Now Atletico get to see first-hand what Leicester are about and will surely not relish the red-hot atmosphere at a raucous King Power stadium in the English Midlands.

Atletico, of course, are European aristocrat­s having been Champions League runners up in 2014 and last year. With Argentine manager Diego Simeone at the helm, Atletico have shown that Spanish football is not just about Real Madrid and Barcelona. Shakespear­e is relishing the clash. “Facing a team who have reached the final in two of the last three seasons is a massive challenge but it’s just the kind of tie you expect in the quarter-finals of the Champions League.

“Atletico are a very good team with some fantastic individual­s with experience in the competitio­n, but we’ll be ready to give everything to progress,” he said.

“It will be a brilliant occasion for our supporters and for everyone at the club but, before the players can begin to think about these games, we have Premier League matches to come that are of huge significan­ce to our season. They will be our sole focus.”

The clubs have met twice before in Europe – in the second round of the European Cup Winners’ Cup during the 1961-62 campaign (Leicester lost 3-1 on aggregate) and in 1997 when the Spaniards prevailed 4-1 over two legs in the first round of the UEFA Cup.

Simeone may not yet know much about Leicester but will be delving into the archives to look for himself. Hopefully, he doesn’t look up the wrong Shakespear­e.

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