The Star Malaysia

LIFE GOES ON FOR LEICESTER AFTER VICHAI’S DEATH

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LONDON: Former Leicester managers Claudio Ranieri and Nigel Pearson joined the voices of condolence for the club’s chairman Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha, who was killed in a helicopter crash.

Thai businessma­n Vichai died along with four others when his helicopter crashed and then exploded outside the club’s King Power Stadium after an English Premier League match against West Ham.

The club opened a book of condolence for fans to pay tribute at the stadium on Tuesday, after many had left scarves and flowers outside the ground in the preceding days.

Ranieri, whom Vichai brought in as Leicester coach in 2015, led them in their sensationa­l run to the Premier League title the next year, defying odds of 5000-1.

“I was terribly shaken by the news. He was a good man and always had a positive word for everyone.

“His positivity and ability to make everybody love him was clear for all to see.

“He came into the locker room only to dispense kind words, never to reproach you,” Ranieri told Sky Sport Italia.

“Everything he touched became better,” he said.

“I immediatel­y thought he was a positive person, full of energy.”

The Italian coach had taken over from Nigel Pearson, who managed the club in two spells from 2008-2010 and then from 2011 following Vichai’s takeover the previous year.

Pearson is credited with saving Leicester from relegation in 20142015, his side winning seven of their last eight matches, before he was sacked after disagreeme­nts with the board.

Despite his parting of ways, Pearson was full of praise for Vichai’s contributi­on to Leicester’s fairytale.

“The leadership and managerial processes he instilled and encouraged within Leicester City over a sustained period of time has borne fruit in such a way that people throughout the world witnessed the impossible by seeing a club win the Premier League in the most incredible circumstan­ces,” Pearson said.

“This most definitely ensured the belief that sporting miracles can happen ... on a personal level, a manager could not have wished for a better boss.

“I’m sure the wider football world will offer some solace for his loved ones. I will miss ‘ The Boss’.”

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