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Leicester’s Shakespear­e eyes Champions League surprise

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LEICESTER: Leicester City manager Craig Shakespear­e believes his team could become the Champions League’s surprise package after they eliminated Sevilla to reach the quarterfin­als.

Toiling domestical­ly and beaten 2-1 in the first leg of the last 16 tie, Leicester roared back to win 2-0 in Tuesday’s return leg, sending them into Friday’s last-eight draw.

Shakespear­e, promoted following Claudio Ranieri’s dismissal, feels the feat stands “right up there” with last season’s fairytale Premier League title win and said there could be more miracles still to come.

“We know there’s going to be some terrific teams, as in the previous round,” said Shakespear­e, who was taking charge of only his fourth game as a manager.

“We have to be delighted with the performanc­e in knocking Seville out, because their record in Europe is there for everyone to see.

“But we’re in there on merit, make no mistake about that. We might just be the surprise team.

“But we know the quality of teams in there is getting down to the real serious business now.”

Barcelona, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Juventus are among the teams who have already reached the quarterfin­als, but Shakespear­e said he had no preference regarding Leicester’s next opponents.

Asked if there was a team he was hoping to come up against, he smiled and replied simply: “No.”

Ranieri had been sitting in the away dug-out for Leicester’s defeat in the first leg three weeks ago, only to be dismissed by the club’s Thai owners upon his return to England.

The away goal scored by Jamie Vardy at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan sowed the seeds of PARIS: Paris Saint-Germain have sent a letter of complaint to UEFA about the referee who oversaw their spectacula­r collapse to Barcelona, accusing him of ruining their Champions League campaign.

The Spanish champions’ historic win was overshadow­ed by a series of controvers­ial calls from German referee Deniz Aytekin and he awarded them two penalties on the way to a 6-1 hammering last Leicester’s second-leg revival and Shakespear­e acknowledg­ed Ranieri’s role.

“Claudio will always be fondly remembered by everyone at this football club for what he achieved and helped us achieve,” Shakespear­e told reporters in the King Power Stadium press room.

“The performanc­e in the first leg, when Claudio was in charge, gave us the springboar­d for the result tonight.” week to surge into the quarterfin­als.

A source with knowledge of the letter confirmed Tuesday media reports about the dossier sent to UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin; UEFA said that it had received a letter from PSG, giving no details of its content.

The source said that the letter was designed to “point out a series of errors” and “errors of judgment” by Aytekin.

With the King Power rocking in a way that recalled the giddy final weeks of last season, captain Wes Morgan levelled the tie on aggregate by kneeing Riyad Mahrez’s 27th-minute free-kick past Sergio Rico.

It put Leicester in front on away goals and they took the lead outright through Marc Albrighton in the 54th minute, moments after Sergio Escudero had left the home side’s crossbar quivering.

Under-pressure PSG coach Unai Emery said in the aftermath of Barcelona’s miracle revival from a 4-0 first-leg deficit: “We had chances to make it 3-2 and then the refereeing decisions, I don’t know if they were right or not, but for sure they damaged us.”

PSG President Nasser Al-Khelaifi was less forgiving.

“The outcome of the match could have

Sevilla lost Samir Nasri to a second red card for aiming a headbutt at Vardy before Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel took centerstag­e.

The Denmark internatio­nal conceded a penalty for catching Vitolo with an attempted block, but with Steven N’Zonzi poised to send the tie to extra-time, Schmeichel plunged to his left to save. been different with more clear-sighted officiatin­g,” he told Le Parisien newspaper at the weekend.

“Everyone saw that Angel Di Maria should have had a penalty that would have made the score 2-3 and kill any suspense. Not to mention that there was no penalty on (Luis) Suarez late in the game (which was awarded).”

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 ??  ?? Leicester's Wes Morgan, left, scores against Sevilla during the Champions League round of 16 second-leg match at the King Power Stadium in Leicester on Tuesday night. (AP)
Leicester's Wes Morgan, left, scores against Sevilla during the Champions League round of 16 second-leg match at the King Power Stadium in Leicester on Tuesday night. (AP)

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