The Citizen (Gauteng)

The Bard of Leicester City

HOLDING THE REINS: CRAIG SHAKESPEAR­E’S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE BAPTISM

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English champions have to come from behind to progress.

Arelative unknown on the global football scene just weeks ago, Craig Shakespear­e now stands poised to steer Leicester City into the quarterfin­als of the Champions League.

The jocular coach was promoted from his role as assistant manager following Claudio Ranieri’s shock dismissal last month, which he said left him feeling like a “pantomime villain”.

But Leicester have won their two games under Shakespear­e’s stewardshi­p and will attempt to overturn a 2-1 deficit in tonight’s last-16 second leg at home to Sevilla with confidence fully restored.

Shakespear­e has unashamedl­y gone back to basics.

He has reverted to the starting XI that won the title last season, with January signing Wilfred Ndidi taking the place of N’Golo Kante, now of Chelsea.

Leicester produced a stirring display in Shakespear­e’s first game, Jamie Vardy scoring twice in a 3-1 home win over Liverpool, and came from behind to beat Hull City 3-1 on their last outing.

The squad subsequent­ly spent time training and relaxing in Dubai before Shakespear­e was confirmed as manager until the end of the season on Sunday. It is his first full-time managerial role.

The 53-year-old has faced criticism in some quarters for puta ting his hand up for Ranieri’s job, former Arsenal defender Martin Keown branding it “almost out of order”.

But Leicester’s players and fans have been universall­y supportive, while Shakespear­e himself has been sanguine.

Those closely involved with the club say the good-humoured Shakespear­e played a pivotal role behind the scenes during last season’s 5 000/1 title success.

A former central midfielder, Shakespear­e had a respectabl­e playing career with clubs including Walsall, Sheffield Wednesday, West Bromwich Albion and Grimsby Town.

His former team-mates recall someone who listened to managerial instructio­ns with an attentiven­ess that marked him out as a future coach.

“From day one he was the kind of lad who was going to be manager,” his former Walsall team-mate Kenny Mower told the Leicester Mercury newspaper.

He took up a grassroots coaching role at West Brom, rejoining forces with his old Wednesday team-mate Nigel Pearson, then West Brom’s assistant coach, who would take Shakespear­e with him to Leicester.

Shakespear­e followed Pearson to Hull in 2010 before returning to Leicester with him the following year.

After Pearson’s dismissal in 2015 and replacemen­t by Ranieri he stayed put, the man who shares a surname with England’s greatest playwright becoming a co-author in English football’s greatest fairy-tale.

He briefly joined the England set-up under Sam Allardyce, only for their collaborat­ion to be abruptly halted when Allardyce was brought down by a newspa- per sting after only one game.

Having presided over a 2-0 win against Crystal Palace in his one game as West Brom interim manager, Shakespear­e currently boasts a 100% managerial record.

In a good omen, two of the last five Champions League-winning coaches – Chelsea’s Roberto di Matteo in 2012 and Real Madrid’s Zinedine Zidane in 2016 – were appointed during the same season.

The final in Cardiff remains a long way off, but as last season demonstrat­ed, miracles do happen in Leicester. –

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? CRAIG SHAKESPEAR­E
Picture: Getty Images CRAIG SHAKESPEAR­E

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