Shakespeare to pen new chapter
LEICESTER PUT LIVERPOOL TO THE SWORD Juergen Klopp has no excuses for his side’s limp display.
Leicester City caretaker manager Craig Shakespeare said he was ready to take on the role fulltime after overseeing an impressive 3-1 win against Liverpool in his first game.
Shakespeare was promoted from his role as assistant following Claudio Ranieri’s sensational dismissal last Thursday, nine months on from Leicester’s 5 000/1 Premier League title triumph.
Leicester looked a team reborn on Monday, prevailing through Jamie Vardy’s first-half double and a Danny Drinkwater strike, and Shakespeare said the experience had whetted his appetite.
“Do I think I’m capable of it? Yes. Does it faze me? No,” he told reporters when asked if he wanted the job.
“But it’s the owners who decide and they’ll do their diligence and look. I think it’ll take its course.
“They’ll sit down and I’ll try and prepare the team as well as I can for Hull unless told otherwise.”
Ranieri may have gone, but Leicester’s faithful showed the much-loved 65-year-old Italian he will not be forgotten.
Several fans brandished banners thanking him and there was a coordinated smartphone light show in his honour in the 65th minute, accompanied by chants of his name.
“The performance you saw tonight, I saw it against Man City (who Leicester beat 4-2 in December). We have done it, but not often enough.”
Leicester, who host second-bottom Hull City on Saturday, had lost their previous five league games and were the last team in Europe’s five major leagues to find the net in 2017.
Vardy broke an eight-game goal drought in the 29th minute, haring onto Marc Albrighton’s through-ball before tucking a shot past Simon Mignolet.
Drinkwater slammed in Leicester’s second with a searing 25-yard shot and Vardy headed in a third goal before Philippe Coutinho reduced the arrears with 21 minutes remaining.
The weekend’s results had seen Leicester slip into the bottom three, but they leapt up to 15th place, two points clear of the relegation zone.
Liverpool would have gone third with victory, but they remain in fifth place and now trail leaders Chelsea by 14 points.
Beaten manager Juergen Klopp said his players had been told to expect an “emotional” display from Leicester and said there was no excuse for the passivity of their display.
“We knew how Leicester would play: go back to their roots,” said the German, whose side welcome Arsenal to Anfield on Saturday.
“We could have done much better. We let them be the Leicester of last year – that’s our fault.” – AFP