Shakespeare’s conscience is clear over sacking of Ranieri
● Leicester manager says there was no fallout as predecessor hints at betrayal
ATLETICO MADRID
V LEICESTER CITY
Leicester manager Craig Shakespeare has reiterated that his conscience is clear after his predecessor, Claudio Ranieri, hinted someone at the club betrayed him.
Shakespeare continued to field questions about the Italian ahead of tonight’s Champions League quarter-final first leg, one of the biggest games in the club’s history.
Ranieri finally spoke about his sacking on Sky Sports’ Monday Night Football and absolved the players from any blame in his February dismissal but did say “maybe it could be somebody behind me”.
Shakespeare has always been clear over his relationship with Ranieri – that there were no problems between the pair – and was again robust in his stance.
“Free speech is there for anyone, I don’t have a problem with that. I’m quite comfortable in my own conscience,” he said.
“I was at the Under-23s, but I’ve seen clips of it [the interview]. Claudio was in good humour and came across exactly as I know him.
“My stance, from my first interview, is I remember coming in and stating I spoke to Claudio the night he was relieved, he thanked me for my time, I thanked him.
“There’s never been any arguments or hard feelings. That’s my side of it. It was good to see him enjoying his football as he did. I thought he came across really well.
“My stance is still the same. We never had any falling out. I haven’t seen it live, I have only seen quotes this morning and I think I’ve answered the question.”
Leicester face Atletico as the only English club left in the competition having beaten Sevilla 3-2 on aggregate in the last 16, with Ranieri dismissed just 24 hours after their 2-1 first-leg defeat.
But, despite being underdogs against the La Liga side, Shakespeare insisted the Foxes are not about to roll over.
“In terms of life experiences you use them as you go along, you have new ones and this is one for us in the Champions League this season,” he said.
“We have enjoyed it but make no mistake we’re there to compete and not to make the numbers up. These players deserve this opportunity and we aim to keep that going.”
Shakespeare will warn the side against collecting bookings with Robert Huth, Wilfred Ndidi, Islam Slimani and Jamie Vardy all a caution away from missing next week’s second leg.
He said: “We are a very well disciplined as a team, but yes, the players will be reminded about their responsibilities and not to get any stupid cards for things like encroaching.
“It is something we will talk about with the players.” Captain Wes Morgan is out with a back problem. Goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel will captain the side and believes their last-eight clash is what the squad have been waiting for.
He said: “When you look at the DNA of our team, the type of characters, the journeys everyone has been on – lower leagues and rejection – these are the kind of nights, when you are playing League Two and watching Champions League on TV, you were working for.”