The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Players should pay for Claudio betrayal

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SHAME.

That is what Leicester City’s players should be feeling over Claudio Ranieri’s sacking.

Now it is up to his replacemen­t – whoever it may be – to make them feel pain. I’m not joking. The situation is too serious. Ranieri is one of football’s nice guys. As a result, when it came to the punch, his players were more ruthless than he was.

They got him sacked by scuttling off to the Foxes’ owners to complain about their lot in life.

But by doing so, they have shown Claudio’s successor what his first task should be – kicking their mollycoddl­ed backsides.

There’s no dressing it up, the Leicester dressing room is poisonous.

And the only explanatio­n I can offer is that winning the Premier League went to their heads.

At the start of last season, like everybody else, I thought the Foxes would struggle badly.

I honestly believed Claudio Ranieri would be one of the first managers in danger of the sack.

How wrong I was.

But is that Ranieri’s fault? Or is it down to the players themselves?

Given the coup that they seem to have just staged, I’m more inclined to blame the guys on the park.

Their actions reek of a group with an attitude problem. And, as it seems to me, if some of them have been plotting for a change in management, can they really have been giving their all on the pitch? They certainly don’t seem to have in the Premier League so far this season.

The Champions League has been a different story but, again, that’s a symptom of their problem this season.

The players will turn it on for the glamour games, but they aren’t interested in the breadand-butter stuff.

That’s what the Foxes’ new manager has to deal with if he wants to lead them to Premier League safety.

He has to get in there and tell those players – you play for me and you will do what I tell you.

For me, it has to be a big name; somebody who instantly commands respect.

And if he does manage to keep them up, his next task will be to strip out the rot.

Leicester’s players should have been grateful to Ranieri for leading them to heights they otherwise never would have scaled.

They should have been willing to run through brick walls for him. Instead, they betrayed him. If they don’t keep the club in the Premier League, they will also have betrayed themselves.

 ??  ?? Nine short months ago the Foxes were celebratin­g title success under Ranieri.
Nine short months ago the Foxes were celebratin­g title success under Ranieri.
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