Leicester closer to unlikely league title
ENGLISH SOCCER
After a fourth successive 1-0 victory sent Leicester into a seven-point lead, some giddy soccer fans started to unfurl Premier League “champions” scarves in the King Power Stadium.
Although there are still six games remaining after Sunday’s gritty win over Southampton, celebrations are already under way in this unassuming central England town.
When you’ve experienced the roller-coaster of emotions endured by followers of Leicester, it is little wonder they can’t wait for the unlikeliest of Premier League title parties next month.
Exactly a year ago, Leicester was braced for relegation while stranded seven points from safety at the bottom of the Premier League. The standings Sunday showed Leicester seven points clear at the right end, looking down on north London teams Tottenham and Arsenal, and Manchester rivals City and United.
Leicester captain Wes Morgan secured Sunday’s victory with his first goal of the season on the eve of the first anniversary of the start of the great escape.
It was the April 4, 2015, triumph over West Ham that sparked a startling resurgence. Six of the final nine games of last season were won as Leicester not only beat the drop but gained the confidence that has been carried into this season.
April 4 is also the birthday of the Thai retail tycoon who has owned Leicester for six years and will surely be the first chair in the club’s 132-year history to lift the English top-flight trophy in May. Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was serenaded by his players on Sunday with a rendition of “Happy Birthday” greeting his pre-match arrival in the dressing room. Outside the stadium, fans were treated to free beer and doughnuts by him — adding to the joyful atmosphere.
But as so often in recent weeks, it was a nervy 90 minutes on the pitch as Leicester ground out another slender win, and top scorer Jamie Vardy went a sixth game without scoring.
Leicester defender Danny Simpson had a lucky escape when his raised right arm blocked a shot in the penalty area and no spot kick was awarded. Compounding the grievances for Southampton, the seventh-place team fell behind in the 38th minute when Morgan met Christian Fuchs’s cross to net with a powerful header.
The mission for manager Claudio Ranieri now is to quieten all the title talk.
Man United, English football’s most successful title with 20 championship crowns, remains 16 points adrift of Leicester in fifth place after beating Everton 1-0 in Sunday’s other game.