Daily Dispatch

Cutting the Foxes down to size not as easy at it looks

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ATLETICO Madrid have grown accustomed to slaying Europe’s giants in the Champions League under Diego Simeone, but ending Leicester City’s run may prove even tougher than ousting Barcelona or Bayern Munich, according to Filipe Luis.

“We’re not favourites. We don’t believe that,” said the Brazilian leftback on Monday despite the vast gulf in Champions League experience between the sides.

Atletico are in their fourth straight quarterfin­al and missed out by the narrowest of margins in two final defeats to cross-city rivals Real Madrid in the past three years.

However, the Spanish side are all too aware of what Leicester are capable of after the Foxes dumped out their La Liga rivals Sevilla en route to the last eight in their first ever appearance in the competitio­n.

“Maybe for us we can play better against these teams, Barcelona and Real Madrid, because they have the ball and they control the game, but when we have to initiate the style of play it’s not going to be easy,” added Luis, who kept Gareth Bale quiet as Atletico held Real to a 1-1 draw on Saturday.

“It’s also going to be difficult for them because we know how to play these quarterfin­als. We have played three in the last three years, so we are prepared.”

Luis said last season that Atletico had used Leicester’s remarkable run to Premier League glory as inspiratio­n as they saw off Barca and Bayern over two legs before falling just short against Real on penalties in Milan.

While not on the scale of Leicester’s title triumph, Atletico also upset the odds by breaking Barca and Madrid’s hegemony when they won La Liga three seasons ago despite a huge financial disadvanta­ge.

“The difference between teams’ budgets is something to remember, but in the end it doesn’t have to be definitive,” Atletico president Enrique Cerezo said last week.

“It was the same for Leicester, they were competing with teams like Chelsea, Manchester City, Manchester United so them winning the Premier League was a huge achievemen­t,” he added.

More impressive­ly, though, unlike Leicester, Atletico have been able to build a sustained period of success under Simeone.

Leicester’s last visit to Spain back in February, when they lost 2-1 to Sevilla in the first leg of their last-16 tie, was the last straw for the club’s Thai owners as title-winning manager Claudio Ranieri was sacked with the champions plunging towards the league relegation zone.

One of Ranieri’s former assistants, Craig Shakespear­e, was put in charge on a temporary basis and has overseen a dramatic turnaround in Leicester’s fortunes.

Until Sunday’s 4-2 defeat at Everton, Shakespear­e had won all six games since taking over to move eight points clear of the drop zone.

“It’s about confidence,” said Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel.

“Just as you can go on a losing run, you can go on a winning run as well. We’ve got the players to do that. We’ve always been capable of doing that.” — AFP

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