Sunday People

Kid Thomas won Cup with his boyhood club ...in front of fans and family for first time

- By Neil Moxley

LEICESTER CITY’S Luke Thomas is giving an interview, sat in front of a screen, possibly unaware of the significan­ce of what he has just said.

“So, let’s get this straight,” says this questioner. “The first time you played in front of fans was the FA Cup Final?

“It was also the first time your family had seen you play in a profession­al game, when you beat Chelsea at Wembley last season?

“Not only that, your dad and uncle are life-long Leicester City supporters who have put up with that jibe about being the club that has suffered the most FA Cup final defeats and you play in the game that ended it?

“And also you’re a former Foxes’ ball-boy, season-ticket holder and graduate from the club’s academy?”

Thomas laughs. The three journalist­s on the zoom call break into a grin.

The story doesn’t need any embellishm­ent – it isright there in front of us. Thomas was still a teenager when he lifted the FA Cup with his hometown side last May as Brendan Rodgers consigned an unwanted statistic to the rubbish bin thanks to Youri Tielemans’ wonderful winner.

Talk about a fairytale. It probably mirrors that of the Premier League title triumph. All that – and he was stepping into the shoes of £50million Chelsea export Ben Chilwell, too. No pressure, then.

Leicester’s left-back, 20, said: “It was a surprising first season – I didn’t expect to play as many games and I definitely didn’t expect to play in an FA Cup Final. To go on to win it was unbelievab­le – mind-blowing.

“It was the best day of my life. To play at Wembley – which I’d never done before – and do it in front of fans – it was the first time I’d played in front of them and my family too – was just incredible.

“We tried to treat it like just another game – for example, James Maddison and I had a game of darts on the night before in the hotel. But I’d never played in front of fans before. Possibly a few at the Under-23 games but I got butterflie­s when I saw them. There were just 6,000 from each club and a few neutrals but that was enough.

“When I walked out of the tunnel, it was: ‘Whoa’, but I just had to deal with it. Youri scored his goal and we were edging towards the end but I was substitute­d eight minutes from time. Then, it looked like they’d scored.

“I just put my head down. I was sure Ben Chilwell was onside. I couldn’t really tell from the angle where I was sitting on the bench.

“As soon as VAR said it was ruled out, you’re on your feet. For the last three minutes or so we’re all standing up – the final whistle goes and everyone’s on the pitch.

“I went to see my dad – there might have been a tear in his eye – and I went back to Leicester with him and my uncle Wes. They go everywhere, all the away games.

“We ended up at the training ground for a celebratio­n – there were quite a few of us there, it was a good night.

“It wasn’t until afterwards I realised how much it meant to everyone. My dad hasn’t stopped talking about it on Facebook for the past six months.”

Dramatic

There is rivalry between Nottingham Forest and Leicester City, and Thomas can remember one of the last occasions the teams met at the City Ground. It was in 2013 when a stoppage-time goal from Anthony Knockaert secured a play-off spot in dramatic circumstan­ces during a topsy-turvy 3-2 victory.

He said: “I haven’t seen too many games between the clubs, although I’ve heard about the rivalry that exists. But we haven’t played them for eight years now.

“Knockaert scored that one in the last minute. The fans went wild, didn’t they? I watched the game on the telly but there’s no doubt they’ll want to put one over us. Their fans will be up for it and I know ours will be.

It was the best day of my life. To play at Wembley – which I’d never done before – and to do it in front of fans for the first time was incredible

 ?? ?? “They’ll want us to win and won’t be happy if we don’t. So we’re going to go out there and hopefully smash them.”
“They’ll want us to win and won’t be happy if we don’t. So we’re going to go out there and hopefully smash them.”

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