The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Leicester and Clarets hit impasse as

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In the circumstan­ces, everything was right, apart from the result.

Leicester City struck the right note in every aspect as they paid an emotional farewell to their chairman, Vichai Srivaddhan­aprabha. As the club has come to realise over the past fortnight, football for all its highs and lows, is very much “only a game”. It would not have mattered if Leicester had been heavily beaten. But apart from the most die-hard Burnley supporters, few could have begrudged a win for the home side.

Instead, they settled for a point, on a day that was about so much more than just the match.

This was acknowledg­ed by Burnley boss Sean Dyche. While pleased with a point for his side, he saw the bigger picture.

“A shocking thing has happened and everyone just feels it,” he said. “It has reminded everyone that underneath the glamour, a club is part of a community.”

This was the first match at the stadium since the tragic events of two weeks before when the owner’s helicopter crashed only yards away, killing all five passengers on board. There had been a huge outpouring of grief from both the club and the wider football family, culminatin­g in this occasion. Thousands of fans took part in a special walk to the ground entitled, “5000 to 1” in respect of Leicester’s famous title win in 2016, made possible by the owner’s vision.

When he arrived in 2010, the aim was to get out of the Championsh­ip. People would have laughed at the idea of Leicester City being champions of England and enjoying incredible nights in the Champions League.

But there he was in May 2016, stood on the pitch at the King Power Stadium holding aloft the Premier League trophy after his players had conquered the big boys.

In the past fortnight,

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