Los Angeles Times

Broadcaste­r enjoys Leicester City’s title

White is amazed the club overcame huge odds to win English Premier League.

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com

Arlo White has seen a lot of soccer during a broadcasti­ng career that has taken him to four continents in 16 years. But last spring he saw something he had long given up hope of ever witnessing.

Leicester City, the luckless, hopeless, low-budget team White had cheered for growing up in the East Midlands, overcame 5,000-to-1 odds to win the English Premier League title. It was the most stunning upset since David took out Goliath with a pebble and a sling.

“I could barely believe it was unfolding in front of me,” White said. “I don’t think that it’s sunk in yet. Leicester City won the Premier League by 10 points. It’s utterly remarkable.”

The Chicago Cubs are a dynasty compared to Leicester City, which hadn’t won a first-division title in its 132year history. And just 13 months before winning its first, the team had been on the verge of relegation to the second tier of English soccer.

Seven years before that it had been on the verge of bankruptcy.

Now it’s the champion of the best soccer league in the world. And White, NBC’s lead play-for-play voice for EPL games, got to celebrate twice — first when he called the Chelsea-Tottenham draw that clinched the title for Leicester, then a week later when he narrated the presentati­on of the EPL trophy at the team’s tiny King Power Stadium.

“It’s a moment in time that the people of Leicester (pronounced LESS-ter) will never forget,” White said.

The same goes for those who had to watch from afar, like many of the thousands who showed up at StubHub Center on Saturday for the team’s preseason exhibition with French champion Paris Saint-Germain. Leicester fans were so plentiful in the sold-out crowd, parts of the grandstand­s looked as if they had been painted blue.

“I’ve supported the club for 50 years. And I never thought I would see it happen,” Mike Witkowski, a Leicester City fan who flew down from Portland for Saturday’s game, said as he nursed a beer before kickoff. “There’s always a mediocre club just struggling to stay up. And then to win the championsh­ip? Unbelievab­le.

“It will never happen again.”

Leicester City’s triumph is arguably the biggest underdog story in sports history. In an era in which money rules soccer, Leicester City won with a payroll of less than $64 million, fourth-lowest in the league. Manchester City spent more than that on Kevin De Bruyne alone.

And Manchester United has spent more on transfers in the last two seasons than Leicester City has spent in the history of the franchise.

The team’s Thai owners were aware what their investment was likely to buy. So after narrowly escaping demotion to the second division a year earlier, Leicester City had modest expectatio­ns when it hired Italian Claudio Ranieri as coach last summer.

The hiring was met with derision in England and Ranieri, who hadn’t won a first-division title in a 29-year coaching career, was asked only to get the team to 40 points, which figured to keep it safe from relegation.

Leicester City reached that number with 18 games to go. By then the team’s longsuffer­ing fans, with their fingers tightly crossed, started thinking seriously about the unthinkabl­e.

White was among them, though he had to remain impartial in public, especially when broadcasti­ng games involving Tottenham, Leicester’s most dogged pursuer.

Soon those two hours in the TV booth each weekend became a welcome respite.

“That was the time I could relax. The 61⁄2 days either side, I was a wreck,” said White, whose home office features framed programs from Leicester City’s four FA Cup appearance­s, of all which, naturally, ended in losses.

“I was waking up in the middle of the night in cold sweats catastroph­izing (yes, White uses words like catastroph­izing) about Tottenham winning every game. That Leicester would lose on goal differenti­al in the final day of the season. It was part excitement and partly horrendous.”

The celebratio­n has only just ended in Leicester City, where a quarter-million people turned out for the team’s victory parade. A new season starts in less than two weeks, a season that, for the first time, will include an appearance in the Champions League.

White chuckles and shudders when he thinks of the Champions League anthem playing at humble King Power Stadium.

“It’s going to be a surreal experience,” he said.

It’s unlikely any EPL champion has gone into a new year facing less pressure than Leicester City.

“I don’t think there’s any expectatio­n from their fans that they’ll ever do it again,” White said. “And if they don’t that’s fine. Because they did it once.”

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