Ranieri top EPL summit with outsiders Leicester



Claudio Ranieri’s appointment as head of unfashionable Leicester City in July after a dismal and short-lived spell in charge of Greece raised some eyebrows, not least because the Italian had not managed a Premier League side since 2004.

Few, if any, could have forseen him storming the pinnacle of English soccer.

After being sacked by Chelsea to usher in the Jose Mourinho era, Ranieri managed in Spain, Italy, France and subsequently Greece, where he lasted just four games.

An embarrassing home defeat for Greece by the Faroe Islands in November 2014 appeared to put Ranieri’s stock at an all-time low but Leicester’s ambitious Thai owners were ready to hand the 64-year-old another crack at management in the most popular league in the world.

That move now looks all the more astute with Leicester top of the league more than halfway through the season and continuing to defy those who thought their unexpected title challenge would naturally start to tail off.

Leicester, three points clear of Manchester City after 23 games, could scarcely now be more fashionable, the shooting star in a league so long dominated by names such as Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool.

Almost forgotten is their great escape last season when, having been bottom at Christmas, they won seven of their last nine games to beat the drop.

Under Ranieri, Leicester deploy a relentless counter-attacking game spearheaded by the dual attacking threats of playmaker Riyad Mahrez and striker Jamie Vardy.

“The thing with Leicester is they can mix their game up. They grind teams down, they adapt to situations accordingly.

Primarily they sit back and hit on the counter with the pace of Mahrez, (Marc) Albrighton and Vardy,” former Leicester captain Matt Elliott told Reuters.

“I think it’s fair to say Ranieri has brought some game management and a little bit of nous to their play.

You can see it from afar, everyone knows their jobs, they are well drilled.”

Vardy, given licence to roam by Ranieri, is the league’s top scorer with 16 goals and it is his partnership with Algerian international Mahrez, who has contributed 13 goals and numerous assists, that have paid rich dividends for Leicester.

Nicknamed “Loose”, as in loose cannon, by his team mates, England international Vardy broke a Premier League scoring record with goals in 11 consecutive games in November.

While Vardy’s value has soared, the reported 400,000 pounds ($570,000) Leicester paid to French Ligue 2 side Le Havre for Mahrez one year ago appears to be another bargain with his value now put at around 11 million euros according to transfermarkt.com.

Having earned the nickname ‘Tinkerman’ at Chelsea for constantly rotating his squad, many thought Ranieri would make wholesale squad changes when he arrived but this has not happened.

Ranieri also retained his predecessor Nigel Pearson’s backroom team, including head of recruitment Steve Walsh, the man credited with bringing Vardy and Mahrez to central England.

Walsh had also scouted little known midfielder N’Golo Kante and persuaded Ranieri to buy him from Ligue 1 side Caen.

Oh that man N'golo Kante. The energetic Kante has formed a telling partnership alongside Danny Drinkwater in front of Leicester’s back four. 

With 13 matches to go will history be made just like when Denmark won Euro 92 ?. Time shall tell.

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