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Leicester City F.C.

Leicester City Football Club is an English professional football club based in Leicester, in the East Midlands of England. They compete in the EFL Championship, the second level of the English football league system.

Leicester City
Full nameLeicester City Football Club
Nickname(s)The Foxes
Founded1884; 139 years ago (1884)
(as Leicester Fosse F.C.)
StadiumKing Power Stadium
Capacity32,262[1]
OwnerKing Power
ChairmanAiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha
ManagerEnzo Maresca
LeagueEFL Championship
2022–23Premier League, 18th of 20 (relegated)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club was founded in 1884 as Leicester Fosse F.C, and they adopted the name Leicester City in 1919.[2] They moved to Filbert Street in 1891, were elected to the Football League in 1894 and moved to the nearby King Power Stadium in 2002.[3][4]

Leicester City have won one Premier League, one FA Cup, three League Cups and two FA Community Shields. The club's 2015–16 Premier League title win attracted global attention, and they became one of seven clubs to have won the Premier League since its inception in 1992.[5][6] Prior to this, Leicester's highest league finish was second place in the top flight in 1928–29.

The club have competed in the FA Cup final five times, winning their first title in 2021. They won the League Cup in 1964, 1997 and 2000 respectively, and were finalists in 1964–65 and 1998–99. Leicester have also played in seven European competitions to date, notably reaching the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals in 2016–17 and the UEFA Europa Conference League semi-finals in 2021–22.

History edit

 
The Leicester Fosse team of 1892

Founding and early years (1884–1949) edit

Formed in 1884 by a group of old boys of Wyggeston School as "Leicester Fosse", the club joined The Football Association (FA) in 1890.[7] Before moving to Filbert Street in 1891, the club played at five different grounds, including Victoria Park south-east of the city centre and the Belgrave Road Cycle and Cricket Ground.[8] The club also joined the Midland League in 1891, and were elected to Division Two of the Football League in 1894 after finishing second. Leicester's first-ever Football League game was a 4–3 defeat at Grimsby Town, with a first League win the following week, against Rotherham United at Filbert Street. The same season also saw the team's largest win to date, a 13–0 victory over Notts Olympic in an FA Cup qualifying game.[2] In 1907–08 the club finished as Second Division runners-up, gaining promotion to the First Division, the highest level of English football. However, the club was relegated after a single season which included the team's record defeat, a 12–0 loss against Nottingham Forest.[2][9]

In 1919, when league football resumed after World War I, Leicester Fosse ceased trading due to financial difficulties. The club was reformed as "Leicester City Football Club", particularly appropriate as the borough of Leicester had recently been given city status. Following the name change, the club enjoyed moderate success in the 1920s; under the management of Peter Hodge, who left in May 1926 to be replaced two months later by Willie Orr, and with record goalscorer Arthur Chandler in the side,[10] they won the Division Two title in 1924–25[11] and recorded their second-highest league finish in 1928–29 as runners-up by a single point to The Wednesday.[7] However, the 1930s saw a downturn in fortunes, with the club relegated in 1934–35[12] and, after promotion in 1936–37,[13] another relegation in 1938–39 would see them finish the decade in Division Two.[2][14]

 
Historical league positions of Leicester City in the Football League

Post-World War II (1949–2000) edit

Leicester reached the FA Cup final for the first time in their history in 1949,[2][15] losing 3–1 to Wolverhampton Wanderers. The club, however, was celebrating a week later when a draw on the last day of the season ensured survival in Division Two.[16][17] Leicester won the Division Two championship in 1954,[18] with the help of Arthur Rowley, one of the club's most prolific strikers. Although they were relegated from Division One the next season, under Dave Halliday they returned in 1957,[19] with Rowley scoring a club record 44 goals in one season.[10] Leicester remained in Division One until 1969,[20] their longest period ever in the top flight.

Under the management of Matt Gillies and his assistant Bert Johnson, Leicester reached the FA Cup final on another two occasions, but lost in both 1961 and 1963.[2] As they lost to double winners Tottenham Hotspur in 1961, they were England's representatives in the 1961–62 European Cup Winners' Cup. In the 1962–63 season, the club led the First Division during the winter. Thanks to a sensational run of form on icy and frozen pitches, the team became nicknamed the "Ice Kings" and eventually finished fourth, the club's best post-war finish. Gillies guided Leicester to their first piece of silverware in 1964, when Leicester beat Stoke City 4–3 on aggregate to win the League Cup for the first time.[2] Leicester also reached the League Cup final the following year but lost 3–2 on aggregate to Chelsea. Gillies and Johnson received praise for their version of the "whirl" and the "switch" system, a system that had previously been used by the Austrian and Hungarian national teams.[21] After a bad start to the season, Matt Gillies resigned in November 1968. His successor Frank O'Farrell was unable to prevent relegation, but the club reached the FA Cup final in 1969, losing to Manchester City 1–0.

 
Robbie Savage in action against Barnsley during the 1997–98 season

In 1971, Leicester were promoted back to the First Division, and won the Charity Shield for the first time.[2] Due to double winners Arsenal's commitments in European competition, Second Division winners Leicester were invited to play FA Cup runners-up Liverpool, beating them 1–0[2] thanks to a goal by Steve Whitworth.[22] Jimmy Bloomfield was appointed for the new season, and his team remained in the First Division for his tenure. Leicester reached the FA Cup semi-final in 1973–74.[23]

Frank McLintock, a noted player for seven years for Leicester in a successful period from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s, succeeded Bloomfield in 1977. The club was relegated at the end of the 1977–78 season and McLintock resigned. Jock Wallace resumed the tradition of successful Scottish managers (after Peter Hodge and Matt Gillies) by steering Leicester to the Second Division championship in 1980.[24] Wallace was unable to keep Leicester in the First Division, but they reached the FA Cup semi-final in 1982. Under Wallace, one of City's most famous home-grown players, Gary Lineker, emerged into the first-team squad. Leicester's next manager was Gordon Milne, who achieved promotion in 1983. Lineker helped Leicester maintain their place in the First Division, but was sold to Everton in 1985; two years later Leicester were relegated, having failed to find a suitable replacement to partner Alan Smith, who was sold to Arsenal after Leicester went down.

Milne left in 1986 and was replaced in 1987 by David Pleat, who was sacked in January 1991 with Leicester in danger of relegation to the Third Division. Gordon Lee was put in charge of the club until the end of the season. Leicester won their final game of the season, which guided them clear of relegation to the third tier of the Football League.[2]

Brian Little took over in 1991 and by the end of the 1991–92 season Leicester had reached the playoff final for a place in the new Premier League, but lost to Blackburn Rovers by way of a penalty from former Leicester striker Mike Newell. The club also reached the playoff final the following year, losing 4–3 to Swindon Town, having come back from 3–0 down. In 1993–94, Leicester were promoted from the playoffs, beating Derby County 2–1 in the final.[2] Little quit as Leicester manager the following November to take charge at Aston Villa, and his successor Mark McGhee was unable to save Leicester from finishing second-from-bottom in the 1994–95 season.

McGhee left the club unexpectedly in December 1995, while Leicester were top of the First Division, to take charge of Wolverhampton Wanderers.[25] McGhee was replaced by Martin O'Neill.[2] Under O'Neill, Leicester qualified for the 1996 Football League play-offs and beat Crystal Palace 2–1 in the final through a 120th-minute Steve Claridge goal to gain promotion to the Premier League. Following promotion, Leicester established themselves in the Premier League with four successive top ten finishes. O'Neill ended Leicester's 33-year wait for a major trophy, winning the League Cup twice, in 1997 and 2000, and Leicester were runners-up in 1999. Thus, the club qualified for the UEFA Cup in 1997–98 and 2000–01, the club's first European competition since 1961. In June 2000, O'Neill left Leicester City to take over as manager of Celtic.

Decline in the early 21st century (2000–2008) edit

Martin O'Neill was replaced by former England under-21 coach Peter Taylor. During this time, one of Leicester's European appearances ended in a 3–1 defeat to Red Star Belgrade on 28 September 2000 in the UEFA Cup.[26] Leicester began well under Taylor's management, topping the Premier League for two weeks in the autumn and remaining in contention for a European place for most of the campaign, before a late-season collapse dragged them down to a 13th-place finish.

Taylor was sacked after a poor start to the 2001–02 season, and his successor Dave Bassett lasted just six months before being succeeded by his assistant Micky Adams, the change of management being announced just before relegation was confirmed. Leicester won just five league matches all season.

 
The East Stand, King Power Stadium

Leicester moved into the new 32,314-seat Walkers Stadium at the start of the 2002–03 season, ending 111 years at Filbert Street. Walkers, the Leicester-based crisp manufacturers, acquired the naming rights for a ten-year period.[27] In October 2002, the club went into administration with debts of £30 million. Some of the reasons were the loss of TV money (ITV Digital, itself in administration, had promised money to First Division clubs for TV rights), the large wage bill, lower-than-expected fees for players transferred to other clubs and the £37 million cost of the new stadium.[28] Adams was banned from the transfer market for most of the season, even after the club was rescued with a takeover by a consortium led by Gary Lineker.[2] Adams guided Leicester to the runners-up spot in Division One and automatic promotion back to the Premier League with more than 90 points. However, Leicester lasted only one season in the top flight and were relegated to the newly labelled Championship, previously known as Division One.

When Adams resigned as manager in October 2004, Craig Levein was appointed boss. This would prove to be an unsuccessful period and after 15 months in charge, Levein was sacked, having failed to get The Foxes anywhere near the promotion places. Assistant manager Rob Kelly took over as caretaker manager, and after winning three out of four matches, was appointed to see out the rest of the season. Kelly steered Leicester to safety and in April 2006 was given the manager's job on a permanent basis.[2]

In October 2006, ex-Portsmouth chairman Milan Mandarić was quoted as saying he was interested in buying the club, reportedly at a price of around £6 million, with the current playing squad valued at roughly £4.2 million. The takeover was formally announced on 13 February 2007.[29] On 11 April 2007, Rob Kelly was sacked as manager and Nigel Worthington appointed as caretaker manager until the end of the season. Worthington saved the club from relegation, but was not offered the job on a permanent basis. On 25 May 2007, the club announced former Milton Keynes Dons manager Martin Allen as their new manager with a three-year contract. Allen's relationship with Mandarić became tense and after only four matches, Allen left by mutual consent on 29 August 2007. On 13 September 2007, Mandarić announced Gary Megson as the new manager of the club, citing Megson's "wealth of experience" as a deciding factor in the appointment. However, Megson left on 24 October 2007 after only six weeks in charge, following an approach made for his services by Bolton Wanderers. Mandarić placed Frank Burrows and Gerry Taggart in the shared position as caretaker managers until a professional manager was appointed.

 
Pearson and Mandarić after winning the Football League One title.

On 22 November, Ian Holloway was appointed manager, and he became the first Leicester manager in over 50 years to win his first league match in charge, beating Bristol City 2–0.[30] However, this success did not last, and Leicester were relegated from the Championship at the end of the 2007–08 season. Holloway left by mutual consent after less than a season at the club, being replaced by Nigel Pearson.

Rise back to Premier League and new ownership (2008–2015) edit

The 2008–09 campaign was Leicester's first season outside the top two levels of English football, but they hit this nadir only seven years before becoming the 2015–16 Premier League champions – one of the fastest ever rises to the top of the English football league system.[31] Following relegation to the third tier the previous season, Leicester returned to the Championship at the first attempt in 2008–09, finishing as champions of League One after a 2–0 win at Southend United, with two matches in hand. The 2009–10 season saw Leicester's revival under manager Nigel Pearson continue, as the club finished fifth and reached the Championship play-offs in their first season back in the second tier. Though coming from 2–0 down on aggregate, away to Cardiff City, to briefly lead 3–2, they eventually lost to a penalty shoot-out in the play-off semi-final. At the end of the season, Pearson left Leicester to become the manager of Hull City, claiming he felt the club seemed reluctant to keep him, and that Paulo Sousa had been the club's guest at both play-off games, hinting at a possible replacement. On 7 July 2010, Sousa was confirmed as Pearson's replacement.[32]

In August 2010, following agreement on a three-year shirt sponsorship deal with duty-free retailers the King Power Group, Mandarić sold the club to Thai-led consortium Asian Football Investments (AFI), fronted by King Power Group's Vichai and his son Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha.[33] Mandarić, an investor in AFI,[34] was retained as club chairman.[35] On 1 October 2010, after a poor start that saw Leicester bottom of the Championship with only one win out of the first nine league matches, Paulo Sousa was sacked by the club with immediate effect.[36] Two days later, Sven-Göran Eriksson, who had been approached by the club after the 6–1 loss to then bottom-of-the-table Portsmouth two weeks earlier, was appointed as his replacement, signing a two-year contract with the club.[37][38] On 10 February 2011, Vichai, part of the Thai-based Asia Football Investments consortium, was appointed new chairman of the club after Mandarić left in November to take over Sheffield Wednesday.[39]

Leicester were viewed as one of the favourites for promotion in the 2011–12 season, but on 24 October 2011, following an inconsistent start with the Foxes winning just 5 out of their first 13 matches, Eriksson left the club by mutual consent.[40] Three weeks later, Nigel Pearson returned to the club as Eriksson's successor. Pearson would go on to lead The Foxes to a sixth-place finish in the 2012–13 season, ensuring Leicester were in the Championship play-offs. However, Leicester lost the playoff semi-final 3–2 on aggregate to Watford after Manuel Almunia made a double save from an Anthony Knockaert late penalty and Troy Deeney scored at the other end following a swift counterattack.[41]

In 2014, Leicester's march up the league system hit a breakthrough. Their 2–1 home win over Sheffield Wednesday, combined with losses by Queens Park Rangers and Derby County, allowed Leicester City to clinch promotion to the Premier League after a ten-year absence. Later that month, a win at Bolton Wanderers saw Leicester become champions of the 2013–14 Championship for a joint record 7th time.

Leicester started their first season in the Premier League since 2004 with a good run of results in their first five league matches, starting with a 2–2 draw on the opening day against Everton.[42] The Foxes then claimed their first Premier League win since May 2004, with a 1–0 win at Stoke City.[43] On 21 September 2014, Leicester went on to produce one of the greatest comebacks in Premier League history, beating Manchester United 5–3 at King Power Stadium. They made Premier League history by becoming the first team to beat Manchester United from a two-goal deficit since the league's launch in 1992.[44]

During the 2014–15 season, a dismal run of form saw the team slip to the bottom of the league table with only 19 points from 29 matches. By 3 April 2015, they were seven points adrift from safety. This could have brought a sudden end to Leicester's seven-year rise, but seven wins from their final nine league matches meant The Foxes finished the season in 14th place with 41 points. They finished the season with a 5–1 thrashing of relegated Queens Park Rangers, and Leicester's upturn in results was described as one of the Premier League's greatest-ever escapes from relegation.[45][46] They also became only the third team in Premier League history to survive after being bottom at Christmas (the other two being West Bromwich Albion in 2005 and Sunderland in 2014), and no team with fewer than 20 points from 29 matches had previously stayed up.

Premier League champions and following years (2015–2020) edit

The usual starting line-up of the Premier League winning team[47]

On 30 June 2015, Nigel Pearson was sacked, with the club stating "the working relationship is no longer viable." The sacking was linked to a number of public relations issues involving Pearson throughout the season, with the final straw involving his son James' role in a "racist sex tape" made by three Leicester reserve players in Thailand during a post-season goodwill tour.[48][49][50] Leicester reacted by appointing former Chelsea manager Claudio Ranieri as their new manager for the new 2015–16 Premier League season.[51] Despite an initially sceptical reaction to Ranieri's appointment, the club made an exceptional start to the season.[52] Striker Jamie Vardy scored 13 goals over 11 consecutive matches from August to November, breaking Ruud van Nistelrooy's Premier League record of scoring in 10 consecutive matches.[53] On 19 December, Leicester defeated Everton 3–2 at Goodison Park to top the Premier League on Christmas Day, having been bottom exactly 12 months earlier.[54] A 2–0 victory at Sunderland on 10 April, coupled with Tottenham Hotspur's 3–0 win over Manchester United, ensured Leicester's qualification for the UEFA Champions League for the first time in their history.[55]

Leicester won the Premier League on 2 May 2016 after Tottenham lost a 2–0 lead against Chelsea, drawing 2–2 at the "Battle of Stamford Bridge".[56][57] Bookmakers thought Leicester's victory was so unlikely that Ladbrokes and William Hill offered odds of 5,000–1 for it at the start of the season, which subsequently resulted in the largest payout in British sporting history with total winnings of £25 million.[58][59][60] A number of newspapers described Leicester's title win as the greatest sporting shock ever; multiple bookmakers including Ladbrokes and William Hill had never paid out at such long odds for any sport.[61][62][63] One book was titled "The Unbelievables", a spin-off harking back to Arsenal's undefeated team "The Invincibles".[64] The scale of the surprise title victory attracted global attention for the club and the city of Leicester.[65][6] The Economist declared it would be "pored over for management lessons."[66] Several commentators viewed it as an inspiration to other clubs and fundamentally transforming expectations.[67]

Leicester became known for their counterattacking style of play, "incredible pace in the areas it is most essential" and defensive solidarity.[68] Former boss Nigel Pearson was credited by pundits and fans as having laid the foundations for Leicester's title winning season.[69] Reacting to the title win, then executive chairman of the Premier League Richard Scudamore said:

If this was a once in every 5,000-year event, then we've effectively got another 5,000 years of hope ahead of us.

Leicester, while performing well in the UEFA Champions League, struggled domestically during 2016–17, spending much of the first few months in the bottom half of the Premier League table. In December 2016, Ranieri was awarded coach of the year and Leicester team of the year at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year.[70] However, on 23 February 2017, Ranieri was dismissed due to the club's continuing poor form, resulting in them being only one point above the relegation zone. The sacking was met with significant upset and anger from sections of the media, with Gary Lineker calling the sacking "very sad" and "inexplicable",[71] while Manchester United manager José Mourinho blamed it on "selfish players".[71] Rumours began emerging some days later that players had been meeting with the owners to discuss Ranieri's sacking without Ranieri knowing, which sparked widespread outrage over social media, but these were never proven.[72] Craig Shakespeare took over as caretaker manager, and in his first match in charge, Leicester won 3–1 against 5th placed Liverpool.[73] In his second match as caretaker, Shakespeare led Leicester to another 3–1 victory over Hull City.[74] Following those two results, it was decided on 12 March 2017 that Shakespeare would become manager until the end of the season.[75]

The 2016–17 campaign was also the first season in 15 years that Leicester qualified for European football. Leicester were placed in Group G of the 2016–17 UEFA Champions League, alongside Porto, Copenhagen and Club Brugge. In their inaugural Champions League campaign, they went undefeated in their first five matches to progress to the knockout stages as group winners.[76] The Foxes then faced La Liga club Sevilla in the round of 16 and defeated the Spanish side 2–0 on the night, and 3–2 on aggregate to advance to the quarter-finals.[77] There they faced Atlético Madrid, and drew 1–1 in the second leg, but lost 2–1 on aggregate after losing 1–0 in the first leg. This put an end to Leicester's 2016–17 European campaign, and they finished as Champions League quarter-finalists.[78] Despite the loss, Leicester remained unbeaten at home in the 2016–17 Champions League.

Craig Shakespeare, having impressed during his caretaker spell, was appointed full-time on a three-year contract.[79] However, following a poor start to the season he was sacked in October 2017 after four months officially in charge, with Leicester in 18th place in the table.[80] He was replaced by former Southampton boss Claude Puel on 25 October 2017. By Christmas, Leicester were in 8th place in the Premier League and finished 9th at the end of the season.

On 27 October 2018, the helicopter carrying chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and four others malfunctioned and crashed outside King Power Stadium, shortly after taking off from the pitch. This followed a home match against West Ham United, and all five people on board the helicopter died. Following the crash, the club announced plans for a permanent memorial in the form of a statue. One year later, The Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Memorial Garden officially opened on 27 October 2019, before The Khun Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Statue was unveiled on 4 April 2022, which would have been Srivaddhanaprabha's 64th birthday.[81][82][83]

 
Brendan Rodgers

Leicester suffered a poor run of results in 2019 which included four successive home defeats, and following a 4–1 home defeat to Crystal Palace, manager Claude Puel was sacked on 24 February 2019 with the club in 12th place.[84] Former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers was appointed as his replacement,[85] and the club finished the season again in 9th place.

The 2019–20 season started with the team picking up 38 points from their first 16 matches, which included a record eight-game winning streak from 19 October to 8 December. On 25 October 2019, Leicester recorded a 0–9 away win at Southampton, the joint-largest win in Premier League history and the largest away win in English top-flight history.[86] In the same season, the club reached the semi-final stage of the League Cup but lost out to Aston Villa over two legs.[87] Despite being in the top four for most of the season, Leicester suffered a drop-off in form at the end of the season, winning only two of their nine games following the resumption of league play due to the coronavirus pandemic. Three defeats in their last four matches saw them slide into fifth, the second-highest Premier League finish in their history, securing a place in the UEFA Europa League for the following season.[88]

FA Cup winners and following years (2021–present) edit

On 15 May 2021, Leicester won their first ever FA Cup, having lost all of their previous four finals, in the process securing a second major trophy in five years; Youri Tielemans scored the only goal against Chelsea at Wembley Stadium.[89] They also won the 2021 FA Community Shield, the second in their history.[90] After finishing 5th again in the 2020–21 Premier League, Leicester qualified for the Europa League for the second consecutive year. In their 2021–22 UEFA Europa League campaign, Leicester came third in their group and were transferred to the newly established UEFA Europa Conference League. They went on to reach their first ever European semi-final, losing out to eventual winners A.S. Roma over two legs.[91] In the Premier League, the club finished in 8th place.[92]

The club's finances were heavily impacted by the COVID pandemic, with the parent company King Power International Group being in the travel retail (DF&TR) sector.[93][94] As a consequence, the club were restricted in their spending in the 2022 summer transfer market, amid additional concerns over breaching Financial Fair Play regulations. At the same time, the club were also looking to continue investing in the infrastructure for the longer term.[95][96][97]

Rodgers left the club on 2 April 2023 via mutual consent, with ten games remaining and the team in the relegation zone.[98] Dean Smith was appointed as his replacement until the end of the season.[99] On 28 May, despite a 2–1 home win over West Ham United, Leicester City were relegated as a consequence of Everton's 1–0 home victory over AFC Bournemouth.[100] This ended the club's nine-year stint in the Premier League, making them only the second former Premier League champions to be relegated from the league since it began in 1992–93, following Blackburn Rovers in 1998–99.[101]

On 16 June 2023, Enzo Maresca was appointed as the club's new manager ahead of the 2023–24 EFL Championship season.[102] Leicester went on to make their best ever start to a league season, and the best since the league became known as the Championship in 2004–05.[103]

Club identity edit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Leicester City's first home colours worn from 1884 to 1886.
 
This City shirt, worn in 1948, was their first to bear a club badge.

The club's traditional home colours of royal blue shirts, white shorts and either white or blue socks have been used for the team's kits throughout most of its history. In more recent times, the club have alternated between either white or blue shorts.

An image of a fox was first incorporated into the club crest in 1948. Since 1992, the club's badge has featured a fox's head overlaid onto a Cinquefoil; the Cinquefoil is similar to the one used on the coat of arms of Leicester.[104][105]

 
Leicester City's badge for the 2009–10 season to commemorate 125 years as a football club

The club's stadium move in 2002 prompted some changes to the crest, and the design has since evolved further.[106] For the 2009–10 season, the club's 125th anniversary year, a special edition crest was worn on the home and away kits.[107] For this season's away kit, there was also a return to the first ever colours worn by the club (originally Leicester Fosse), albeit with black shorts as opposed to the original white.[108][106] This kit returned once again for the 2023–24 season, having also previously featured in the 2004–05 season.[109]

In 1941, the club adopted the playing of the Post Horn Galop at home matches.[110] Currently for the first half of games, the tune is usually played live on the pitch, while a modern version of the tune is played over the PA system for the second half.[111] The club's anthem When You're Smiling is also played prior to kick-off.[112] Foxes Never Quit is the club's motto, with these words placed above the tunnel inside the stadium.

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors edit

Source:[113]

Year Kit Manufacturer Primary Shirt Sponsor Sleeve Sponsor
1962–1964 Bukta None None
1976–1979 Admiral
1979–1983 Umbro
1983–1986 Admiral Ind Coope
1986–1987 John Bull
1987–1988 Walkers Crisps
1988–1990 Scoreline
1990–1992 Bukta
1992–2000 Fox Leisure
2000–2001 Le Coq Sportif
2001–2003 LG
2003–2005 Alliance & Leicester
2005–2007 JJB Sports
2007–2009 Jako Topps Tiles
2009–2010 Joma LOROS Hospice Care
2010–2012 Burrda King Power
2012–2016 Puma
2017–2018 Siam Commercial Bank
2018–2020 Adidas Bia Saigon
2020–2021 King Power and Tourism Authority of Thailand
2021–2023 FBS (international brokerage company)
2023– King Power

Since 2018, Leicester City's kit has been manufactured by German sportswear company Adidas.[114] Previous manufacturers have included Bukta (1962–64, 1990–92), Admiral (1976–79, 1983–88), Umbro (1979–83), Scoreline (1988–90), Fox Leisure (1992–2000), Le Coq Sportif (2000–05), JJB (2005–07), Jako (2007–09), Joma (2009–10), Burrda (2010–12),[115] and Puma (2012–18).[116]

The club's current main shirt sponsor is King Power, the company of the club's owners.[117] The first sponsorship logo to appear on a Leicester shirt was that of Ind Coope in 1983.[105] British snack food manufacturer Walkers Crisps are the club's official snack partner.[118] Walkers Crisps have held a long association with the club, sponsoring their shirts from 1987 to 2001 and the stadium from 2002 to 2011.[105][4] Other sponsors have included John Bull (1986–87),[105] LG (2001–03),[105] Alliance & Leicester (2003–07),[105] Topps Tiles (2007–09),[105] Jessops (2009–10),[citation needed] Loros (2009–10), Tourism Authority of Thailand (2020–21) and FBS (2021–23).[119][108] Siam Commercial Bank became the club's first sleeve sponsor, and the deal was valid for the 2017–18 season.[120] Since the 2018–19 season, the sleeve sponsor has been Bia Saigon.[121]

Stadium and training ground edit

 
The "Double Decker" Stand at Filbert Street

In their early years, Leicester played at numerous grounds, but have only played at two since they joined the Football League. When first starting out, they played on a field by Fosse Road,[122] hence the original club name Leicester Fosse. They moved from there to Victoria Park, and subsequently to Belgrave Road. Upon turning professional the club moved to Mill Lane.[122] After eviction from Mill Lane the club played at the County Cricket ground while seeking a new ground. The club secured the use of an area of land by Filbert Street and moved there in 1891.[122]

Some improvements by noted football architect Archibald Leitch occurred in the Edwardian era, and in 1927 a new two-tier stand was built,[122] nicknamed "the Double Decker", which would persist until the ground's closure in 2002. With the exception of the addition of compulsory seating, the ground saw no further development until 1993, when the Main Stand was demolished and replaced by the new Carling Stand. The addition of the new stand, while the rest of the ground had been untouched since the 1920s, led manager Martin O'Neill to joke that he used to "lead new signings out backwards" so they only saw the Carling Stand.[123]

 
King Power Stadium, formerly known as the Walkers Stadium, has been the home of Leicester City since 2002

The club moved away from Filbert Street in 2002, to a new 32,500-capacity all-seater stadium located less than a mile away.[124] The current site was known as the Walkers Stadium until 2011 in a deal with Leicester-based food manufacturers Walkers.[125] The first match hosted at the stadium was a 1–1 friendly draw against Athletic Bilbao, with Bilbao's Tiko being the first scorer at the stadium and Jordan Stewart being the first Leicester player to score.[126] The first competitive match was a 2–0 victory against Watford.[127]

On 19 August 2010, it emerged that the new owners King Power wanted to rename the stadium King Power Stadium, and had plans to increase the capacity to 42,000 should Leicester secure promotion.[128] On 5 July 2011, Leicester City confirmed the Walkers Stadium would now be known as King Power Stadium.[129] In 2020, the club moved into a new state-of-the-art training complex in the Leicestershire village of Seagrave, described as being "one of the world's most advanced training facilities." The club's former training ground Belvoir Drive now serves as the training ground for Leicester City Women.[130]

Rivalries edit

Nottingham Forest, Derby County and Coventry City are considered to be the club's main rivals. The rivalry with Coventry is commonly known as the M69 derby, taking the name from the M69 motorway which connects the two cities.[131] Leicester were widely considered to be Nottingham Forest's main rivals prior to the mid-1970s. However, when Brian Clough was appointed as Forest manager in 1975, much to the dismay of Derby fans, the rivalry between Forest and Derby quickly intensified.

European record edit

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1961–62 European Cup Winners' Cup PR   Glenavon 3–1 4–1 7–2
1R   Atlético Madrid 1–1 0–2 1–3
1997–98 UEFA Cup 1R   Atlético Madrid 0–2 1–2 1–4
2000–01 UEFA Cup 1R   Red Star Belgrade 1–1 1–3 [nb 1] 2–4
2016–17 UEFA Champions League GS   Porto 1–0 0–5 1st
  Club Brugge 2–1 3–0
  Copenhagen 1–0 0–0
R16   Sevilla 2–0 1–2 3–2
QF   Atlético Madrid 1–1 0–1 1–2
2020–21 UEFA Europa League GS   Braga 4–0 3–3 1st
  AEK Athens 2–0 2–1
  Zorya Luhansk 3–0 0–1
R32   Slavia Prague 0–2 0–0 0–2
2021–22 UEFA Europa League GS   Napoli 2–2 2–3 3rd
  Spartak Moscow 1–1 4–3
  Legia Warsaw 3–1 0–1
UEFA Conference League KPO   Randers 4–1 3–1 7–2
R16   Rennes 2–0 1–2 3–2
QF   PSV Eindhoven 0–0 2–1 2–1
SF   Roma 1–1 0–1 1–2
Notes
  • LCFC goals listed first
  • PR: Preliminary round
  • 1R: First round
  • GS: Group stage
  • R32: Round of 32
  • R16: Round of 16
  • QF: Quarter-final
  • SF: Semi-final

Managerial history edit

Leicester City's current manager is Enzo Maresca, the club's 50th permanent manager.[132] Nigel Pearson and Peter Hodge have both had two separate spells in charge of the club. Dave Bassett also had a second spell as caretaker manager after his spell as permanent manager.[133] Up until Peter Hodge was hired after World War I, the club had no official manager. A nominal role of secretary/manager was employed, though the board and the selection committee took control of most team affairs. It was Hodge who instated a system at the club for the manager having complete control over player and staff recruitment, team selection, and tactics. Though Hodge was originally also titled "secretary/manager" he has retrospectively been named as the club's first official "manager."[134]

Records and statistics edit

Graham Cross holds the record for the most Leicester appearances, with the defender playing 600 games between 1960 and 1976, increased from 599 following the club's decision to incorporate the 1971 Charity Shield into official records.[135] However, Adam Black holds the record for the most appearances in the league with 528 between 1920 and 1935.[136]

Striker Arthur Chandler is currently the club's all-time record goal scorer, netting 273 in his 12 years at the club; he also found the net in 8 consecutive matches in the 1924–25 season.[7] The most goals managed in a single season for the club is 44 by Arthur Rowley, in the 1956–57 season.[7] The fastest goal in the club's history was scored by Matty Fryatt, when he netted after just nine seconds against Preston North End in April 2006.[137]

Jamie Vardy broke the Premier League record by scoring in 11 consecutive Premier League games, scoring 13 in the process during the 2015–16 Premier League season.[138] Vardy is also the ninth player to score 20 top-flight goals in a season, following Arthur Chandler, Ernie Hine, Arthur Rowley, Jimmy Walsh, Ken Keyworth, Jackie Sinclair, Frank Worthington and Gary Lineker.[citation needed] Vardy's goal at Sunderland on 10 April 2016 saw him become the first player since Gary Lineker in 1984–85 to score 20 top flight goals for the club, having already become Leicester's highest Premier League scorer in a single season.[139]

The record transfer fee paid by Leicester for a player was in the region of £32-to-40 million for midfielder Youri Tielemans from AS Monaco.[140] The highest transfer fee received for a Leicester player was approximately £80 million from Manchester United for Harry Maguire; at the time of the transfer this was the eleventh-highest-ever fee, the highest-ever move between two English teams, and the highest-ever for a defender.[141][additional citation(s) needed]

The club's record home attendance is 47,298, for a fifth-round FA Cup match against Tottenham Hotspur at Filbert Street in 1928.[142] The current record home attendance at the current stadium is 32,242, for a Premier League match against Sunderland on 8 August 2015.[143] The highest-ever attendance for a non-competitive football match at King Power Stadium stands at 32,188, for a pre-season friendly against Real Madrid on 30 July 2011.[144]

Leicester's highest-ever league finish is first in the Premier League in 2015–16. Their lowest-ever league finish was first in League One in 2008–09.[citation needed] The club currently hold the joint all-time record for second tier titles, sharing a total of seven with Manchester City.[145]

Leicester's longest-ever unbeaten run in the league was between 1 November 2008 and 7 March 2009, in which the team remained unbeaten for 23 games on their way to the League One title.[146] The club's longest run of consecutive victories in league football is currently nine, which the team achieved between 21 December 2013 and 1 February 2014 in the EFL Championship.

In the 2015–16 season, Leicester achieved many new club records in what The Daily Telegraph described as "one of the most astonishing league titles of all-time".[147] They recorded the fewest losses in any of the club's previous Premier League seasons, the fewest away defeats in any top-flight season, and the most consecutive wins in the top flight. Those consecutive victories came against Watford, Newcastle United, Crystal Palace, Southampton and Sunderland. Coincidentally, Leicester kept a record of five straight clean sheets against each of the same five opponents. The King Power Stadium's home crowds in 2015–16 saw their team beaten just once in the Premier League all season.[139]

Leicester made their UEFA Champions League debut in the 2016–17 season, their fourth appearance in European football. The club became the third English team to win on their Champions League debut, after Manchester United in 1994 and Newcastle United in 1997. They also became the first English team to win away on their Champions League debut, and win all three of their opening games in the competition.[148][149] Leicester are currently the first and only team in Champions League history to keep clean sheets in each of their opening four games in the competition.[150] In March 2017, the club became the 50th to reach the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals.

On 25 October 2019, the Leicester team set the record for the highest margin of away victory in English top-flight history, defeating Southampton 9–0 at St Mary's Stadium. In doing so they also tied the record for the highest margin of victory in Premier League history, equalling Manchester United's 9–0 home victory over Ipswich Town in 1995.[151] As a result, Leicester City hold the all-time top tier records for the biggest defeat, biggest away win, and highest-scoring draw.

Leicester made a record-breaking start to the 2023–24 EFL Championship season, collecting 33 points after winning 11 of their first 12 matches.[152] This was the best ever start to a season in the club's history, and the best in the competition's history (since being known as the Championship). During this period, the club also set a new record of six straight away wins, matched the all-time record of nine consecutive league wins home and away, and went four home matches without conceding for the first time since 1973.[153]

League history edit

Since their election to the Football League in 1894, Leicester City have spent all but one season within the top two tiers of English football. During the 2008–09 season, they played in League One, the third tier of English football, after the club's relegation from the Championship in the previous season. However, the club made an instant return to the second tier and were promoted as 2008–09 League One champions.

Source[92]
L1 = Level 1 of the football league system; L2 = Level 2 of the football league system; L3 = Level 3 of the football league system.
  • Seasons spent at Level 1 of the football league system: 55
  • Seasons spent at Level 2 of the football league system: 62
  • Seasons spent at Level 3 of the football league system: 1

(up to and including 2022–23)

Players edit

First-team squad edit

As of 12 September 2023[154]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   WAL Danny Ward
2 DF   ENG James Justin
3 DF   BEL Wout Faes
4 DF   ENG Conor Coady
5 DF   ENG Callum Doyle (on loan from Manchester City)
7 MF   ITA Cesare Casadei (on loan from Chelsea)
8 MF   ENG Harry Winks
9 FW   ENG Jamie Vardy
10 FW   ENG Stephy Mavididi
11 MF   ENG Marc Albrighton
14 FW   NGA Kelechi Iheanacho
15 DF   AUS Harry Souttar
17 MF   ENG Hamza Choudhury
18 FW   GHA Abdul Fatawu (on loan from Sporting)

Unregistered players edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
12 GK   ENG Alex Smithies

Out on loan edit

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF   DEN Victor Kristiansen (at Bologna until the end of the 2023–24 season)[155]
24 MF   FRA Boubakary Soumaré (at Sevilla until the end of the 2023–24 season)[156]
No. Pos. Nation Player
33 DF   ENG Luke Thomas (at Sheffield United until the end of the 2023–24 season)[157]

Under-21s and Academy edit

Former players edit

Club staff edit

As of 9 July 2023[158][159][160][161][162][163][164][165]

Directors & Senior Management
Role Person
Chairman   Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha
Vice Chairman   Apichet Srivaddhanaprabha
Chief Executive   Susan Whelan
Finance Director   Simon Capper
Director of Football   Jon Rudkin
Football Operations Director   Andrew Neville
Operations Director   Anthony Mundy
Strategy Director   Nick Oakley
Communications Director   Anthony Herlihy
HR Director   Liam Dolan-Barr
Commercial Director   Dan Barnett
General Counsel   Matthew Phillips
Management Staff
Role Person
First Team Manager   Enzo Maresca
First Team Assistant Manager   Willy Caballero
First Team Coach   Danny Walker
First Team Goalkeeping Coach   Michele De Bernardin
Head of Fitness & Conditioning   Matt Reeves
First Team Fitness Coach   Marcos Alvarez
First Team Analyst   Javier Molina Caballero
First Team Physiotherapist   Gary Silk
Kit Manager   Paul McAndrew
Head of Senior Player Recruitment   Martyn Glover
Loans Manager   Robert Huth
Academy Director   Jon Rudkin

Player statistics edit

Captains edit

Dates Name
1987–1992   Ally Mauchlen
1992–1993   Steve Walsh
1993–1994   Gary Mills
1995–1996   Garry Parker
1996–1999   Steve Walsh
1999–2005   Matt Elliott
2005–2006   Danny Tiatto
2006–2007   Paddy McCarthy
2007–2008   Stephen Clemence
2008–2011   Matt Oakley
2011–2012   Matt Mills
2012–2021   Wes Morgan
2021–2022   Kasper Schmeichel
2022–2023   Jonny Evans
2023–present Rotation[166]

Player of the Year edit

Leicester City's Player of the Year award is voted for by the club's supporters at the end of every season.[134]

English Hall of Fame members edit

The following have played for Leicester and have been inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame:

Football League 100 Legends edit

The Football League 100 Legends is a list of "100 legendary football players" produced by The Football League in 1998, to celebrate the 100th season of League football.[173] It also included Premier League players, and the following former Leicester City players were included:[173]

Players with over 300 appearances for Leicester edit

Includes competitive appearances only. Current players in bold.[134][136]

Players with 50 or more goals for Leicester edit

Includes competitive appearances only. Current players in bold.[134][174][175]

Honours edit

 
Leicester City players lifting the 2015–16 Premier League trophy

Leicester City are currently one of five clubs, including Manchester United, Manchester City, Chelsea and Liverpool, to have won the Premier League, FA Cup and League Cup in the 21st century. Since the start of the millennium, they are the 6th most successful club in English football and one of 14 clubs to have won all four major domestic competitions.[176]

League

Cup

Notes edit

  1. ^ 'Away' leg held at the Gerhard Hanappi Stadium, Vienna, Austria

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  138. ^
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This article is about the men s football club For the women s team see Leicester City W F C Leicester City redirects here For the city itself see Leicester Leicester City Football Club is an English professional football club based in Leicester in the East Midlands of England They compete in the EFL Championship the second level of the English football league system Leicester CityFull nameLeicester City Football ClubNickname s The FoxesFounded1884 139 years ago 1884 as Leicester Fosse F C StadiumKing Power StadiumCapacity32 262 1 OwnerKing PowerChairmanAiyawatt SrivaddhanaprabhaManagerEnzo MarescaLeagueEFL Championship2022 23Premier League 18th of 20 relegated WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonThe club was founded in 1884 as Leicester Fosse F C and they adopted the name Leicester City in 1919 2 They moved to Filbert Street in 1891 were elected to the Football League in 1894 and moved to the nearby King Power Stadium in 2002 3 4 Leicester City have won one Premier League one FA Cup three League Cups and two FA Community Shields The club s 2015 16 Premier League title win attracted global attention and they became one of seven clubs to have won the Premier League since its inception in 1992 5 6 Prior to this Leicester s highest league finish was second place in the top flight in 1928 29 The club have competed in the FA Cup final five times winning their first title in 2021 They won the League Cup in 1964 1997 and 2000 respectively and were finalists in 1964 65 and 1998 99 Leicester have also played in seven European competitions to date notably reaching the UEFA Champions League quarter finals in 2016 17 and the UEFA Europa Conference League semi finals in 2021 22 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and early years 1884 1949 1 2 Post World War II 1949 2000 1 3 Decline in the early 21st century 2000 2008 1 4 Rise back to Premier League and new ownership 2008 2015 1 5 Premier League champions and following years 2015 2020 1 6 FA Cup winners and following years 2021 present 2 Club identity 2 1 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors 3 Stadium and training ground 4 Rivalries 5 European record 6 Managerial history 7 Records and statistics 8 League history 9 Players 9 1 First team squad 9 2 Unregistered players 9 3 Out on loan 9 4 Under 21s and Academy 9 5 Former players 10 Club staff 11 Player statistics 11 1 Captains 11 2 Player of the Year 11 3 English Hall of Fame members 11 4 Football League 100 Legends 11 5 Players with over 300 appearances for Leicester 11 6 Players with 50 or more goals for Leicester 12 Honours 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory editMain article History of Leicester City F C nbsp The Leicester Fosse team of 1892Founding and early years 1884 1949 edit Formed in 1884 by a group of old boys of Wyggeston School as Leicester Fosse the club joined The Football Association FA in 1890 7 Before moving to Filbert Street in 1891 the club played at five different grounds including Victoria Park south east of the city centre and the Belgrave Road Cycle and Cricket Ground 8 The club also joined the Midland League in 1891 and were elected to Division Two of the Football League in 1894 after finishing second Leicester s first ever Football League game was a 4 3 defeat at Grimsby Town with a first League win the following week against Rotherham United at Filbert Street The same season also saw the team s largest win to date a 13 0 victory over Notts Olympic in an FA Cup qualifying game 2 In 1907 08 the club finished as Second Division runners up gaining promotion to the First Division the highest level of English football However the club was relegated after a single season which included the team s record defeat a 12 0 loss against Nottingham Forest 2 9 In 1919 when league football resumed after World War I Leicester Fosse ceased trading due to financial difficulties The club was reformed as Leicester City Football Club particularly appropriate as the borough of Leicester had recently been given city status Following the name change the club enjoyed moderate success in the 1920s under the management of Peter Hodge who left in May 1926 to be replaced two months later by Willie Orr and with record goalscorer Arthur Chandler in the side 10 they won the Division Two title in 1924 25 11 and recorded their second highest league finish in 1928 29 as runners up by a single point to The Wednesday 7 However the 1930s saw a downturn in fortunes with the club relegated in 1934 35 12 and after promotion in 1936 37 13 another relegation in 1938 39 would see them finish the decade in Division Two 2 14 nbsp Historical league positions of Leicester City in the Football LeaguePost World War II 1949 2000 edit Leicester reached the FA Cup final for the first time in their history in 1949 2 15 losing 3 1 to Wolverhampton Wanderers The club however was celebrating a week later when a draw on the last day of the season ensured survival in Division Two 16 17 Leicester won the Division Two championship in 1954 18 with the help of Arthur Rowley one of the club s most prolific strikers Although they were relegated from Division One the next season under Dave Halliday they returned in 1957 19 with Rowley scoring a club record 44 goals in one season 10 Leicester remained in Division One until 1969 20 their longest period ever in the top flight Under the management of Matt Gillies and his assistant Bert Johnson Leicester reached the FA Cup final on another two occasions but lost in both 1961 and 1963 2 As they lost to double winners Tottenham Hotspur in 1961 they were England s representatives in the 1961 62 European Cup Winners Cup In the 1962 63 season the club led the First Division during the winter Thanks to a sensational run of form on icy and frozen pitches the team became nicknamed the Ice Kings and eventually finished fourth the club s best post war finish Gillies guided Leicester to their first piece of silverware in 1964 when Leicester beat Stoke City 4 3 on aggregate to win the League Cup for the first time 2 Leicester also reached the League Cup final the following year but lost 3 2 on aggregate to Chelsea Gillies and Johnson received praise for their version of the whirl and the switch system a system that had previously been used by the Austrian and Hungarian national teams 21 After a bad start to the season Matt Gillies resigned in November 1968 His successor Frank O Farrell was unable to prevent relegation but the club reached the FA Cup final in 1969 losing to Manchester City 1 0 nbsp Robbie Savage in action against Barnsley during the 1997 98 seasonIn 1971 Leicester were promoted back to the First Division and won the Charity Shield for the first time 2 Due to double winners Arsenal s commitments in European competition Second Division winners Leicester were invited to play FA Cup runners up Liverpool beating them 1 0 2 thanks to a goal by Steve Whitworth 22 Jimmy Bloomfield was appointed for the new season and his team remained in the First Division for his tenure Leicester reached the FA Cup semi final in 1973 74 23 Frank McLintock a noted player for seven years for Leicester in a successful period from the late 1950s to the mid 1960s succeeded Bloomfield in 1977 The club was relegated at the end of the 1977 78 season and McLintock resigned Jock Wallace resumed the tradition of successful Scottish managers after Peter Hodge and Matt Gillies by steering Leicester to the Second Division championship in 1980 24 Wallace was unable to keep Leicester in the First Division but they reached the FA Cup semi final in 1982 Under Wallace one of City s most famous home grown players Gary Lineker emerged into the first team squad Leicester s next manager was Gordon Milne who achieved promotion in 1983 Lineker helped Leicester maintain their place in the First Division but was sold to Everton in 1985 two years later Leicester were relegated having failed to find a suitable replacement to partner Alan Smith who was sold to Arsenal after Leicester went down Milne left in 1986 and was replaced in 1987 by David Pleat who was sacked in January 1991 with Leicester in danger of relegation to the Third Division Gordon Lee was put in charge of the club until the end of the season Leicester won their final game of the season which guided them clear of relegation to the third tier of the Football League 2 Brian Little took over in 1991 and by the end of the 1991 92 season Leicester had reached the playoff final for a place in the new Premier League but lost to Blackburn Rovers by way of a penalty from former Leicester striker Mike Newell The club also reached the playoff final the following year losing 4 3 to Swindon Town having come back from 3 0 down In 1993 94 Leicester were promoted from the playoffs beating Derby County 2 1 in the final 2 Little quit as Leicester manager the following November to take charge at Aston Villa and his successor Mark McGhee was unable to save Leicester from finishing second from bottom in the 1994 95 season McGhee left the club unexpectedly in December 1995 while Leicester were top of the First Division to take charge of Wolverhampton Wanderers 25 McGhee was replaced by Martin O Neill 2 Under O Neill Leicester qualified for the 1996 Football League play offs and beat Crystal Palace 2 1 in the final through a 120th minute Steve Claridge goal to gain promotion to the Premier League Following promotion Leicester established themselves in the Premier League with four successive top ten finishes O Neill ended Leicester s 33 year wait for a major trophy winning the League Cup twice in 1997 and 2000 and Leicester were runners up in 1999 Thus the club qualified for the UEFA Cup in 1997 98 and 2000 01 the club s first European competition since 1961 In June 2000 O Neill left Leicester City to take over as manager of Celtic Decline in the early 21st century 2000 2008 edit Martin O Neill was replaced by former England under 21 coach Peter Taylor During this time one of Leicester s European appearances ended in a 3 1 defeat to Red Star Belgrade on 28 September 2000 in the UEFA Cup 26 Leicester began well under Taylor s management topping the Premier League for two weeks in the autumn and remaining in contention for a European place for most of the campaign before a late season collapse dragged them down to a 13th place finish Taylor was sacked after a poor start to the 2001 02 season and his successor Dave Bassett lasted just six months before being succeeded by his assistant Micky Adams the change of management being announced just before relegation was confirmed Leicester won just five league matches all season nbsp The East Stand King Power StadiumLeicester moved into the new 32 314 seat Walkers Stadium at the start of the 2002 03 season ending 111 years at Filbert Street Walkers the Leicester based crisp manufacturers acquired the naming rights for a ten year period 27 In October 2002 the club went into administration with debts of 30 million Some of the reasons were the loss of TV money ITV Digital itself in administration had promised money to First Division clubs for TV rights the large wage bill lower than expected fees for players transferred to other clubs and the 37 million cost of the new stadium 28 Adams was banned from the transfer market for most of the season even after the club was rescued with a takeover by a consortium led by Gary Lineker 2 Adams guided Leicester to the runners up spot in Division One and automatic promotion back to the Premier League with more than 90 points However Leicester lasted only one season in the top flight and were relegated to the newly labelled Championship previously known as Division One When Adams resigned as manager in October 2004 Craig Levein was appointed boss This would prove to be an unsuccessful period and after 15 months in charge Levein was sacked having failed to get The Foxes anywhere near the promotion places Assistant manager Rob Kelly took over as caretaker manager and after winning three out of four matches was appointed to see out the rest of the season Kelly steered Leicester to safety and in April 2006 was given the manager s job on a permanent basis 2 In October 2006 ex Portsmouth chairman Milan Mandaric was quoted as saying he was interested in buying the club reportedly at a price of around 6 million with the current playing squad valued at roughly 4 2 million The takeover was formally announced on 13 February 2007 29 On 11 April 2007 Rob Kelly was sacked as manager and Nigel Worthington appointed as caretaker manager until the end of the season Worthington saved the club from relegation but was not offered the job on a permanent basis On 25 May 2007 the club announced former Milton Keynes Dons manager Martin Allen as their new manager with a three year contract Allen s relationship with Mandaric became tense and after only four matches Allen left by mutual consent on 29 August 2007 On 13 September 2007 Mandaric announced Gary Megson as the new manager of the club citing Megson s wealth of experience as a deciding factor in the appointment However Megson left on 24 October 2007 after only six weeks in charge following an approach made for his services by Bolton Wanderers Mandaric placed Frank Burrows and Gerry Taggart in the shared position as caretaker managers until a professional manager was appointed nbsp Pearson and Mandaric after winning the Football League One title On 22 November Ian Holloway was appointed manager and he became the first Leicester manager in over 50 years to win his first league match in charge beating Bristol City 2 0 30 However this success did not last and Leicester were relegated from the Championship at the end of the 2007 08 season Holloway left by mutual consent after less than a season at the club being replaced by Nigel Pearson Rise back to Premier League and new ownership 2008 2015 edit The 2008 09 campaign was Leicester s first season outside the top two levels of English football but they hit this nadir only seven years before becoming the 2015 16 Premier League champions one of the fastest ever rises to the top of the English football league system 31 Following relegation to the third tier the previous season Leicester returned to the Championship at the first attempt in 2008 09 finishing as champions of League One after a 2 0 win at Southend United with two matches in hand The 2009 10 season saw Leicester s revival under manager Nigel Pearson continue as the club finished fifth and reached the Championship play offs in their first season back in the second tier Though coming from 2 0 down on aggregate away to Cardiff City to briefly lead 3 2 they eventually lost to a penalty shoot out in the play off semi final At the end of the season Pearson left Leicester to become the manager of Hull City claiming he felt the club seemed reluctant to keep him and that Paulo Sousa had been the club s guest at both play off games hinting at a possible replacement On 7 July 2010 Sousa was confirmed as Pearson s replacement 32 In August 2010 following agreement on a three year shirt sponsorship deal with duty free retailers the King Power Group Mandaric sold the club to Thai led consortium Asian Football Investments AFI fronted by King Power Group s Vichai and his son Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha 33 Mandaric an investor in AFI 34 was retained as club chairman 35 On 1 October 2010 after a poor start that saw Leicester bottom of the Championship with only one win out of the first nine league matches Paulo Sousa was sacked by the club with immediate effect 36 Two days later Sven Goran Eriksson who had been approached by the club after the 6 1 loss to then bottom of the table Portsmouth two weeks earlier was appointed as his replacement signing a two year contract with the club 37 38 On 10 February 2011 Vichai part of the Thai based Asia Football Investments consortium was appointed new chairman of the club after Mandaric left in November to take over Sheffield Wednesday 39 Leicester were viewed as one of the favourites for promotion in the 2011 12 season but on 24 October 2011 following an inconsistent start with the Foxes winning just 5 out of their first 13 matches Eriksson left the club by mutual consent 40 Three weeks later Nigel Pearson returned to the club as Eriksson s successor Pearson would go on to lead The Foxes to a sixth place finish in the 2012 13 season ensuring Leicester were in the Championship play offs However Leicester lost the playoff semi final 3 2 on aggregate to Watford after Manuel Almunia made a double save from an Anthony Knockaert late penalty and Troy Deeney scored at the other end following a swift counterattack 41 In 2014 Leicester s march up the league system hit a breakthrough Their 2 1 home win over Sheffield Wednesday combined with losses by Queens Park Rangers and Derby County allowed Leicester City to clinch promotion to the Premier League after a ten year absence Later that month a win at Bolton Wanderers saw Leicester become champions of the 2013 14 Championship for a joint record 7th time Leicester started their first season in the Premier League since 2004 with a good run of results in their first five league matches starting with a 2 2 draw on the opening day against Everton 42 The Foxes then claimed their first Premier League win since May 2004 with a 1 0 win at Stoke City 43 On 21 September 2014 Leicester went on to produce one of the greatest comebacks in Premier League history beating Manchester United 5 3 at King Power Stadium They made Premier League history by becoming the first team to beat Manchester United from a two goal deficit since the league s launch in 1992 44 During the 2014 15 season a dismal run of form saw the team slip to the bottom of the league table with only 19 points from 29 matches By 3 April 2015 they were seven points adrift from safety This could have brought a sudden end to Leicester s seven year rise but seven wins from their final nine league matches meant The Foxes finished the season in 14th place with 41 points They finished the season with a 5 1 thrashing of relegated Queens Park Rangers and Leicester s upturn in results was described as one of the Premier League s greatest ever escapes from relegation 45 46 They also became only the third team in Premier League history to survive after being bottom at Christmas the other two being West Bromwich Albion in 2005 and Sunderland in 2014 and no team with fewer than 20 points from 29 matches had previously stayed up Premier League champions and following years 2015 2020 edit Main article 2015 16 Leicester City F C season nbsp nbsp Schmeichel nbsp Morgan c nbsp Huth nbsp Simpson nbsp Fuchs nbsp Drinkwater nbsp Kante nbsp Mahrez nbsp Albrighton nbsp Okazaki nbsp VardyThe usual starting line up of the Premier League winning team 47 On 30 June 2015 Nigel Pearson was sacked with the club stating the working relationship is no longer viable The sacking was linked to a number of public relations issues involving Pearson throughout the season with the final straw involving his son James role in a racist sex tape made by three Leicester reserve players in Thailand during a post season goodwill tour 48 49 50 Leicester reacted by appointing former Chelsea manager Claudio Ranieri as their new manager for the new 2015 16 Premier League season 51 Despite an initially sceptical reaction to Ranieri s appointment the club made an exceptional start to the season 52 Striker Jamie Vardy scored 13 goals over 11 consecutive matches from August to November breaking Ruud van Nistelrooy s Premier League record of scoring in 10 consecutive matches 53 On 19 December Leicester defeated Everton 3 2 at Goodison Park to top the Premier League on Christmas Day having been bottom exactly 12 months earlier 54 A 2 0 victory at Sunderland on 10 April coupled with Tottenham Hotspur s 3 0 win over Manchester United ensured Leicester s qualification for the UEFA Champions League for the first time in their history 55 Leicester won the Premier League on 2 May 2016 after Tottenham lost a 2 0 lead against Chelsea drawing 2 2 at the Battle of Stamford Bridge 56 57 Bookmakers thought Leicester s victory was so unlikely that Ladbrokes and William Hill offered odds of 5 000 1 for it at the start of the season which subsequently resulted in the largest payout in British sporting history with total winnings of 25 million 58 59 60 A number of newspapers described Leicester s title win as the greatest sporting shock ever multiple bookmakers including Ladbrokes and William Hill had never paid out at such long odds for any sport 61 62 63 One book was titled The Unbelievables a spin off harking back to Arsenal s undefeated team The Invincibles 64 The scale of the surprise title victory attracted global attention for the club and the city of Leicester 65 6 The Economist declared it would be pored over for management lessons 66 Several commentators viewed it as an inspiration to other clubs and fundamentally transforming expectations 67 Leicester became known for their counterattacking style of play incredible pace in the areas it is most essential and defensive solidarity 68 Former boss Nigel Pearson was credited by pundits and fans as having laid the foundations for Leicester s title winning season 69 Reacting to the title win then executive chairman of the Premier League Richard Scudamore said If this was a once in every 5 000 year event then we ve effectively got another 5 000 years of hope ahead of us Leicester while performing well in the UEFA Champions League struggled domestically during 2016 17 spending much of the first few months in the bottom half of the Premier League table In December 2016 Ranieri was awarded coach of the year and Leicester team of the year at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year 70 However on 23 February 2017 Ranieri was dismissed due to the club s continuing poor form resulting in them being only one point above the relegation zone The sacking was met with significant upset and anger from sections of the media with Gary Lineker calling the sacking very sad and inexplicable 71 while Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho blamed it on selfish players 71 Rumours began emerging some days later that players had been meeting with the owners to discuss Ranieri s sacking without Ranieri knowing which sparked widespread outrage over social media but these were never proven 72 Craig Shakespeare took over as caretaker manager and in his first match in charge Leicester won 3 1 against 5th placed Liverpool 73 In his second match as caretaker Shakespeare led Leicester to another 3 1 victory over Hull City 74 Following those two results it was decided on 12 March 2017 that Shakespeare would become manager until the end of the season 75 The 2016 17 campaign was also the first season in 15 years that Leicester qualified for European football Leicester were placed in Group G of the 2016 17 UEFA Champions League alongside Porto Copenhagen and Club Brugge In their inaugural Champions League campaign they went undefeated in their first five matches to progress to the knockout stages as group winners 76 The Foxes then faced La Liga club Sevilla in the round of 16 and defeated the Spanish side 2 0 on the night and 3 2 on aggregate to advance to the quarter finals 77 There they faced Atletico Madrid and drew 1 1 in the second leg but lost 2 1 on aggregate after losing 1 0 in the first leg This put an end to Leicester s 2016 17 European campaign and they finished as Champions League quarter finalists 78 Despite the loss Leicester remained unbeaten at home in the 2016 17 Champions League Craig Shakespeare having impressed during his caretaker spell was appointed full time on a three year contract 79 However following a poor start to the season he was sacked in October 2017 after four months officially in charge with Leicester in 18th place in the table 80 He was replaced by former Southampton boss Claude Puel on 25 October 2017 By Christmas Leicester were in 8th place in the Premier League and finished 9th at the end of the season On 27 October 2018 the helicopter carrying chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and four others malfunctioned and crashed outside King Power Stadium shortly after taking off from the pitch This followed a home match against West Ham United and all five people on board the helicopter died Following the crash the club announced plans for a permanent memorial in the form of a statue One year later The Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Memorial Garden officially opened on 27 October 2019 before The Khun Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Statue was unveiled on 4 April 2022 which would have been Srivaddhanaprabha s 64th birthday 81 82 83 nbsp Brendan RodgersLeicester suffered a poor run of results in 2019 which included four successive home defeats and following a 4 1 home defeat to Crystal Palace manager Claude Puel was sacked on 24 February 2019 with the club in 12th place 84 Former Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers was appointed as his replacement 85 and the club finished the season again in 9th place The 2019 20 season started with the team picking up 38 points from their first 16 matches which included a record eight game winning streak from 19 October to 8 December On 25 October 2019 Leicester recorded a 0 9 away win at Southampton the joint largest win in Premier League history and the largest away win in English top flight history 86 In the same season the club reached the semi final stage of the League Cup but lost out to Aston Villa over two legs 87 Despite being in the top four for most of the season Leicester suffered a drop off in form at the end of the season winning only two of their nine games following the resumption of league play due to the coronavirus pandemic Three defeats in their last four matches saw them slide into fifth the second highest Premier League finish in their history securing a place in the UEFA Europa League for the following season 88 FA Cup winners and following years 2021 present edit On 15 May 2021 Leicester won their first ever FA Cup having lost all of their previous four finals in the process securing a second major trophy in five years Youri Tielemans scored the only goal against Chelsea at Wembley Stadium 89 They also won the 2021 FA Community Shield the second in their history 90 After finishing 5th again in the 2020 21 Premier League Leicester qualified for the Europa League for the second consecutive year In their 2021 22 UEFA Europa League campaign Leicester came third in their group and were transferred to the newly established UEFA Europa Conference League They went on to reach their first ever European semi final losing out to eventual winners A S Roma over two legs 91 In the Premier League the club finished in 8th place 92 The club s finances were heavily impacted by the COVID pandemic with the parent company King Power International Group being in the travel retail DF amp TR sector 93 94 As a consequence the club were restricted in their spending in the 2022 summer transfer market amid additional concerns over breaching Financial Fair Play regulations At the same time the club were also looking to continue investing in the infrastructure for the longer term 95 96 97 Rodgers left the club on 2 April 2023 via mutual consent with ten games remaining and the team in the relegation zone 98 Dean Smith was appointed as his replacement until the end of the season 99 On 28 May despite a 2 1 home win over West Ham United Leicester City were relegated as a consequence of Everton s 1 0 home victory over AFC Bournemouth 100 This ended the club s nine year stint in the Premier League making them only the second former Premier League champions to be relegated from the league since it began in 1992 93 following Blackburn Rovers in 1998 99 101 On 16 June 2023 Enzo Maresca was appointed as the club s new manager ahead of the 2023 24 EFL Championship season 102 Leicester went on to make their best ever start to a league season and the best since the league became known as the Championship in 2004 05 103 Club identity edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leicester City F C kits nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Leicester City s first home colours worn from 1884 to 1886 nbsp This City shirt worn in 1948 was their first to bear a club badge The club s traditional home colours of royal blue shirts white shorts and either white or blue socks have been used for the team s kits throughout most of its history In more recent times the club have alternated between either white or blue shorts An image of a fox was first incorporated into the club crest in 1948 Since 1992 the club s badge has featured a fox s head overlaid onto a Cinquefoil the Cinquefoil is similar to the one used on the coat of arms of Leicester 104 105 nbsp Leicester City s badge for the 2009 10 season to commemorate 125 years as a football clubThe club s stadium move in 2002 prompted some changes to the crest and the design has since evolved further 106 For the 2009 10 season the club s 125th anniversary year a special edition crest was worn on the home and away kits 107 For this season s away kit there was also a return to the first ever colours worn by the club originally Leicester Fosse albeit with black shorts as opposed to the original white 108 106 This kit returned once again for the 2023 24 season having also previously featured in the 2004 05 season 109 In 1941 the club adopted the playing of the Post Horn Galop at home matches 110 Currently for the first half of games the tune is usually played live on the pitch while a modern version of the tune is played over the PA system for the second half 111 The club s anthem When You re Smiling is also played prior to kick off 112 Foxes Never Quit is the club s motto with these words placed above the tunnel inside the stadium Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors edit Source 113 Year Kit Manufacturer Primary Shirt Sponsor Sleeve Sponsor1962 1964 Bukta None None1976 1979 Admiral1979 1983 Umbro1983 1986 Admiral Ind Coope1986 1987 John Bull1987 1988 Walkers Crisps1988 1990 Scoreline1990 1992 Bukta1992 2000 Fox Leisure2000 2001 Le Coq Sportif2001 2003 LG2003 2005 Alliance amp Leicester2005 2007 JJB Sports2007 2009 Jako Topps Tiles2009 2010 Joma LOROS Hospice Care2010 2012 Burrda King Power2012 2016 Puma2017 2018 Siam Commercial Bank2018 2020 Adidas Bia Saigon2020 2021 King Power and Tourism Authority of Thailand2021 2023 FBS international brokerage company 2023 King PowerSince 2018 Leicester City s kit has been manufactured by German sportswear company Adidas 114 Previous manufacturers have included Bukta 1962 64 1990 92 Admiral 1976 79 1983 88 Umbro 1979 83 Scoreline 1988 90 Fox Leisure 1992 2000 Le Coq Sportif 2000 05 JJB 2005 07 Jako 2007 09 Joma 2009 10 Burrda 2010 12 115 and Puma 2012 18 116 The club s current main shirt sponsor is King Power the company of the club s owners 117 The first sponsorship logo to appear on a Leicester shirt was that of Ind Coope in 1983 105 British snack food manufacturer Walkers Crisps are the club s official snack partner 118 Walkers Crisps have held a long association with the club sponsoring their shirts from 1987 to 2001 and the stadium from 2002 to 2011 105 4 Other sponsors have included John Bull 1986 87 105 LG 2001 03 105 Alliance amp Leicester 2003 07 105 Topps Tiles 2007 09 105 Jessops 2009 10 citation needed Loros 2009 10 Tourism Authority of Thailand 2020 21 and FBS 2021 23 119 108 Siam Commercial Bank became the club s first sleeve sponsor and the deal was valid for the 2017 18 season 120 Since the 2018 19 season the sleeve sponsor has been Bia Saigon 121 Stadium and training ground editSee also King Power Stadium and Filbert Street nbsp The Double Decker Stand at Filbert StreetIn their early years Leicester played at numerous grounds but have only played at two since they joined the Football League When first starting out they played on a field by Fosse Road 122 hence the original club name Leicester Fosse They moved from there to Victoria Park and subsequently to Belgrave Road Upon turning professional the club moved to Mill Lane 122 After eviction from Mill Lane the club played at the County Cricket ground while seeking a new ground The club secured the use of an area of land by Filbert Street and moved there in 1891 122 Some improvements by noted football architect Archibald Leitch occurred in the Edwardian era and in 1927 a new two tier stand was built 122 nicknamed the Double Decker which would persist until the ground s closure in 2002 With the exception of the addition of compulsory seating the ground saw no further development until 1993 when the Main Stand was demolished and replaced by the new Carling Stand The addition of the new stand while the rest of the ground had been untouched since the 1920s led manager Martin O Neill to joke that he used to lead new signings out backwards so they only saw the Carling Stand 123 nbsp King Power Stadium formerly known as the Walkers Stadium has been the home of Leicester City since 2002The club moved away from Filbert Street in 2002 to a new 32 500 capacity all seater stadium located less than a mile away 124 The current site was known as the Walkers Stadium until 2011 in a deal with Leicester based food manufacturers Walkers 125 The first match hosted at the stadium was a 1 1 friendly draw against Athletic Bilbao with Bilbao s Tiko being the first scorer at the stadium and Jordan Stewart being the first Leicester player to score 126 The first competitive match was a 2 0 victory against Watford 127 On 19 August 2010 it emerged that the new owners King Power wanted to rename the stadium King Power Stadium and had plans to increase the capacity to 42 000 should Leicester secure promotion 128 On 5 July 2011 Leicester City confirmed the Walkers Stadium would now be known as King Power Stadium 129 In 2020 the club moved into a new state of the art training complex in the Leicestershire village of Seagrave described as being one of the world s most advanced training facilities The club s former training ground Belvoir Drive now serves as the training ground for Leicester City Women 130 Rivalries editMain articles Leicester City F C Nottingham Forest F C rivalry Derby County F C Leicester City F C rivalry and M69 derby Nottingham Forest Derby County and Coventry City are considered to be the club s main rivals The rivalry with Coventry is commonly known as the M69 derby taking the name from the M69 motorway which connects the two cities 131 Leicester were widely considered to be Nottingham Forest s main rivals prior to the mid 1970s However when Brian Clough was appointed as Forest manager in 1975 much to the dismay of Derby fans the rivalry between Forest and Derby quickly intensified European record editMain article Leicester City F C in European football Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate1961 62 European Cup Winners Cup PR nbsp Glenavon 3 1 4 1 7 21R nbsp Atletico Madrid 1 1 0 2 1 31997 98 UEFA Cup 1R nbsp Atletico Madrid 0 2 1 2 1 42000 01 UEFA Cup 1R nbsp Red Star Belgrade 1 1 1 3 nb 1 2 42016 17 UEFA Champions League GS nbsp Porto 1 0 0 5 1st nbsp Club Brugge 2 1 3 0 nbsp Copenhagen 1 0 0 0R16 nbsp Sevilla 2 0 1 2 3 2QF nbsp Atletico Madrid 1 1 0 1 1 22020 21 UEFA Europa League GS nbsp Braga 4 0 3 3 1st nbsp AEK Athens 2 0 2 1 nbsp Zorya Luhansk 3 0 0 1R32 nbsp Slavia Prague 0 2 0 0 0 22021 22 UEFA Europa League GS nbsp Napoli 2 2 2 3 3rd nbsp Spartak Moscow 1 1 4 3 nbsp Legia Warsaw 3 1 0 1UEFA Conference League KPO nbsp Randers 4 1 3 1 7 2R16 nbsp Rennes 2 0 1 2 3 2QF nbsp PSV Eindhoven 0 0 2 1 2 1SF nbsp Roma 1 1 0 1 1 2NotesLCFC goals listed first PR Preliminary round 1R First round GS Group stage R32 Round of 32 R16 Round of 16 QF Quarter final SF Semi finalManagerial history editMain article List of Leicester City F C managers Leicester City s current manager is Enzo Maresca the club s 50th permanent manager 132 Nigel Pearson and Peter Hodge have both had two separate spells in charge of the club Dave Bassett also had a second spell as caretaker manager after his spell as permanent manager 133 Up until Peter Hodge was hired after World War I the club had no official manager A nominal role of secretary manager was employed though the board and the selection committee took control of most team affairs It was Hodge who instated a system at the club for the manager having complete control over player and staff recruitment team selection and tactics Though Hodge was originally also titled secretary manager he has retrospectively been named as the club s first official manager 134 Records and statistics editMain article List of Leicester City F C records and statistics Graham Cross holds the record for the most Leicester appearances with the defender playing 600 games between 1960 and 1976 increased from 599 following the club s decision to incorporate the 1971 Charity Shield into official records 135 However Adam Black holds the record for the most appearances in the league with 528 between 1920 and 1935 136 Striker Arthur Chandler is currently the club s all time record goal scorer netting 273 in his 12 years at the club he also found the net in 8 consecutive matches in the 1924 25 season 7 The most goals managed in a single season for the club is 44 by Arthur Rowley in the 1956 57 season 7 The fastest goal in the club s history was scored by Matty Fryatt when he netted after just nine seconds against Preston North End in April 2006 137 Jamie Vardy broke the Premier League record by scoring in 11 consecutive Premier League games scoring 13 in the process during the 2015 16 Premier League season 138 Vardy is also the ninth player to score 20 top flight goals in a season following Arthur Chandler Ernie Hine Arthur Rowley Jimmy Walsh Ken Keyworth Jackie Sinclair Frank Worthington and Gary Lineker citation needed Vardy s goal at Sunderland on 10 April 2016 saw him become the first player since Gary Lineker in 1984 85 to score 20 top flight goals for the club having already become Leicester s highest Premier League scorer in a single season 139 The record transfer fee paid by Leicester for a player was in the region of 32 to 40 million for midfielder Youri Tielemans from AS Monaco 140 The highest transfer fee received for a Leicester player was approximately 80 million from Manchester United for Harry Maguire at the time of the transfer this was the eleventh highest ever fee the highest ever move between two English teams and the highest ever for a defender 141 additional citation s needed The club s record home attendance is 47 298 for a fifth round FA Cup match against Tottenham Hotspur at Filbert Street in 1928 142 The current record home attendance at the current stadium is 32 242 for a Premier League match against Sunderland on 8 August 2015 143 The highest ever attendance for a non competitive football match at King Power Stadium stands at 32 188 for a pre season friendly against Real Madrid on 30 July 2011 144 Leicester s highest ever league finish is first in the Premier League in 2015 16 Their lowest ever league finish was first in League One in 2008 09 citation needed The club currently hold the joint all time record for second tier titles sharing a total of seven with Manchester City 145 Leicester s longest ever unbeaten run in the league was between 1 November 2008 and 7 March 2009 in which the team remained unbeaten for 23 games on their way to the League One title 146 The club s longest run of consecutive victories in league football is currently nine which the team achieved between 21 December 2013 and 1 February 2014 in the EFL Championship In the 2015 16 season Leicester achieved many new club records in what The Daily Telegraph described as one of the most astonishing league titles of all time 147 They recorded the fewest losses in any of the club s previous Premier League seasons the fewest away defeats in any top flight season and the most consecutive wins in the top flight Those consecutive victories came against Watford Newcastle United Crystal Palace Southampton and Sunderland Coincidentally Leicester kept a record of five straight clean sheets against each of the same five opponents The King Power Stadium s home crowds in 2015 16 saw their team beaten just once in the Premier League all season 139 Leicester made their UEFA Champions League debut in the 2016 17 season their fourth appearance in European football The club became the third English team to win on their Champions League debut after Manchester United in 1994 and Newcastle United in 1997 They also became the first English team to win away on their Champions League debut and win all three of their opening games in the competition 148 149 Leicester are currently the first and only team in Champions League history to keep clean sheets in each of their opening four games in the competition 150 In March 2017 the club became the 50th to reach the UEFA Champions League quarter finals On 25 October 2019 the Leicester team set the record for the highest margin of away victory in English top flight history defeating Southampton 9 0 at St Mary s Stadium In doing so they also tied the record for the highest margin of victory in Premier League history equalling Manchester United s 9 0 home victory over Ipswich Town in 1995 151 As a result Leicester City hold the all time top tier records for the biggest defeat biggest away win and highest scoring draw Leicester made a record breaking start to the 2023 24 EFL Championship season collecting 33 points after winning 11 of their first 12 matches 152 This was the best ever start to a season in the club s history and the best in the competition s history since being known as the Championship During this period the club also set a new record of six straight away wins matched the all time record of nine consecutive league wins home and away and went four home matches without conceding for the first time since 1973 153 League history editMain article List of Leicester City F C seasons Since their election to the Football League in 1894 Leicester City have spent all but one season within the top two tiers of English football During the 2008 09 season they played in League One the third tier of English football after the club s relegation from the Championship in the previous season However the club made an instant return to the second tier and were promoted as 2008 09 League One champions Source 92 1894 1908 Division 2 L2 1908 1909 Division 1 L1 1909 1915 Division 2 L2 1919 1925 Division 2 L2 1925 1935 Division 1 L1 1935 1937 Division 2 L2 1937 1939 Division 1 L1 1946 1954 Division 2 L2 1954 1955 Division 1 L1 1955 1957 Division 2 L2 1957 1969 Division 1 L1 1969 1971 Division 2 L2 1971 1978 Division 1 L1 1978 1980 Division 2 L2 1980 1981 Division 1 L1 1981 1983 Division 2 L2 1983 1987 Division 1 L1 1987 1992 Division 2 L2 1992 1994 Division 1 L2 1994 1995 Premier League L1 1995 1996 Division 1 L2 1996 2002 Premier League L1 2002 2003 Division 1 L2 2003 2004 Premier League L1 2004 2008 Championship L2 2008 2009 League One L3 2009 2014 Championship L2 2014 2023 Premier League L1 2023 present Championship L2 L1 Level 1 of the football league system L2 Level 2 of the football league system L3 Level 3 of the football league system Seasons spent at Level 1 of the football league system 55 Seasons spent at Level 2 of the football league system 62 Seasons spent at Level 3 of the football league system 1 up to and including 2022 23 Players editFirst team squad edit As of 12 September 2023 154 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK nbsp WAL Danny Ward2 DF nbsp ENG James Justin3 DF nbsp BEL Wout Faes4 DF nbsp ENG Conor Coady5 DF nbsp ENG Callum Doyle on loan from Manchester City 7 MF nbsp ITA Cesare Casadei on loan from Chelsea 8 MF nbsp ENG Harry Winks9 FW nbsp ENG Jamie Vardy10 FW nbsp ENG Stephy Mavididi11 MF nbsp ENG Marc Albrighton14 FW nbsp NGA Kelechi Iheanacho15 DF nbsp AUS Harry Souttar17 MF nbsp ENG Hamza Choudhury18 FW nbsp GHA Abdul Fatawu on loan from Sporting No Pos Nation Player20 FW nbsp ZAM Patson Daka21 DF nbsp POR Ricardo Pereira22 MF nbsp ENG Kiernan Dewsbury Hall23 DF nbsp DEN Jannik Vestergaard25 MF nbsp NGA Wilfred Ndidi26 MF nbsp BEL Dennis Praet28 FW nbsp IRL Tom Cannon29 MF nbsp TUR Yunus Akgun on loan from Galatasaray 30 GK nbsp DEN Mads Hermansen31 GK nbsp DEN Daniel Iversen35 MF nbsp ENG Kasey McAteer40 MF nbsp POR Wanya Marcal41 GK nbsp POL Jakub Stolarczyk45 DF nbsp ENG Ben NelsonUnregistered players edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player12 GK nbsp ENG Alex SmithiesOut on loan edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player16 DF nbsp DEN Victor Kristiansen at Bologna until the end of the 2023 24 season 155 24 MF nbsp FRA Boubakary Soumare at Sevilla until the end of the 2023 24 season 156 No Pos Nation Player33 DF nbsp ENG Luke Thomas at Sheffield United until the end of the 2023 24 season 157 Under 21s and Academy edit Main article Leicester City F C Under 21s and Academy Former players edit Main article List of Leicester City F C playersClub staff editAs of 9 July 2023 update 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 Directors amp Senior ManagementRole PersonChairman nbsp Aiyawatt SrivaddhanaprabhaVice Chairman nbsp Apichet SrivaddhanaprabhaChief Executive nbsp Susan WhelanFinance Director nbsp Simon CapperDirector of Football nbsp Jon RudkinFootball Operations Director nbsp Andrew NevilleOperations Director nbsp Anthony MundyStrategy Director nbsp Nick OakleyCommunications Director nbsp Anthony HerlihyHR Director nbsp Liam Dolan BarrCommercial Director nbsp Dan BarnettGeneral Counsel nbsp Matthew PhillipsManagement StaffRole PersonFirst Team Manager nbsp Enzo MarescaFirst Team Assistant Manager nbsp Willy CaballeroFirst Team Coach nbsp Danny WalkerFirst Team Goalkeeping Coach nbsp Michele De BernardinHead of Fitness amp Conditioning nbsp Matt ReevesFirst Team Fitness Coach nbsp Marcos AlvarezFirst Team Analyst nbsp Javier Molina CaballeroFirst Team Physiotherapist nbsp Gary SilkKit Manager nbsp Paul McAndrewHead of Senior Player Recruitment nbsp Martyn GloverLoans Manager nbsp Robert HuthAcademy Director nbsp Jon RudkinPlayer statistics editCaptains edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dates Name1987 1992 nbsp Ally Mauchlen1992 1993 nbsp Steve Walsh1993 1994 nbsp Gary Mills1995 1996 nbsp Garry Parker1996 1999 nbsp Steve Walsh1999 2005 nbsp Matt Elliott2005 2006 nbsp Danny Tiatto2006 2007 nbsp Paddy McCarthy2007 2008 nbsp Stephen Clemence2008 2011 nbsp Matt Oakley2011 2012 nbsp Matt Mills2012 2021 nbsp Wes Morgan2021 2022 nbsp Kasper Schmeichel2022 2023 nbsp Jonny Evans2023 present Rotation 166 Player of the Year edit Leicester City s Player of the Year award is voted for by the club s supporters at the end of every season 134 Year Winner1987 88 nbsp Steve Walsh1988 89 nbsp Alan Paris1989 90 nbsp Gary Mills1990 91 nbsp Tony James1991 92 nbsp Gary Mills1992 93 nbsp Colin Hill1993 94 nbsp Simon Grayson1994 95 nbsp Kevin Poole1995 96 nbsp Garry Parker1996 97 nbsp Simon Grayson1997 98 nbsp Matt Elliott1998 99 nbsp Tony Cottee1999 2000 nbsp Gerry Taggart2000 01 nbsp Robbie Savage Year Winner2001 02 nbsp Robbie Savage2002 03 nbsp Paul Dickov2003 04 nbsp Les Ferdinand2004 05 nbsp Danny Tiatto2005 06 nbsp Joey Gudjonsson2006 07 nbsp Iain Hume2007 08 nbsp Richard Stearman2008 09 nbsp Steve Howard2009 10 nbsp Jack Hobbs2010 11 nbsp Richie Wellens2011 12 nbsp Kasper Schmeichel2012 13 nbsp Wes Morgan2013 14 nbsp Danny Drinkwater2014 15 nbsp Esteban Cambiasso Year Winner2015 16 nbsp Riyad Mahrez2016 17 nbsp Kasper Schmeichel2017 18 nbsp Harry Maguire2018 19 nbsp Ricardo Pereira2019 20 nbsp Jamie Vardy2020 21 nbsp Youri Tielemans2021 22 nbsp James Maddison2022 23 nbsp Kelechi Iheanacho 167 English Hall of Fame members edit The following have played for Leicester and have been inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame nbsp Gordon Banks 2002 Inaugural Inductee 168 nbsp Peter Shilton 2002 Inaugural Inductee 168 nbsp Gary Lineker 2003 169 nbsp Don Revie 2004 Inducted as a manager 170 nbsp Frank McLintock 2009 171 172 Football League 100 Legends edit The Football League 100 Legends is a list of 100 legendary football players produced by The Football League in 1998 to celebrate the 100th season of League football 173 It also included Premier League players and the following former Leicester City players were included 173 nbsp Arthur Rowley nbsp Gordon Banks nbsp Frank McLintock nbsp Peter Shilton nbsp Gary LinekerPlayers with over 300 appearances for Leicester edit Includes competitive appearances only Current players in bold 134 136 nbsp Graham Cross 600 nbsp Adam Black 557 nbsp Kasper Schmeichel 479 nbsp Hugh Adcock 460 nbsp Mark Wallington 460 nbsp Steve Walsh 450 nbsp Jamie Vardy 446 nbsp Arthur Chandler 419 nbsp John Sjoberg 414 nbsp Mal Griffiths 409 nbsp Steve Whitworth 401 nbsp Andy King 379 nbsp Sep Smith 373 nbsp Mike Stringfellow 370 nbsp Richie Norman 365 nbsp Gordon Banks 356 nbsp John O Neill 345 nbsp Dave Gibson 339 nbsp Peter Shilton 339 nbsp Colin Appleton 333 nbsp Dennis Rofe 324 nbsp Wes Morgan 323 nbsp Paul Ramsey 322 nbsp Arthur Rowley 321 nbsp Arthur Lochhead 320 nbsp Muzzy Izzet 319 nbsp Ian Wilson 318 nbsp Derek Hines 317 nbsp Lenny Glover 306 nbsp Marc Albrighton 305 Players with 50 or more goals for Leicester edit Includes competitive appearances only Current players in bold 134 174 175 nbsp Arthur Chandler 273 nbsp Arthur Rowley 265 nbsp Jamie Vardy 177 nbsp Ernie Hine 156 nbsp Derek Hines 117 nbsp Arthur Lochhead 114 nbsp Gary Lineker 103 nbsp Mike Stringfellow 97 nbsp Johnny Duncan 95 nbsp Jimmy Walsh 91 nbsp Jack Lee 84 nbsp Alan Smith 84 nbsp Frank Worthington 78 nbsp Mal Griffiths 76 nbsp Ken Keyworth 76 nbsp Danny Liddle 71 nbsp Arthur Maw 64 nbsp Matty Fryatt 62 nbsp Andy King 62 nbsp Steve Walsh 62 nbsp Kelechi Iheanacho 61 nbsp Steve Lynex 60 nbsp David Nugent 59 nbsp Fred Shinton 58 nbsp Jack Bowers 56 nbsp James Maddison 55 nbsp Dave Gibson 53 nbsp Jackie Sinclair 53 nbsp Hugh Adcock 52 nbsp George Dewis 51 nbsp Gary McAllister 51Honours editSee also List of Leicester City F C records and statistics Honours nbsp Leicester City players lifting the 2015 16 Premier League trophyLeicester City are currently one of five clubs including Manchester United Manchester City Chelsea and Liverpool to have won the Premier League FA Cup and League Cup in the 21st century Since the start of the millennium they are the 6th most successful club in English football and one of 14 clubs to have won all four major domestic competitions 176 League First Division Premier League level 1 Champions 2015 16 Runners up 1928 29 Second Division First Division Championship level 2 Champions 1924 25 1936 37 1953 54 1956 57 1970 71 1979 80 2013 14 Runners up 1907 08 2002 03 Play off winners 1994 1996 League One level 3 Champions 2008 09Cup FA Cup Winners 2020 21 Runners up 1948 49 1960 61 1962 63 1968 69 League Cup Winners 1963 64 1996 97 1999 2000 Runners up 1964 65 1998 99 FA Charity Shield FA Community Shield Winners 1971 2021 Runners up 2016Notes edit Away leg held at the Gerhard Hanappi Stadium Vienna AustriaReferences edit Premier League Handbook 2022 23 PDF 19 July 2022 p 24 Archived PDF from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 11 April 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m 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