Are Leicester FC players worth buying?

By Liam Poulton / Roar Rookie

As the dust settles on the English Premier League 2015-16 season and the footballing world comes to grip with Leicester FC’s magical title, the big clubs of Europe have come to see who they can pry away from the team.

However is it a good idea to drop millions of pounds sterling on players who have had average careers up until this season?

Charlie Adam, Wilfried Zaha, Scott Sinclair, Rickie Lambert, Andy Carroll, Adam Johnson, Stewart Downing, Danny Ings and Angel Di Maria – the list goes on. There have been many players in the Premier League who have been bought after one good season and then failed to repeat that form.

These players are often moved on for a fraction of the price they were brought for in the first place.

It worth dropping a huge transfer fee on the Leicester players? It has to be remembered that there was a reason these players were playing at Leicester in the first place. A team that was 5000-1 to win the Premier League and a team that most pundits thought would be playing against Blackburn, Leeds, Charlton and other former Premier League high flyers in the Championship come season 2016-17.

Jamie Vardy was playing non-league football for Fleetwood in 2012. Danny Drinkwater was released from Manchester United despite never playing a competitive game for them.

Marc Albrighton was deemed surplus to requirements at Aston Villa, the team that finished bottom of the table.

Yet these players are rumoured to be big signings for big clubs with no guarantee that they will be able to produce this newfound form and consistency. What happens when they have to adjust to a new team and a new game plan?

While it’s easy to comment from the stands and with the benefit of hindsight we can easily pick the poor transfers from the good ones, it is incredibly hard at the coal face.

Wait too long to buy a player and his value could skyrocket, or a rival may buy him and get propelled past you in the championship race.

Only time will tell if the Leicester accomplishments were a result of champion players or a champion team. However it would be nice for some caution to be shown with the amount of money being thrown around in the transfer market for a change.

The Crowd Says:

2016-06-30T12:42:58+00:00

Kareem

Guest


Angel Di Maria was not a one season wonder Absolutely top quality player, kicked out of Madrid because he wanted a parish. LVG didn't utilise him properly Not Di maria's fault

2016-06-08T01:09:29+00:00

Freycinet1803

Roar Rookie


Mahrez and Schmeichel are the only two players I think a "bigger" club would get a return on a sizeable transfer. Vardy could be great for a mid-table team, especially one that counter attacks. However, in strong teams I think his influence would greatly diminish. Don't see him getting a chance in Europe outside Leicester either. I hope for Leicester's sake a lot of the team can be retained, for I think they'll struggle next year. Every team will be out to beat the Champions, and I think a mid-table finish would be a great achievement for them next season.

2016-06-07T01:41:33+00:00

Andy

Guest


lol seriously? also the world is flat and the ruling elite are lizard people.

2016-06-06T09:30:36+00:00

Bob Brown

Roar Guru


Yes.

2016-06-06T01:43:19+00:00

Freddie

Guest


A minor point, but can the headline writers please get the terminology right in football stories? It's not "Leicester FC" it's Leicester City. As irritating as reading articles entitled "Manchester" when referring to United, when there are two clubs in the city. I appreciate not everyone is a football fan, but best to check. Calling United "Manchester" is like calling the Rabbitohs "Sydney"

2016-06-05T22:49:20+00:00

Fan

Guest


Some of the Leicester players are being pursued just to break up the Leicester squad. There are two ways to climb the ladder, improve your own squad, and weaken your opposition. Its not a new concept, it has happened for years, buy a player just to prevent your opponents getting him.

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