The sudden collapse of football's greatest fairytale: Where did it all go wrong for Leicester?

By Luca Larocca / Roar Rookie

Despite the astonishing highlights of this season’s Premier League which included the historic Manchester City treble, Newcastle United’s awe-inspiring top-four finish and the ultimate transformation of Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal, arguably the greatest surprise was the unforeseen relegation of former champions, Leicester City.

It was a mere seven years prior when the Foxes would eventually charge towards the most astonishing league triumph the sporting world has ever seen, led by now club icons, Riyad Mahrez, Jamie Vardy and N’Golo Kante.

Fast-forward to the conclusion of the 2022-23 season, Leicester had their most decorated stay in the top flight brought to an abrupt end, through a series of errors, miscalculations and hardships culminating over the past few years.

One controlling factor in the club’s sudden decline sparked from an abundance of poor transfer and squad mismanagement in recent summer and winter windows.

After a less than desirable ending to their 2021-22 Premier League season, Foxes fans were inclined to believe the club would revamp and strengthen, in the hope of returning to the heights of European qualification seen in prior campaigns under Brendan Rodgers.

However, once the transfer window officially opened, supporter morale had already taken a hit, as club legend and captain at the time, Kasper Schmeichel made his sudden departure for French side, Nice.

This isolated the East-Midlands club without an established leader in the dressing room, and a first-team calibre goalkeeper. Instead, management placed their blind faith in the inexperienced, and ultimately unequipped former backup, Danny Ward.

During his spell in between the sticks, Ward conceded a whopping 45 goals in only 26 appearances, forcing caretaker manager Dean Smith to throw the also unqualified youth academy product Daniel Iversen into the starting 11 to see out the remaining fixtures.

Leicester’s backline also managed to diminish in quality, after failing to replace another club star and controlling ‘rock’ Wesley Fofana, who departed for Chelsea during the same window.

The Foxes received a substantial fee for the promising French centre-back (£75 million), but were evidently unable to properly replace the impact and role played by the young starlet, conceding a total of 68 goals over the 38 game season (a goal every 50 minutes approx.).

Whilst the Foxes still had remnants of creative firepower and goal scoring prowess in James Maddison, Youri Tielemans and Harvey Barnes, Leicester’s leaky defence caused through transfer window mismanagement, ultimately was the difference which sent the club down on the final day.

Moreover, Leicester’s lingering disappointment of previous campaigns may also have had its impact on the club’s sudden demise.

As for the majority of both the 2020 and 2021 league seasons, Leicester had occupied a top-four spot, having fans and the press almost certain the club would return to the Champions League for the first time since their historic title campaign.

But they would finish both years in similarly heartbreaking fashion, ‘bottling’ qualification on the final day and missing out on those lucrative positions in the table.

Harvey Barnes reacts as the Foxes are relegated (Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

These frustrating instances of what ‘might-have-been’ may have taken a toll on the belief of the existing players, hurt from the fact that they couldn’t achieve that elusive goal two seasons running. This in turn, possibly influenced the increasingly-disappointing performances in the following campaigns.

Whilst the club had made various errors culminating in their relegation, Leicester had to struggle through the sudden, tragic passing of club owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha in 2018.

The successful Thai businessman led the Foxes from the second tier all the way to the Premier league title in only six years, despite his side being neglected and touted as relegation favourites.

Now, as Leicester City move into the upcoming weeks and months of a new season, fans may find a small shed of hope and positivity through the appointment of new manager, Enzo Maresca.

The young Italian coach moved from treble-winning Manchester City this summer, aiming to lead the foxes straight back up to the promised land. With bags of tactical experience gained under decorated manager Pep Guardiola, as his assistant, Maresca will hope to entice a displeased fanbase with an improved, positive play style and ultimately succeed in one of the toughest leagues in European football.

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The Crowd Says:

2023-06-27T02:34:45+00:00

Tiger Toon

Roar Rookie


Good article mate and Toon definitely merited a shoutout. No one one would have predicted a top 4 finish this season - I believe we were also only the second team in the last 15(?) seasons to finish in the top 4 (from the club's not considered part of the big 6) - the other being of course Leicester. Howe also a worthy candidate for manager of the season taking a defence that broke the record for the most goals conceded in a calendar year by the fraud Steve Bruce - to joint best defence in the league 18 months later (and all for a cost that was less than what Man Utd paid for Maguire). As for Leicester, a cautionary tale of what can happen and how fortunes can change so quickly. A bit like Southampton (and possibly something for Brighton fans to worry about) in that continually selling your best players and gambling you can unearth new talent to replace them is always a risk. With the prohibitive restrictions of FFP to protect the established elite, it makes it very hard for other clubs to make a sustained push to break into the top 4/6. Even with all NUFC's wealth, our commercial revenue is a fraction of the teams we are chasing - so for ambitious clubs like Villa, Brighton, Brentford, Fulham, West Ham etc, the challenge will be likely even harder if they want to shake up the top of the table. That being said, Leicester went from a relative 'yo-yo' club to winning a PL and FA Cup as well as playing in the champions league. They are the main character in probably the biggest team underdog story in any sport. Not bad for a club that was in League One 15 or so seasons ago and a further considerable chunk in the Championship in that same stretch. They are definitely one of the most intriguing clubs to watch next season for me and will be keen to see if they can rebuild under Maresca. Hopefully big Souttar can help lead them back to the PL.

2023-06-25T08:50:50+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


Fair enough. When you look across the major European football leagues, you often see, say, middle order club managing to qualify for one of the Euro cups, and they might even go deep into whatever comp they are in, but it takes so much out of them trying to compete, expending resources on staying competitive in two separate comps. Things can come to a head very quickly when everyone realises, they just can't keep expending resources to the same degree as other clubs who can.

2023-06-25T02:22:22+00:00

SquareBall

Roar Rookie


The recent Leicester City story is a cautionary tale for every club not bankrolled by an obscenely wealthy benefactor. Owners, the King Power Group - a Thai travel and retail company, never recovered from COVID-19; hence, the lack of funds to feed the beast over the past few seasons. I guess you could also argue that The Foxes represent the seamier side of Premier League football with an owner, who hails from a country with the fourth highest wealth inequality rate in the world, pumping billions of Baht into a vanity project in the East Midlands.

AUTHOR

2023-06-24T07:04:47+00:00

Luca Larocca

Roar Rookie


True but they had also only just won the FA cup 2 seasons ago, and were in a European semi final just over a year ago. Pretty sudden decline imo.

2023-06-24T05:04:29+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


Fair enough, Luca. All the best with the writing. __ Given I didn’t see any of it, I’m not really in a position to judge what they did on the field, though I am obviously judging their deplorable ownership. I shall suspend my awe. __ Eibar’s the best underdog story, IMO. It would be like Armidale having a team in the A-League.

2023-06-24T00:37:21+00:00

Roberto Bettega

Roar Rookie


A lot can happen in 7 years.

AUTHOR

2023-06-24T00:36:35+00:00

Luca Larocca

Roar Rookie


Hi David, I appreciate the feedback, I want to keep improving my writing and will take on any tips given! I however stand by the belief that Eddie Howe has done an amazing job at Newcastle and finishing 4th was a huge surprise this season – only a season and a half ago they were dead last when Howe came in (hence being a season highlight.) Finally, yes I agree there have been plenty of great stories of underdog rises and falls! I outlined my opinion that Leicester’s story was the best out of them all. Thanks again for the feedback! Luca

2023-06-23T07:00:52+00:00

Redcap

Roar Guru


“Despite the astonishing highlights of this season’s Premier League which included the historic Manchester City treble, Newcastle United’s awe-inspiring top-four finish…” __ Admittedly, I don’t watch the ‘premier’ league, but mate, using ‘astonishing’ twice in the first two paragraphs and describing a Saudi soft power/propaganda vehicle as ‘awe-inspiring’ is next level hyperbole. __ As for Leicester, they’re not the first team to experience an Icarus-style rise and fall – Kaiserslautern, Deportivo La Coruna, Notts Forest and, of course, the greatest of them all, the Brisbane Strikers.

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