Claudio Ranieri planned to remain at Leicester City forever after guiding the club to its first Premier League title.
Forever turned into nine months when Leicester’s owners opted to part ways with the manager Thursday, a decision that triggered an outpouring of support and sympathy for Ranieri.
Ranieri revealed the heartache associated with losing his job in a statement Friday. He also took the opportunity to reminisce about the fairy-tale season in which he played an instrumental role in leading Leicester to the summit of England’s top flight.
He wrote:
Yesterday my dream died.
After the euphoria of last season and being crowned Premier League Champions, all I dreamt of was staying at Leicester City, the club I love, for always.
Sadly this was not to be.
Related – Leicester vice chairman: ‘We will forever be grateful’ to Ranieri
Ranieri went on to thank his family, his agents, and two of his coaches who were also sacked Thursday, and praised the media for its coverage and reporting on the “greatest story in football.”
“Mostly I have to thank Leicester City Football Club,” he wrote. “The adventure was amazing and will live with me forever.”
Related: Leicester interim boss says players didn’t force Ranieri out
Ranieri reserved his largest measure of gratitude for Leicester City supporters:
You took me into your hearts from day one and loved me. I love you too. No one can ever take away what we together have achieved.
I hope you think about it and smile every day the way I always will. It was a time of wonderfulness and happiness that I will never forget. It’s been a pleasure and an honour to be a champion with all of you.
A little more than two weeks after receiving a vote of confidence from the Leicester City brass, Claudio Ranieri was sacked Thursday by the floundering Foxes.
Germinal reactions were many, and with each claim by pundit and supporter alike that called the move cynical and in poor timing, was an abundance of evidence supporting the dismissal of the captain of last season’s storybook ship.
Related: Ranieri fired by Leicester City after wretched run of form
Plentifully cordial and wholly likeable, mild mannered Ranieri’s eventual firing was always going to draw derision, though one glance at the club’s form is reason enough to make a change, let alone a host of other justifications.
Shocking squad selection
The only side in England’s top-four divisions yet to score in 2017, if Leicester’s attack last season was an explosive unit profiting from break-neck efforts against the run of play, this campaign’s variant was as frightful and flaccid as the top tier will permit.
As easy as it is to pin that on the likes of Jamie Vardy and Riyad Mahrez, the manager picks the squad, and his insistence to rely on last season’s stalwarts has dented his crown and rusted its sheen.
It’s utterly inexplicable that Demarai Gray, who has dazzled when given the opportunity, has played the full 90 minutes only twice in the Premier League. Somehow Ahmed Musa, who has appeared unsure of himself and completely lacking in confidence, has been named to the starting XI seven times in the league.
Related – Lineker: Decision to sack Ranieri ‘inexplicable, unforgivable’
Ranieri’s squad selection issues were on display Wednesday at Sevilla, when Musa and Marc Albrighton started on opposing wings, and you’d be hard pressed to find two worse players on the pitch in Andalusia. Gray came on for Musa in the 68th minute and almost immediately breathed life into Leicester’s attack.
Times Sport chief writer Henry Winter adds that Ranieri’s call to start Musa over Grey understandably ruffled some feathers in the Foxes’ dressing room, and losing the faith of the players may have cemented the Italian’s exit.
Pair the limp attack with troubles at the back, and Ranieri’s persistence with the same back four as last season speaks both to his stubborn squad selection issues and his disastrous moves in the summer and January windows.
Transfer troubles
When midfield lynchpin N’Golo Kante ditched the King Power for a second successive title run at Chelsea, Ranieri and his scouts were helpless to replace the tireless French worker.
Kante’s absence undoubtedly marred Leicester’s title defense, with the club winning just 19.2 percent of its matches without him compared to 62.1 percent with him in the squad. No player in the Premier League has proven to be as difficult to succeed as Kante.
That’s not to say they didn’t try.
Nampalys Mendy’s £13-million move from Nice has proved to be a crummy cocktail of injury and omission, prompting the £15-million January transfer of Wilfred Ndidi from Anderlecht.
Pair that with a failure to provide cover for a languid and lackadaisical back four of Wes Morgan, Robert Huth, Danny Simpson, and Christian Fuchs who post an average age of 31.3, and it’s clear why this season’s troubles at the back has matched those in the attacking positions.
Centre-back Luis Hernandez was lured to Leicester from Sporting Gijon, made four league appearances and was off to Malaga in January, nearly as swiftly as he arrived. In addition to the failed move for Hernandez, Yohan Benalouane returned from loan, Molla Wague arrived on a temporary move, and Marcin Wasilewski peculiarly still had a job. Wague broke his leg in his first Foxes feature against Millwall and Wasilewski is a well-caffeinated blindfolded bull in a china shop.
Related – Poll: Did Leicester make the right decision by firing Ranieri?
Among a host of moves, only the arrivals of Islam Slimani and Ndidi appear beneficial, while conversely, the signing of Bartosz Kapustka in the summer from Krakow is easily one of the transfer window’s worst additions.
Ranieri’s fate may have been different had head scout Steve Walsh not moved to Everton in July. After signing the likes of Mahrez, Vardy, and Kante – Ranieri’s successes in the transfer window – Walsh made the Goodison switch, and the club’s dealings took a serious hit.
For the sake of the season
With 13 matches left to salvage a disastrous campaign, Ranieri was sacrificed so that Leicester could save its season.
It’s now or never for the Foxes, and without a win in six Premier League matches hampered by a dire run of five points earned out of a possible 30, Leicester’s top-flight safety is quickly shifting from an expectation to a pipe dream.
When Leicester appeared destined for the drop in 2014-15, Nigel Pearson’s Foxes pulled off the unthinkable to finish 14th thanks to the Nottingham-born gaffer’s bullish ways. Pearson is Ranieri’s opposite, and in the same fashion that the media supported the former’s contentious sacking, they are flocking to Ranieri’s side.
Related – Report: Some Leicester players want Pearson back as manager
With home fixtures against Liverpool and an inspired Hull City fast approaching before a visit to Arsenal, Leicester could not afford to sit patiently in hopes that Ranieri could replicate some of last season’s magic.
With just a one-point margin between a narrow escape and the perils of relegation, the Foxes recent form was reason enough to shuffle the deck. The last time Leicester was relegated from the Premier League, it took the East Midlands side a decade to return. The club can’t afford that again.
It’s hard not to feel for Ranieri, but cheerful pressers, congenial relations with journos, and gleaming smiles do not secure Premier League safety.
After a celebrated career lacking only a top-flight title came to a head amid a fairy tale run with Leicester, the Italian is out of ideas, and after Thursday’s decision, he’s also out of time.
It’s not a popular decision, though it is the correct one.
Here’s hoping that Ranieri’s nine-month tenure with the club will be remembered for a shock Premier League title, and not for this season’s failings.
Two years before Claudio Ranieri led Leicester City out for its first-ever European knockout clash at Sevilla on Wednesday, the Foxes were withering at the bottom of the Premier League table. It took a remarkable turnaround for then-manager Nigel Pearson to haul it from that mire, but the subsequent departure of captain Esteban Cambiasso, and controversy behind the scenes when three players were filmed partaking in a racist sexual act in Thailand, promptly sobered matters.
The video from the post-season tour featured Nigel’s son James Pearson, and his exit was followed by the dismissal of his father by the club’s Thai owners little over a month later. Leicester had been gutted, and few tipped the club to stomach anything better than 18th place the following campaign. Relegation appeared a certainty.
Then Ranieri, a questionable appointment after his woeful overseeing of Greece, produced the impossible. Leicester’s title win was built on team spirit. Seeing the belief that endured after the previous season’s survival, the Italian tightened the bonds that had formed throughout the squad. Pizza parties and fancy-dress frolics ensued, and a team comprised of former non-league players and has-beens stormed to the title. It’s a story that has gone down in sporting folklore.
Twenty-five Premier League outings later, Ranieri has been handed his P45. While the groundwork crumbled underneath him, it would be folly to view Ranieri as the architect of his own demise.
What a short memory the unforgiving world of Premier League football has. And one would suspect with each passing week after Thursday’s sacking, off-the-pitch tales will emerge which reflect the blatant apathy among certain members of Ranieri’s former squad.
The evidence of his throng dining out on the tag of champions was evident merely days after the season had ended. Wes Morgan, a man bestowed with tags such as “stalwart” and “leader” over the previous nine months, skipped the beginning of Jamaica’s Copa America campaign at the start of June – 34 days after the title was wrapped up – due to his beer-swilling commitments.
“He partied in London and Thailand,” said his then-national team coach Winfried Schafer when explaining his absence.
It never stopped. Award ceremonies were rife, and Christian Fuchs wrote an article in The Players’ Tribune on Oct. 26, 2016, which began: “So Jamie Vardy was having a party.” It was an underdog story the protagonists would never tire of retelling.
Ranieri is due some criticism. On the first day of pre-season training, the Italian should’ve made it clear that those heady days in May were banished to the previous campaign – that they were to play, rather than strut, like champions – but the way the players turned their backs on the man who guided them to the highlight of their careers is unforgivable.
One reason for the wanting form of Vardy and Riyad Mahrez was the deep defensive lines now deployed by opponents, but this was something Leicester had already addressed. In the opening 18 matches of the 2015-16 term, Leicester scored 2 and conceded 1.4 per game. The final 20 bouts saw both numbers drop: goals scored stood at 1.55, and strikes surrendered plummeted to 0.55.
This wasn’t a collective of poor footballers – they romped to the summit of the English game, and proved they can adapt when their attack was blunted by rivals belatedly learning how to deal with them. That lesson went astray this season – and that’s not the fault of the departed N’Golo Kante. Ranieri’s throng simply checked out.
“I could be (too loyal), could be,” Ranieri admitted earlier in February. “It is difficult when you achieve something so good, you want to give them one chance, two chances, three chances. Maybe now, it is too much.”
It was. The loyalty that Ranieri deserved from his players was lost in the galas and lagers that follow success and, whether this season ends with relegation or not, there will be a loitering unease around the King Power Stadium surrounding players that have avoided much of their workload lately – particularly if there’s a sudden upturn in form.
“After all that Claudio Ranieri has done for Leicester City, to sack him now is inexplicable, unforgivable and gut-wrenchingly sad,” local hero Gary Lineker said after hearing Thursday’s news.
It certainly is, and his downfall was orchestrated by the players he heroically conducted in one of the greatest feats in sporting history.
Leicester City pulled the trigger Thursday, announcing that affable Italian Claudio Ranieri has been relieved of his managerial duties just nine months after leading the Foxes to the most improbable Premier League title in history.
With the club mired in a relegation battle, was this the right decision, or did Ranieri deserve to see out the campaign after last season’s unlikely triumph?