Input your search keywords and press Enter.

Leicester City win Premier League title after Tottenham draw at Chelsea

_89185609_ameivardyvmanutd_getty

Jamie Vardy (22 goals, six assists) and team-mate Riyad Mahrez (17 goals, 11 assists) have both been involved in 28 goals each – the joint most in the Premier League. Vardy has been named the Football Writers’ Association’s Footballer of the Year.

Leicester City have won the Premier League title in one of the greatest sporting stories of all time.

Tottenham’s 2-2 draw at Chelsea on Monday confirmed a stunning achievement for Claudio Ranieri’s side.

Leicester started the campaign as 5,000-1 outsiders for the title after almost being relegated last season.

But they have lost just three league games in what has been described as a “fairytale” and the “most unlikely triumph in the history of team sport”.

Closest challengers Spurs, Arsenal, Manchester City, Manchester United and last year’s champions Chelsea, have all failed to match the Foxes’ consistency across the season.

Former Leicester, Everton and England striker Gary Lineker described his hometown team’s achievement as “the biggest sporting shock of my lifetime”.

The Match of the Day presenter had suggested the Leicester players were on the “edge of sporting immortality” last month.

He told BBC Sport: “I can’t think of anything that surpasses it in sporting history. It is difficult to put over in words.

“I got emotional. It was hard to breathe. I was a season ticket holder from the age of seven. This is actually impossible.”

Leicester’s title – a comic book celebration
The greatest sporting story of all time?
Title win an amazing feeling – Ranieri
Leicester ‘could make £150m from title win’
Watch: Lineker celebrates with champagne
In search of the real Ranieri – BBC Sport in Rome
Football Daily podcast: ‘The impossible dream is now a reality’

After Leicester drew 1-1 at Manchester United on Sunday, Tottenham needed to win all three of their remaining league games to catch the Foxes.

But their title hopes were ended when they squandered a 2-0 lead to only draw at London rivals Chelsea.

Match of the Day pundit and former Newcastle United, Blackburn Rovers and England striker Alan Shearer said Leicester’s achievement was “the biggest thing ever in football”.

Shearer, who won the Premier League in 1995 with underdogs Blackburn, told BBC Sport: “For a team like Leicester to come and take the giants on with their wealth and experience – not only take them on but to beat them – I think it’s the biggest thing to happen in football.”

Gianni Infantino, president of football’s world governing body Fifa, said Leicester’s “beautiful story” was a “fairytale”.

The East Midlands club was also quick to hail the achievement of Ranieri and his players, saying they “have captured the imaginations of football fans around the world with one of the most brilliant and unlikely sporting triumphs ever seen”.

Sports data analysts say Leicester are set for a potential £150m boost for winning the title, coming from Premier League prize money, Champions League participation cash and increased match-day revenues from ticket and hospitality sales.

‘A sporting miracle’

“In terms of domestic football, Leicester City winning the Premier League is the greatest achievement ever and I think it will never be surpassed,” former Leicester midfielder Robbie Savage told BBC Sport.

“It is incredible. This is a turning point in Premier League history.”

Leicester East MP Keith Vaz said: “This is the greatest day in the history of this city. It’s the top, absolutely the top to win the English Premier League, the best league in the world. It’s a miracle and what Claudia Ranieri has done with this amazing team.”

Former Foxes manager Martin O’Neill, who led the club to their previous highest Premier League finish of eighth in 2000, said: “Not only is it a brilliant story, but it gives everyone that little bit of hope again that romance has not left football.

“It’s been the talk of Europe, there’s no question about that. Everything about this season has been remarkable.”

Snooker player Mark Selby, a Leicester fan, clinched his second World Championship title a little over 10 minutes after his hometown team won the Premier League crown. “To be Premier League champions is a fantastic achievement and I want to say well done to Claudio and the boys,” he said.

Even Prime Minister David Cameron passed on his congratulations, saying it was “an extraordinary, thoroughly deserved, Premier League title”.

It is Leicester’s first top-flight title and the club, owned by Thai billionaire businessman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, have also qualified for next season’s Champions League group stages for the first time.

The Foxes started the season among the favourites for relegation and only the three promoted sides – Watford, Norwich and Bournemouth – were longer odds for the league title.

Ranieri, who took over from the sacked Nigel Pearson in the summer, was seen as an uninspired choice by some fans and pundits after his predecessor had overseen a run of seven wins in nine games as Leicester escaped relegation in 2014-15.

The Italian’s previous job ended abruptly when his Greece side lost to European minnows Faroe Islands during Euro 2016 qualifying.

Yet the charismatic 64-year-old’s team – assembled for less than £30m and playing pacy, direct, counter-attacking football – has confounded the experts.

Savage added: “I’m speechless, it is unbelievable. I’ve seen England win the Ashes and get OBEs and MBEs. This Leicester team’s achievement is greater than any of that. They should be recognised in the honours list.”

More on this story
Danny Murphy analysis: Why Leicester’s simple tactics work so well
Leicester and Tottenham players dominate Team of the Year
Watch: How Thailand is falling in love with Leicester
Troy Deeney analysis: Why are Leicester so hard to beat?

Comparison with other sporting shocks

  • Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest side were promoted to the top flight, won the league and then won two European Cups in consecutive seasons between 1976 and 1980.
  • Baseball’s Boston Red Sox finally triumphed in the 2004 World Series – 86 years after their last win.
  • Unseeded 17-year-old German Boris Becker became the youngest player to win the Wimbledon tennis tournament with victory in 1985.
  • Chain-smoking rookie reserve John Daly won the 1991 US PGA golf championship after being drafted in as a late replacement.
  • Undisputed, undefeated boxing heavyweight champion of the world Mike Tyson was knocked out by flu-ridden ‘stooge’ Buster Douglas in Tokyo, 1990.
  • Leicester’s title triumph is expected to generate millions of pounds in additional income for the local economy with tourism boosted by the club’s higher global profile.Kasabian, the Leicester-born platinum-selling, stadium-filling rock band, will play two gigs at the Foxes’ King Power Stadium on 28 and 29 May, saying it will be “the biggest party the city has ever seen”. Guitarist Serge Pizzorno said: “It feels like we’re almost centre of the universe.”Mayor of Leicester Peter Soulsby has kept celebration plans secret, but said: “Twelve months ago we were re-interring the remains of the last king of England to die in battle [Richard III] and we were worried about our football team.”We had the eyes of the world upon us and frankly we thought that it could not get any better, or bigger. Well, it has.

    “I don’t believe in miracles but this is as near as it gets.

    “We’ve had media interest from across the world. We were on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, I’ve spoken to two German television crews in the last few days, Chilean television and Italian television twice. It really has attracted worldwide attention beyond anything that we fully understood.”

    Chairman Srivaddhanaprabha bought the club in 2010 for £39m and, after Leicester were promoted from the Championship in 2014, said he would spend £180m to get them into European competition in three years.

    According to BBC South Asia correspondent Jonathan Head, the Thai businessman’s travel retail group King Power has “hit the jackpot” and can now start to “tap into a bottomless well of passion in this football-mad nation of 68 million people”.

  • Leicester’s story is epitomised by 29-year-old striker Jamie Vardy. Released by Sheffield Wednesday at 16 for being too small, he rose through non-league football until Leicester paid Fleetwood Town £1m for him in 2012.He is now an England international, second in the Premier League’s scoring charts this season and was named the Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year on Monday.Meanwhile, Professional Footballers’ Association Player of the Year Riyad Mahrez, 25, was bought for just £400,000 from French second-tier side Le Havre in January 2014.

    Only 14 players have made more than a dozen league appearances and Ranieri’s preferred starting XI cost an estimated £22m – less than a 10th of what is arguably big-spending Manchester City’s first-choice line-up.

    • Read more: Leicester – from rejects to champions
    • Watch: BBC World Service’s ‘The Making of Riyad Mahrez’
      • Since the Premier League began in 1992-93, only Blackburn Rovers have managed to take the title away from either Manchester United, Arsenal, Chelsea or Manchester City.
      • Leicester’s highest previous top-flight finish was second in 1928-29.
      • Ranieri – known in England as ‘The Tinkerman’ after his spell as Chelsea boss more than a decade ago – has made just 27 changes to his line-up across the entire Premier League season. The next lowest is Bournemouth (50).
      • At 42.3%, Leicester have the lowest average possession figure of any Premier League champion since 2006-07.
      • Of Leicester’s 22 wins this season, 19 have come despite having a lower share of possession than their opponents.
      • At the start of April, Leicester were seven points clear at the top of the Premier League. Exactly one year earlier, they were bottom of the table, seven points from safety. BBC