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Premier League

LEICESTER CITY PAY FAREWELL TRIBUTE TO TRAGIC OWNER, SRIVADDHANAPRABHA

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In their dream time, when Leicester City were about miracles and wonder, and tragedy was the furthest thing from anybody’s mind, the club’s owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, stood in the directors’ box at the King Power Stadium and gazed down at the joyous scene unfolding in front of him as Claudio Ranieri led Andrea Bocelli to the centre circle.

The manager and the singer stood there for a moment, surrounded by ballboys and club staff as Ranieri tried to hush the crowd. The Premier League trophy was with the two men on the dais, ready to be presented to the team later at their coronation as champions, after they played and beat Everton that bright spring afternoon in May 2016.

They were surrounded by bouquets of flowers and smiling faces and the kind of happiness that feels as if it will never dim. And then Bocelli began to sing Nessun Dorma. None Shall Sleep. It seemed to encapsulate in a moment all the beauty football could bring. And anybody with a heart, anybody who loved football, felt the tears welling up inside them.

But tragedy will partner that success as Leicester players and staff stand with Cardiff players to mourn Srivaddhanaprabha’s passing on Saturday

Two-and-a-half-years later, two groups of men gathered around another centre circle in another city. The Cardiff City players stood on one side. On the other side were the Leicester team, their substitutes and most of their backroom staff, their arms linked, their heads bowed. Everybody was included.

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There were flowers again but this time it was a wreath. And this time, there was no singing. Just a minute of silence. A picture of Vichai appeared on the big screens at either end of the Cardiff City Stadium. ‘A great son of Thailand, may you rest in peace,’ a message read beneath his image. On the hoardings around the ground, another message flashed up. ‘Together with Leicester,’ it said.

Kasper Schmeichel (second left) struggled to hold back the tears during the minute’s silence

In the midst of the silence, Kasper Schmeichel, the Leicester goalkeeper, who was one of the first on the scene of the crash that killed Vichai, two of his assistants and two pilots at the King Power Stadium last Saturday night, wept openly. And anybody with a heart, anybody who loved football, felt the tears welling up inside them.

Nigeria’s Kelechi Iheanacho (4th from left) and Wilfred Ndidi (9th from left) joined teammates in paying tributes

Tragedy is a part of Leicester’s history, too, now. Tragedy will always be the partner of the miracle of that Premier League title triumph of 2015-16. That was one of the greatest sports stories ever told but when the man who made it all possible died in the wreckage of his helicopter soon after the 1-1 draw with West Ham last weekend, all that joy was joined with pain. Leicester’s home Carabao Cup tie with Southampton last Tuesday was postponed in the aftermath of the crash and so this foray into Wales was the first time the club had played since. It was the first time they had tested their readiness to deal with their grief as their players tried to do their jobs and play the game Vichai loved so much.

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This is a stadium that usually provides a hostile reception for visitors but this time was different. When the Leicester players ran out for the warm-up, wearing white T-shirts with a picture of Vichai on the front and the words ‘The Boss’, they were warmly applauded by the Cardiff supporters. On the back of the shirts, there was another tribute. ‘Khun Vichai. You Will Be Forever In Our Hearts,’ it read.

Foxes fans pass a huge banner which displayed the words ‘RIP Vichai’ around the ground

And when the teams emerged from the tunnel before kick-off, a giant banner featuring the Thai flag, the badges of Leicester and Cardiff, and the words ‘RIP Vichai’ was passed above the heads of Cardiff fans towards to the Leicester supporters behind the goal. Another travelled from the Leicester end towards it until they met.

The Leicester squad show a united front wearing the special tribute shirts before the game

No one quite knew what to expect from the game. No one really knew whether they were coming to watch a match or just show solidarity. The images of the Leicester players in distress last week asked obvious questions about whether they were psychologically ready to play. The message from them and their manager, Claude Puel, was they wanted to compete to honour their owner.

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Cardiff were unsure how to approach it, too. Neil Warnock had wondered if maybe his players would feel guilty about trying to beat men who were still in the midst of suffering.

The unavoidable way of looking at this game was that it was 90 minutes of grief interrupted. After the match, the Leicester squad travelled to Cardiff airport to catch a plane to Bangkok so they could attend Vichai’s funeral, which began on Saturday.

Before it, as Schmeichel and the rest of the Leicester players sought comfort in the solidarity of team-mates, it was obvious that they were still in mourning.

How does a team deal with something like this? Try to push all thoughts of the tragedy away? Use the idea of honouring Vichai as motivation? Or forget about football, damn the result, get it over with and get out of there? In the end, Leicester used a mixture of all three. Those who thought they might crumble, though, were proved utterly wrong.

As BBC Radio Leicester presenters sat in the press box wearing their own T-shirts commemorating Vichai, the players refused to allow the tragedy that has befallen their club to overcome them. In the gloom of a south Wales evening, the white shirts of their fans, all bearing the same image of Vichai, shone out from behind the goal like a beacon.

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The result was not important but the spirit that Leicester showed in achieving it was. They certainly fulfilled their promise to honour Vichai with the way they played.

The records will show that Leicester won 1-0 with a second-half goal from Demarai Gray. The reports will tell you that he whipped off his shirt to reveal the legend: ‘For Khun Vichai.’

And they will also tell you, sadly, that referee Lee Probert felt obliged to obey the rules and show Gray a yellow card.

And when the final whistle blew, the Leicester fans sang: ‘There’s only one Vichai.’ And the players gathered around Schmeichel and hugged each other as if maybe they had achieved the first step in some kind of catharsis.

Then the players and Puel and other members of Leicester’s staff walked slowly over to the fans and stood in front of them in a long line. The players applauded the fans and the fans applauded the players. It stayed like that for 10 or 15 minutes, as if no one wanted to say goodbye.

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‘Champions of England,’ the fans roared, referencing Vichai’s greatest gift to them. ‘Champions of England, you made us sing that.’ And still the players stayed. Still they gazed up at the supporters as if they were taking strength from them and their loyalty.

Finally, another flag appeared and the players gathered around as their fans sang ‘There’s only Vichai.’ It was a picture of their owner with the Premier League trophy. ‘Thank You, Vichai,’ the message next to it said.

In the tunnel, Schmeichel stopped to talk. He was clearly fighting hard to hold himself together. ‘You come across in your life very few people that hit you and really impact you and he had a really big impact on my life,’ Schmeichel said. ‘He’s a man we’re immensely proud to have known.

‘We are thinking about his family. We are all really hurting but I can’t imagine what they are going through. We wanted to do it for him and his family tonight. We hope that we did his family proud.’ And anybody with a heart, anybody who loved football, felt the tears welling up inside them.

– Daily Mail

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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Premier League

Arsenal suffer 2-0 loss to Villa, hand Man City title race boost

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Premier League - Arsenal v Aston Villa - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - April 14, 2024 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs

Arsenal were stunned by two late Aston Villa goals as they lost 2-0 at home on Sunday to hand the initiative in the Premier League title race to defending champions Manchester City.

Villa substitute Leon Bailey tapped home from close range in the 84th minute before Ollie Watkins’ sublime finish three minutes later sent Gunners fans streaming for the exits.

Arsenal’s defeat, their first in 12 league games, sees them remain second, two points behind City and level on points with third-placed Liverpool with six games left to play.

Following Liverpool’s 1-0 defeat at home to Crystal Palace earlier on Sunday, the weekend belonged to City who bolstered their chances of an unprecedented fourth straight league title with a 5-1 demolition of visiting Luton Town on Saturday.

Villa weathered pressure in the first half, with Kai Havertz shooting straight at goalkeeper Emi Martinez before Gabriel Jesus and Bukayo Saka hit the side-netting as an opening goal for the Gunners’ felt like an imminent inevitability.

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But Villa went closest when Watkins’ effort bounced off one post and narrowly wide of the other, while Youri Tielemans’s rasping effort hit the crossbar then the post and somehow stayed out as the visitors improved considerably after the break.

Bailey gave the visitors the lead when he turned in Lucas Digne’s dangerous cross before Watkins broke Arsenal hearts with a beautiful chip over keeper David Raya to settle the contest.

“It’s massive to come away to Arsenal when they are playing such good football and to play like that just shows where we are going really, it was a perfect away performance,” Villa’s England striker Watkins told Sky Sports.

The win boosts fourth-placed Villa’s chances of qualifying for next season’s Champions League and moves them three points above Tottenham Hotspur, albeit having played a game more.

-Reuters

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Premier League to introduce semi-automated offside technology next season

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Premier League - Nottingham Forest v Brighton & Hove Albion - The City Ground, Nottingham, Britain - April 26, 2023 A big screen displays a VAR review message with a no goal for offside REUTERS/Molly Darlington/File Photo

The Premier League will introduce semi-automated offside technology next season to speed up decision-making after the clubs unanimously agreed on the move at a shareholders’ meeting on Thursday.

The technology has been in use in major tournaments and helps limit the need for long waits for VAR reviews, where match officials manually check if a player is offside or not, while also reducing the margins for error.

“The new system will be used for the first time in the Premier League next season, and it is anticipated the technology will be ready to be introduced after one of the autumn international breaks,” the league said in a statement.

“The technology will provide quicker and consistent placement of the virtual offside line, based on optical player tracking, and will produce high-quality broadcast graphics to ensure an enhanced in-stadium and broadcast experience for supporters.”

The Premier League currently has VAR officials check offsides but the system has faced heavy criticism for the time taken to come to a decision while also leaving fans in the stadium in the dark with no replays.

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The technology involves several cameras tracking the ball as well as each player. The technology alone cannot determine if a player is offside, with VAR still having to validate it based on the data available — hence the term “semi-automated”.

The technology has been used in the 2022 World Cup and the Champions League, while most recently it was implemented at the Asian Cup earlier this year.

-Reuters

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Computers say Arsenal won’t win title, on the pitch they look like champions in waiting

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Premier League - Brighton & Hove Albion v Arsenal - The American Express Community Stadium, Brighton, Britain - April 6, 2024 Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta and his players applaud their fans after the match REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

The super computers and number crunchers still don’t fancy Arsenal’s chances of winning a compelling three-way Premier League title race despite, on current form, the London club being the best team in England.

Twelve months ago Arsenal were gobbled up by a relentless Manchester City in a two-horse race, but this time Mikel Arteta’s side are showing absolutely no sign of flinching and lead Liverpool on goal difference and City by one point.

They have won 10 of their last 11 Premier League games with the only dropped points coming in a masterful 0-0 draw at champions Manchester City that was concrete proof of how much they improved from last year’s model.

Arsenal have scored 20 times in their last five away league games in which they conceded not a single goal.

They wear the confident look of champions elect but there are caveats, notably a seven-game run in that looks tougher than Liverpool’s and Manchester City’s with matches against Aston Villa, Tottenham Hotspur, Chelsea and Manchester United.

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Premier League data analysts Opta ran the likely scenarios through their computer after Liverpool’s 2-2 draw at Manchester United on Sunday and come up with a conclusion that will not be comforting for Arsenal fans.

In fact the weekend’s matches, which began with City’s 4-2 win at Crystal Palace and included Arsenal’s superlative 3-0 win away at Brighton and Hove Albion appear to have skewed the title race firmly in favour of Pep Guardiola’s City.

Before the weekend City were 33.6% likely to win a fourth successive title, according to Opta. That has now increased to 40.6%. Arsenal’s title-winning chance is 30.3% with Liverpool slipping from favourites to third at 29.1% — a 15.9% drop from before the last round of fixtures.

A look at the remaining fixtures explains why City are marginally the more likely to prevail in the tightest three-way title duel since City edged out a stumbling Liverpool and Chelsea by two and four points respectively in 2013-14.

Six of City’s last seven games are against Luton Town (h), Brighton and Hove Albion (a), Nottingham Forest (a), Wolverhampton Wanderers (h), Fulham (a) and West Ham United (h) with their biggest test being a trip to Tottenham Hotspur.

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Arsenal host fifth-placed Aston Villa on Saturday before Wolves (a), Chelsea (h), Tottenham (a), Bournemouth (h), Manchester United (a) and Everton (h).

Liverpool face Crystal Palace (h), Fulham (a), Everton (a), West Ham (a), Tottenham (h), Aston Villa (a) and Wolves (h).

While the algorithms still favour City, Arsenal’s hopes of a first league title in 20 years are boosted by a far superior goal difference compared to their two rivals.

In a race that looks like going to the wire, that could be crucial, although Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp knows there will be many more twists and turns to come.

“I knew it would be super tricky until the end. Until yesterday we were top, now it’s Arsenal and — I don’t know when — then it may be somebody else,” he said.

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-Reuters

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