Out of form Leicester City risk losing Mahrez
It was one of the transfer sagas that seemed to run
on the longest throughout preseason, but when Riyad Mahrez rejected approaches
from Arsenal and Chelsea and committed himself to Leicester City with a new contract,
the relief among Foxes fans was noticeable. He was – alongside N’Golo Kante – one
of just two irreplaceables in Claudio Ranieri’s title-winning team.
With Kante having already departed for Stamford
Bridge, whether Leicester could again compete
with the biggest and best the
Premier League has to offer was largely down to if Mahrez stayed, and whether
he had the mental focus to continue the upward trajectory his career has thus
far taken.
In reality, the loss of Kante and drop in form of
others has seen the Foxes’ defense end before it even began. They are
succeeding in the Champions League, but they remain also-rans domestically
rather than the force of nature they so often performed like last season.
Against West Brom their performance was again nothing short of average at best,
save for the majestic Mahrez.
The Algeria international’s brilliant control of a
football were on show for all to see at the King Power Stadium, with the winger
routinely plucking diagonal balls out of the air before looking to beat Baggies
left back Allan Nyom on whichever side he so fancied. His brilliant cross to
pick out Islam Slimani for the home side’s equalizing goal early in the second
half was just one of a number of teasing balls into the box that otherwise went
unrewarded.
It is becoming clearer by the game, however, that
progress to the latter stages of the Champions League is all that stands
between Mahrez and a likely departure through the exit door in the east
Midlands. Defeat to Tony Pulis’s side was Leicester’s first at home in the
league since September last year, and it was no more than yet another
lackluster display deserved.
Too often the Foxes gave the ball away in
crucial areas or ran down blind alleys while Wes Morgan and Robert Huth again
lacked the composure at the heart of defense that they displayed so often in
the final third last season. Behind them Ron-Robert Zieler fails to instil the
same confidence as Kasper Schmeichel – who is set for a month on the sidelines
with a fractured hand – while Danny Drinkwater’s uncharacteristic error in
playing in the impressive Matt Phillips for the West Brom winner only
compounded matters.
It is unlikely the Foxes will be sucked into a
relegation battle - they sit just two points above the bottom three after 11 matches
- but Ranieri’s insistence on getting to 40 points as soon as possible
seems far more pertinent this term than it did last. A seemingly favorable run
of fixtures that was meant to reignite their hopes of a second season of
European football have begun in the worst possible way, and already a top-half
finish is looking likely to be the best Leicester can hope for.
A fan at halftime said that he had “seen
44 years of football like this before last season” and could cope with watching
it again. It remains to be seen whether Mahrez feels the same way.
Out of form Leicester City risk losing Mahrez
Reviewed by Unknown
on
12:38
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
12:38
Rating:

No comments