Leicester City

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  1. Pick of the stats: Leicester City v Millwallpublished at 10:34 BST 23 April

    The club badges of Leicester City and Millwall side by side

    Leicester City play their final home game in the Championship this season, after relegation to League One was confirmed with their 2-2 draw against Hull City on Tuesday.

    Millwall visit on Friday (20:00 BST) and will need at least a point to move back into second position, above Ipswich who visit West Bromwich Albion on Saturday lunchtime.

    • Leicester City have won both of their past two home league games against Millwall, scoring three goals in each: a 3-0 win in November 2013, and 3-2 in December 2023.

    • Millwall have won both of their past two Championship matches against Leicester City (both 1-0), and are looking to complete their fourth league double over the Foxes, after 1990-91, 2011-12, and 2012-13.

    • Leicester City have been relegated to League One, 10 years after they were crowned Premier League champions. It is the second-shortest gap between a side being English champions and then being relegated to the third tier, after Derby County's nine years from 1975 to 1984.

    • Leicester have lost their final home game in five of their past eight Championship seasons (W3), including three of their past four.

    • Millwall have won 40 points from 22 Championship away games this season (W11 D7 L4); it is the Lions' joint-most away points (assuming 3 points for a win) in a league campaign, along with the 2000-01 campaign.

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  2. 'Gutted, heartbroken and upset' - how Foxes fans reacted to relegationpublished at 15:58 BST 22 April

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    'Gutted, heartbroken and upset' - how Foxes fans reacted to relegation

    Watch what Leicester City fans told BBC East Midlands Today immediately after the Foxes' relegation to League One was confirmed.

    Tuesday's 2-2 draw with Hull City consigned the East Midlands club to successive relegations, meaning they will be playing in the third tier just 10 years on from their remarkable 5,000-1 Premier League title win.

    Supporters reflected on the club's famous 2016 title and the 2021 FA Cup triumph, as well as years of European football along the way, when talking about just how far the club has fallen.

  3. We need 'a full clear-out' and to 'stick together' - fans react to relegationpublished at 13:18 BST 22 April

    Leicester City fans hold up a sign demanding the King Power Group sells the club, while in the blurred foreground a Foxes player can be seen hunched over in disappointment after relegation Image source, Getty Images

    BBC Sport asked Leicester City supporters what they would like to see happen at the club to stop the rot after they suffered back-to-back relegations to drop into League One.

    Fans gathered outside the ground to demand change immediately after the draw with Hull City that sealed the Foxes' fate.

    Below is a selection of what fans had to say.

    Hardy: A full clear-out is needed, starting with the board and coaching staff. The focus now should be on building a younger, hungrier squad with a long-term vision, not short-term fixes. Rebuild properly and come back stronger.

    Wes: Depressed. The club needs a complete overhaul. Too many uninformed decisions were made. The firing of a ridiculous amount of mangers solely based on the 'new manager bounce'. My advice to the King Power Group: take a deep breath, take a step back and hire competent staff members who know how to run a club, based upon a clear direction and plan. If not, just sell the club because the KPG is haemorrhaging money on its 'plan' and it is not making sense from a business perspective.

    Stephen: I had been resigned to League One football for quite some time if I'm being honest. It's been a woeful season - from getting the basics right to showing any fight or passion, it's all been missing. I got to the point where I didn't even get angry any more, just accepted it, even sort of expected it - says it all really. Massive clear out, Top (no pun intended) to bottom, is definitely needed.

    David: Having been a supporter since 1959, I've seen all the ups and downs. When King Power took over, these have been the greatest years we have known. We need to stick with and support the owners and the good years will return.

    Chris: I was taken to my first Leicester City game by my grandfather at the age of eight. As a lifelong supporter, now a grandfather myself, I watched us lose three FA Cup finals in the 1960s and never thought I would see the club become one of only seven clubs to win the Premier League and to finally break our FA Cup hoodoo.

    Of course, relegation to League One feels like a disaster but frankly I wouldn't swap the highs of the last 10 years for a mid-table Championship finish this year. The reasons for our decline are many and mostly off the field. Contrast the inspired recruitment and managerial appointments of the 'glory years' (think Vardy, Kante and Mahrez among others) with the recent lack of quality players and the embarrassing merry-go-round of poor managerial choices. I will always be a fan and cannot support any other team. Let's get back to a 'Foxes never quit' mentality and better times will return.

    Pete: The next two months are vital and there's so much to do. First, we need to appoint a manager in May or by June at the latest. I'd go for Rowett simply as he's got a head start. We've got to clear out as many high-wage earners as possible, retain only those who will work hard and play with pride and passion, then recruit a mix of experienced battlers and those with hunger to prove themselves. I can't see anyone buying out King Power right now so they need to be decisive and pragmatic - abandon their fantasies of a playing style 'identity' and get back the club's authentic identity of shrewd recruitment, hard work to raise standards and pragmatic, winning football played with passion and urgency.

    Luke: Every single capillary of Leicester City Football Club has been infiltrated by a culture of complacency over the last few years. It is very difficult to see this being rectified under the current leadership. King Power's position as owners is, and has been for some time now, untenable.

    Tom: Anxious now to see how spending rules will be applied to us in League One and how they will impact our future. No doubt we have been run terribly but it is a very bitter pill to swallow while clubs like us watch Chelsea and Manchester City continue to escape punishment.

  4. Rowett reacts to relegation-sealing draw with Hullpublished at 08:23 BST 22 April

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    Gary Rowett: 'I believed I could turn it around. I will hold myself accountable.'

    Leicester City manager Gary Rowett spoke to BBC Radio Leicester following the 2-2 draw with Hull City that condemned the Foxes to relegation to League One.

    "I'm incredibly frustrated. In the first half, our energy and drive didn't match the importance of the game," he said.

    "We still created some good moments and chances, but the fact that 18-year-old Divine Mukasa was trying to do everything himself showed that some of the others needed to step up a little bit more.

    "Second half was much better and if we had that same drive and energy and passion in some of the other games, maybe things would be different.

    "We should have won the game - we created lots of good chances. The game was symptomatic of a lot of games - we created a lot of chances and we don't take them and give away silly goals at the other end to give the opposition a lift.

    "We are all disappointed and the fans, who have paid their hard-earned money, will be incredibly disappointed to see their football club that 10 years ago won the Premier League [get relegated].

    "I know it's a rollercoaster being a fan at times, but I probably wouldn't expect that rollercoaster to be quite so extreme."

  5. What's next for relegated Leicester?published at 22:34 BST 21 April

    A dark blue banner with 'Have Your Say' written across in white lettering next to the Leicester City club badge

    A decade after lifting the Premier League title, Leicester City's 2-2 draw against Hull City has confirmed a second successive relegation to League One.

    What do the Foxes need to do to return to their glory days of 10 years ago?

    Will the club continue to decline in League One?

    Could this be the turning point the club needs?

    Let us know your thoughts and feelings here and check back Wednesday for a handful of your responses.

  6. Pick of the stats: Leicester City v Hull Citypublished at 12:23 BST 20 April

    Leicester City and Hull City club badgesImage source, Opta

    Leicester City must win to stand any chance of avoiding relegation to League One when they host play-off chasing Hull City on Tuesday night (kick-off 19:45 BST).

    The Foxes are eight points adrift of safety with three games remaining after a run of just one win in their past 17 matches (D7 L9).

    Even victory will not be enough for Gary Rowett's side to stay up if Charlton Athletic avoid defeat and both West Bromwich Albion and Blackburn Rovers win in midweek.

    The Tigers are sixth, two points ahead of seventh-placed Wrexham, and need a win to guarantee they keep their play-off hopes in their own hands, though Sergej Jakirovic's side have gone four games without victory (D3 L1).

    • Leicester have lost just one of their past six home league games against Hull (W3 D2), though it was the last time they hosted them in September 2023 (0-1).

    • Hull are looking to complete the league double over Leicester for the first time since 2007-08, when the Tigers were promoted to the top-flight for the first time.

    • Only Sheffield Wednesday have collected fewer points at home in the Championship in 2026 than Leicester City (7 – W2 D1 L6); indeed, their six defeats in their past eight are as many as in their previous 28 home matches in the second tier (W17 D5).

    • Hull have lost three of their past five away league games (W1 D1), as many as in their previous 14 matches on their travels (W9 D2).

    • Hull's Oliver McBurnie has four goal involvements across his previous eight away league starts (2 goals, 2 assists), netting most recently at former side Sheffield United.

  7. Leicester battle but lack quality in Pompey losspublished at 17:45 BST 18 April

    Dan George
    BBC Sport England at Fratton Park

    Leicester City's Bobby Decordova-Reid and Harry Winks prepare to restart the game Image source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Leicester conceded from a corner in the second half to lose at Portsmouth

    Despite the result, it was a gritty performance, at least in the first half, by the majority of the Leicester players in a game that lacked quality and started with both sides looking quite nervous.

    Towards the end, as desperation increased, there were moments that turned unsavoury, with Hamza Choudhury clashing with officials and the home fans, while some of the players were also involved in a verbal altercation with opposition players towards the end.

    Midfielder Harry Winks was also seen shouting at a fan after the game as he was boarding the team coach.

    On the pitch, Leicester had some chances to score and on another day could have taken an early lead when Patson Daka went down from Conor Shaughnessy's challenge that had the away fans calling for a spot-kick.

    Daka also had a great chance in the second half when Regan Poole underhit a backpass and if he could have knocked it past Nicolas Schmid then they could have been leaving the south coast with a point.

    Despite winning only two league games in 2026 and losing 18 times all season, the Foxes will need to win their remaining three games and hope other results go their way to stand any chance of staying up.

  8. Frustration for Rowett at 'soft set-piece goal'published at 17:31 BST 18 April

    Gary Rowett looks on from the sidelinesImage source, Shutterstock
    Image caption,

    If results go against Leicester in midweek their relegation could be confirmed.

    Leicester City boss Gary Rowett expressed his frustration at the way his side conceded in their defeat at Portsmouth.

    They went behind in the second half and ended up losing the game from a corner, scored by defender Ibane Bowat.

    That result leaves the Foxes in real danger of being relegated from the Championship and coupled with West Brom's victory at Preston they are now eight points from safety, with only three games remaining.

    "I'm disappointed with the way we conceded the goal to lose the game," Rowett told BBC Radio Leicester

    "If you played my last four interviews it would sound very similar to this one, which is deeply frustrating.

    "We've made it pretty clear to the players the importance of where we are in the season and what it means to a lot of people at this football club.

    "We got into some really good positions but without finding that final third quality, we have to show that and we can't keep not showing it in those moments.

    "We tweaked a few things after the break and the frustration is that we've conceded a soft set-piece goal. We chased the game reasonably well and we created some good moments but didn't take them.

    "That's been the story of this last 10-11 games for us."

    The Foxes host Hull City on Tuesday night at the King Power.

  9. 'We have to give Leicester fans more' - Rowettpublished at 16:00 BST 17 April

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    BBC East Midlands Today previews Leicester City's crucial trip to Championship relegation rivals Portsmouth.

    It is a must win game for a side that famously won the Premier League title 10 years ago, with defeat at Fratton Park putting the Foxes in danger of dropping into League One by Tuesday.

    Leicester boss Gary Rowett said his side "has to fight and have pride" as they attempt to prolong their battle for survival.

    Leicester City fans, as well as The Athletic's Rob Tanner, also share their thoughts on the club's astonishing fall in recent years.

    You can read more from Rowett and the club's battle to beat the drop here.

  10. Foxes know 'urgency' of relegation fight - Rowettpublished at 10:58 BST 17 April

    Media caption,

    Manager Gary Rowett says the "urgency" of Leicester City's fight to avoid relegation is clear to everyone.

    The Foxes are five points adrift of safety with four games remaining, and travel to relegation rivals Portsmouth on Saturday.

    If beaten at Fratton Park, Leicester City could be relegated as early as Tuesday if results elsewhere also go against them.

    "It still comes down to doing the right things in games to win games," he told BBC Radio Leicester.

    "We haven't done what we need to do, therefore we are in a position that we don't want to be in. The only thing we can do is concentrate on winning the next game or doing everything you can to win the next game.

    "We are running out of games, we know that and we understand the urgency of the situation.

    "If other teams around us are winning their games, then good for them because they are doing their job. We can't reply on other people."

    You can listen to more of what Rowett had to say to BBC Radio Leicester in the build-up to Saturday's crucial trip to Portsmouth on the latest edition of When You're Smiling podcast.

  11. Pick of the stats: Portsmouth v Leicester Citypublished at 12:42 BST 16 April

    Side-by-side of Portsmouth and Leicester City badges

    Portsmouth head into this clash having further boosted their Championship survival hopes with an impressive 2-0 win over Ipswich on Tuesday.

    That victory meant Pompey moved four points clear of the relegation zone and stretched their unbeaten run to four games with a chance of making it three wins on the bounce here.

    Second-bottom Leicester will be desperate for a win after last Saturday's 1-0 defeat by Swansea.

    No wins in five means the Foxes are five points from safety before their trip to Fratton Park, making this a massive game for Gary Rowett's side if they are to stand any chance of avoiding relegation.

    • Portsmouth are unbeaten in their past five league games against Leicester (W2 D3), with each of the last three all finishing 1-1.

    • This is Leicester's first away league game against Portsmouth since a 1-1 draw in November 2011. Their previous visit prior to that draw was a 6-1 defeat.

    • Portsmouth have lost their past two home league games on a Saturday, both by the same scoreline (1-0 v Sheffield United and Hull). They have not lost three in a row since April 2018, when they were in League One.

    • Leicester have taken just 13 points from 54 available in the Championship in 2026 (W2 D7 L9) – indeed, only bottom side Sheffield Wednesday (three) have picked up fewer points in the division since the turn of the year.

    • Leicester winger Abdul Fatawu has completed the most dribbles (108) in the Championship this season, while he has also been involved in more shots following a carry than any other player (76 – 54 shots, 22 chances created).

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  12. We're doomed but let's not forget the great escape - Foxes fans have their saypublished at 09:42 BST 15 April

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    Leicester City fans wage a huge flag at the King Power StadiumImage source, Getty Images

    BBC Sport asked Leicester City fans to share their opinions on the club's hopes of avoiding relegation to League One this season.

    The call went out to see if there were any 'glass half full' supporters out there and, while some remain hopeful, the overwhelming response is that there is little belief left.

    Below is a cross-section of the responses.

    Aryan: You know when you're walking back from the ground and no-one's even arguing any more? That's where we are. It's just a sigh and a shrug. You don't even get angry when we concede - you half expect it, like spilt drink on the walk home. Same mistakes, same faces staring at the floor, same claps to the fans that feel automatic. It doesn't feel unlucky, it feels deserved. And that's the worst part, because once a team feels like that, you don't fight relegation - you accept it.

    Paul: Until it's mathematically impossible of course there's always a chance. However, there's been no fight, no passion shown by the majority of our overpaid players all season so why would anything change now? In the words of the Scottish bloke from Dad's Army, we're doomed!

    John: When the 5,000-1 shot came off, we had a bunch of players who would run through brick walls to get a result. The only walls this lot would run through are those paper ones they have in Japan, and even that's only a 50/50 bet. One win in 16 games and now we've got to win at least three out of four (and probably all four) just to have a chance of staying up. Que sera, sera. Whatever will be will be. We're going to the Pi-rell-eee. Que sera, sera.

    Michael: The best way to describe our situation is to compare us to being caught in the coils of a large snake. We struggle every now and then and we think we may escape but deep down we know we are going to get swallowed!

    Mark: No hope left - this has been coming for a while. This will be the third relegation in four years. Questions need to be asked of the ownership and board - how did it go so wrong so quickly? Why are they breaking the financial rules and ending up with such a gutless, uninspiring squad? Why is there such a disconnect between the club and the now fractured, divided, apathetic fanbase? Do the ownership and board even realize how bad things are, how disillusioned a lot of fans are and how much worse things could get in a very short space of time? This is the club that inspired everyone to dream big, but the dream has rapidly become a nightmare with no end in sight.

    Gary: Will Leicester go down? Simply, yes. After seasons of bad management and incredibly poor player recruitment, it has come to this. However, the feeling is not so numbing as in 2008. Watching football for as long as I have, I am sure we can start again. Looking at Coventry, Sunderland etc. gives one some sort of hope that fortunes can change pretty quick. The pain of relegation on this occasion has been the manner of how it's been achieved. Accomplished players, many of them internationals, who have collectively lacked the professionalism to compete at such a level. One can excuse a poor side, because they are rightly not good enough. This Leicester team is a bad one in the true sense, and shameful compared to the contemporaries of 10 years ago.

    Padraig: Mismanagement at every level. Disastrous recruitment. Unmotivated players. Doesn't get much worse. New owner and complete clearout of executive committee and playing squad required. Scandalous ineptitude at every level. Relegation a certainty as no fight in these players.

    Richard: There are many issues at the club no doubt, but the team's Achilles heel this season has been the lack of a striker who can score. The forward line has been woeful and if you can't score you're not going to win very many matches. Why did the club not address this issue after Jamie Vardy left in the summer? And again they had another opening in the January window, but they failed to do anything, likely as a result of PSR. I doubt we'll win another game and I've resigned myself following the failure to beat Sheffield Wednesday and Swansea that we are going down. No doubt in my mind, sadly.

    Martin: It's not looking good, is it? We struggle to score at one end and we keep conceding at the other. The toxic atmosphere at the King Power doesn't help. There is no home advantage for us. I think we're more likely to pick up points away from home.

    Ben: Relegation FIGHT. The clue is in the name. Have you ever seen any fight from this club in the past four years? Third relegation in four years without an ounce of real fight shown!

    Ric: We've done the great escape before in 2014, why can't it happen again? Foxes never quit.

    Alex: Let's not forget the great escape - we won seven of our last nine games. If we can win three of our last four we can stay up. Plus a fox is far more slippery then a bull…

    Tom: I think we will beat Portsmouth and I believe we will stay up. Honest.

    Stephen: It grieves me so much to witness my team in so much trouble. I don't personally subscribe to the populous belief that "the players don't care or try". If that was really the case, how could they possibly hope to win a contract elsewhere? There's a lot of good players out there, all with dreams of a Premier League chance, and just because we've been there affords us no automatic rights for automatic promotion. I AM a 'cup half full' guy, and with the trickle of returning injuries, I do hope that we'll survive - but it IS squeaky bum time.

  13. Is there any hope left in Leicester's relegation battle?published at 14:29 BST 14 April

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    Jannik Vestergaard of Leicester City looks dejected after their defeat by SwanseaImage source, Getty Images

    Leicester City boss Gary Rowett says the the Foxes are down to one last roll of the dice to try and stay up.

    Pundits fear relegation is likely and fans seem to overwhelming echo those feelings.

    Out of curiosity, are there any 'glass half full' supporters out there still?

    Sure, it looks grim and Leicester could be a week away from relegation to League One, but surely where there is a mathematical chance of staying up there has to be hope... yes?

    Or is the club famous for the 5,000-1 Premier League title win now nailed on for their second relegation in as many years?

    Leicester fans can have your say here.

    Check back in the next day and we will have a selection of responses.