Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,630 members, 7,809,348 topics. Date: Friday, 26 April 2024 at 08:07 AM

The Greatest Underdog Story Of All Time...leicester Are Champions - Sports - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Sports / The Greatest Underdog Story Of All Time...leicester Are Champions (549 Views)

Rivers Angels Are Champions Of Nigeria Women Professional League Again (PHOTOS) / FRSC Abuja Are Champions Of Nationwide League One Super 8 Tournament / Chile Are Champions Again! (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

The Greatest Underdog Story Of All Time...leicester Are Champions by urbanidris(m): 10:35pm On May 02, 2016
Tottenham Hotspur's failure to defeat Chelsea at Stamford
Bridge hands the title to the Foxes, completing what is surely
sport's most dramatic story in history. The music starts; those
horns, the strings and that guitar riff. The gun barrel
sequence, thrilling cinema-goers since 1962, begins. The
assassin tracks 007 across the screen in the familiar manner
but the secret agent turns as only he can; he fires his gun and
fresh blood trickles down in front of the camera lens...
"The name's Vardy. Jamie Vardy."
Unlikely? You bet. But still, according to the bookmakers, it's
10 times more likely that Vardy now moves to Hollywood to
become the new James Bond than it was for Leicester City
to win the Premier League title at the start of the season.
Vardy, freshly crowned the Football Writers' Player of the
Year, is currently available at odds of 500/1 to play the
quintessential British action hero in the new franchise
release. Leicester at the start of the season were 5000/1 to
win the Premier League - by far, the longest odds offered on
any winning team or individual in the history of professional
sports.
Earlier this season it was revealed that Adrian Butchart - the
Hollywood screenwriter behind the Goal trilogy - wanted to
make a movie about Vardy's rapid rise from part-time
football to the Premier League where he scored in 11
consecutive games, marking a new record.
Vardy's journey might well deserve to be chronicled but the
collective Leicester City story has overtaken their striker's
one and surely deserves the Hollywood treatment. It's Rocky,
it's Seabiscuit, it's Cool Runnings if only the Jamaican
bobsled team had actually won the gold medal at the 1988
Winter Olympics.
Things like this, you don't expect to happen in real life. And
when they do, you laud them. You exhalt the participants who defied not only seemingly insurmountable odds but all
sporting logic. You do something about it so people forever
more will know about it.
Let’s say it again; 5000/1. Kim Kardashian is currently
available at 2000/1 to become the next president of the
United States.
League seasons don't generally end with a bang and that
sometimes serves to deaden the sensation of incoming title
winners. It's not a criticism to say that a league campaign
lacks something of the buzzer-beating drama of play-offs or
cup finals, merely an observation. Sergio Aguero's injury time
goal against Queens Park Rangers in 2012 to win the title for
Manchester City is as dramatic as it could possibly get.
There are 38 matches - that's a long old slog - and as such
there is usually plenty of time to become accustomed to one
team or another being crowned the league champions. Most
people felt when Tottenham Hotspur failed to beat West
Bromwich Albion last Monday night that the Fat Lady sang.
The 1-1 draw at White Hart Lane left Leicester seven points
clear with only nine to play for. Throw in the fact that Spurs
had to go to Chelsea and win - a result beyond their
capabilities since 1990 - and Leicester's title win felt as close
to inevitable as could be.
They didn't beat Manchester United at Old Trafford to clinch
the title for themselves but they left the sodden Manchester
turf with the air of champions nonetheless. They were
clapped off by the thousands of United fans who stuck
around to the final whistle. Their fans sang long and forcefully
into the evening - "Now you're gonna believe us, we're gonna
win the league." And they have.
Down the final stretch, teams have come unstuck before.
"The choke". Most famously, Newcastle botched their title bid in 1996 when it appeared to all and sundry they would win it.
Leicester went top on matchday 23 and every week since
they were expected to falter. But they haven't looked back.
There was a wobble over Christmas and the New Year. Now
they'll go back to where they belong, it was reasoned. The
natural order would be restored. Well, it was, but to a
contrary extent. They re-emerged from their slump to win
away at Spurs. Oh, what a vital win that looks like now.
Since beating Stoke on January 23, Leicester have lost only
one match - to Arsenal on February 14 - a game which many
predicted would signal the beginning of the end. Arsenal, with their proud dressing room selfies, looked to have the
momentum. Leicester, though, have won seven of 10
matches since then and have drawn the other three.
Champions' form.
We have had the chance, then, to grow used to the once
implausible idea of Leicester City becoming champions. Their titlle chances moved through all stages from impossible to unlikely, from improbable to inevitable.
Claudio Ranieri remarked earlier in the season that 40 points
and survival was the objective. How many league-winning
managers have had to say that? There's keeping expectations in check and there's presiding over the greatest sporting
outsider story of all time.
So, let's take a minute to appreciate what we are seeing.
Here we are after 36 matches of the 2015-16 English Premier
League season congratulating Leicester City for winning the
title. It is the richest prize in football contested by some of
the highest-paying sports teams on the planet. It is a closed
shop won by only five different teams since 1992. Only one of those could be classed as an outsider - Blackburn Rovers in 1995.
For the most part, it's been a case of let the richest team win.
Not now. Of course, the stars aligned for Leicester in the
sense that the big teams couldn't summon the consistency or the courage to do it this year. That takes nothing away from Leicester's unique achievements.
Let's recap.
Leicester City were only promoted in 2014 and still feature
many of the same players who came up from the
Championship. Wes Morgan, Riyad Mahrez and Vardy are just three; all were voted into the PFA Premier League team of the season. Mahrez, meanwhile, is the players' Player of the Year while Vardy, of course, took the Writers' award.
Leicester City, who miraculously escaped relegation last term having won seven of the last nine matches, are now
champions. Leicester City, who as recently as 2009 were in
the third tier, are kings of all 92 English league clubs.
Leicester City fans, who rallied to keep the club alive as
recently as 2002 when it fell into administration with debts of
£30m, are now planning their Champions League trips.
Leicester City, who hadn't finished in the top two since 1929,
have won the bloody league. And Ranieri, sacked by Greece
for losing to the Faroe Islands in his last job prior to this one,
is the man who oversaw it all.
Fans at the King Power Stadium on Saturday will rise to
salute their Premier League champions in their final home
game of the season against Everton. Leicester supporters
will not have to bite their nails or worry how Spurs will do
against Southampton a day later. The job's done, the
pressure's off.
They can sit back, relax and enjoy the show. And in a couple
years' time they can relive the story all over again when it
makes it onto the silver screen.
m.goal.com/x/en-ng/news/4071/premier-league/2016/05/02/23046992/the-greatest-underdog-story-of-all-time-leicester-are-bloody

Re: The Greatest Underdog Story Of All Time...leicester Are Champions by richol(m): 10:48pm On May 02, 2016
There's really one person that will read all of this....the writer grin

(1) (Reply)

. / Win Big With Goalrush Tips / Meet Manchester City's New Left-footed Attacking Midfielder: Leroy Sane.

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 68
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.