Brentford FC
·29 November 2024
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Yahoo sportsBrentford FC
·29 November 2024
Leicester were beaten 2-1 by Chelsea last Saturday, and parted company with manager Steve Cooper the following day.
Cooper was dismissed with the Foxes 16th in the Premier League table after 12 games.
It goes without saying that Leicester City have been on a wild ride over the last eight years.
From winning the Premier League as a 5000/1 shot in 2016, to playing in the Champions League, lifting the FA Cup for the first time, reaching the semi-final of the Conference League, then being relegated to the Championship and bouncing back at the first time of asking, there have rarely been any quiet moments at all.
Under Enzo Maresca last term, the Foxes had the most incredible season.
They won 13 of their first 14 Championship games, pushed Chelsea all the way in the FA Cup quarter-final and Jamie Vardy rolled back the years to return to his potent best to help the cause with 18 league goals.
Leicester looked on course to shatter Reading’s 106-point record for a long time, too, but seven defeats in the last 13 put paid to that dream and they had to settle for 97.
Their squad was, admittedly, too good for the second tier - as was Maresca, who was poached by Chelsea as Mauricio Pochettino’s replacement less than a month after the final day of the Championship season.
Steve Cooper’s six-month spell out of work came to an end when he was handed a three-year deal to replace Maresca at the King Power Stadium.
“His vision for the team, including his ability to develop players and implement a dynamic style of play, is very much aligned with our aspirations for the club," said Leicester chair Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha.
"As a leader, he has the ability to build on the strong relationship that has been forged between our fans and our team, strengthening a bond that will be vital to us re-establishing the club in the Premier League."
Many have suggested the summer transfer window hindered the Welshman from the start. Leicester spent £82.2 million, but mostly on young players with potential.
Leicester fell behind in five of their first six Premier League games and took three points along the way, but then won against Bournemouth and Southampton either side of the October international break, which had them looking upwards for the first time.
After the game at St Mary’s, where the Foxes came from 2-0 down to beat Saints 3-2, Cooper said: “We've gone back-to-back and we've got to take everything out of the game today, learn, continue to improve, continue to strive and we'll continue to get better as well."
Sadly for him, that was not the case - in the short-term at least. Leicester went four without a win after that and, after the latest result – a 2-1 loss to Maresca’s Chelsea – Cooper was sacked after five months in the job and just 14 competitive games.
Jordan Blackwell, Leicester City correspondent for Leicestershire Live, explains how the Foxes are likely to set up on Saturday in the wake of manager Steve Cooper’s dismissal.
“I think it will be too soon for too many changes to be made, so I think it will be similar, but there may be a slight reversion towards how they played under Maresca last season,” Blackwell told us earlier this week.
“The feeling was that, coming into the Premier League, they could not play that possession-dominant style, but I think the players would quite like to play that way and I think they will give that a go against Brentford.
“They will try to keep more of the ball than they have done in previous games, and I think they will not seek long balls as much as they perhaps have done in recent weeks.
“Stephy Mavididi will probably come into the side and they will get their talented attacking players on the ball as often as possible. Jannik Vestergaard might come back into the team, too, as he is their best ball-playing defender.
“I think that will be the focus, because if a new manager comes in, it is going to be with not a lot of time to work with the squad, but the one thing they can do is just try and keep the ball a little bit better because that has been part of their downfall; the reason they have conceded so many shots is because they are just not keeping the ball well enough.”
Blackwell added: “Looking at the stats at the weekend, in the first 25 minutes they had one touch of the ball in Chelsea's half, so they are just putting themselves under pressure.
“If they can get players in the team that can keep the ball really well, that should help them at least a little bit.”
Last Premier League starting XI v Chelsea (4-2-3-1): Hermansen; Justin, Faes, Okoli, Kristiansen; Soumaré, Winks; McAteer, Ndidi, El Khannous; Vardy
Brentford captain Christian Nørgaard has avoided a ban after the club successfully appealed his red card in Saturday’s goalless draw with Everton in the Premier League.
Nørgaard was shown a straight red card for a foul on Toffees goalkeeper Jordan Pickford and would have faced a three-match suspension for serious foul play.
However, this decision has been overturned and the midfielder will now be available for the Bees’ forthcoming fixtures against Leicester City, Aston Villa and Newcastle United.
Referee: Michael Oliver
Assistants: Stuart Burt and James Mainwaring
Fourth official: Darren Bond
VAR: Stuart Attwell
Michael Oliver was one of six English officials to oversee matches at the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
Oliver officiated three matches in Qatar, including the quarter-final between Croatia and Brazil.
The Northumberland-born referee’s most recent Brentford assignment was the Bees’ 4-1 defeat to Liverpool in February this year.
Oliver refereed 41 games last season, showing 153 yellow cards and six reds.
Mathias Jensen scored for the fourth time in five home games to earn Brentford a point against Leicester City.
The midfielder’s deflected effort gave the Bees a deserved lead at the end of an entertaining opening 45 minutes at Gtech Community Stadium.
Harvey Barnes’ neat finish drew the Foxes level seven minutes after the restart and Brendan Rodgers’ side went onto enjoy the better of the second half without testing David Raya on his 150th appearance for Brentford.
Shandon Baptiste was sent off for two late bookings, but Brentford saw out the final moments with 10 players.