Claudio Ranieri Urges Leicester City to Target Champions League Spot and Maintain Consistency
Leicester City are on the brink of a historic Premier League title and Claudio Ranieri has urged them to maintain focus and target even a Champions League berth.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: April 09, 2016 06:14 am IST
Highlights
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Leicester City are on top of the Premier League table.
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They have a seven-point lead over Tottenham Hotspur
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Leicester City have a total of six games remaining in the Premier League.
Claudio Ranieri has called on Leicester to maintain the consistency that has made them favourites to be crowned Premier League champions and carried them to the brink of the Champions League. (Jamie Vardy Set to Become Football's Definitive Cindrella Story)
While a seven-point lead over second-placed Tottenham is not enough to persuade Ranieri to discuss Leicester's chances of winning an historic first top-flight title, the Foxes boss is now willing to contemplate a top four finish and a place in Europe's elite club competition.
They could seal a Champions League berth at Sunderland on Sunday and Ranieri highlighted the consistency in performances and results that his previously unheralded players have produced this term.
While the rest of the football world has been swept away by the Foxes' success, their manager has refused to join in and only this week, with a Europa League spot already secured, was he willing to look ahead to the next goal, with title talk still effectively off limits.
"Of course the Champions League would be fantastic," Ranieri said. "Can you imagine if next season Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Real Madrid and so on came here?
"That would be unbelievable for our fans and for everybody. It's a good experience. But now, it's about Sunderland."
A top-four place will be confirmed this weekend if Ranieri's side win at the Stadium of Light, Manchester United lose to Tottenham later on Sunday and West Ham drop points against Arsenal on Saturday.
That would come just a year after Leicester sat at the bottom of the table, seemingly doomed to relegation. While he refuses to concede his side are favourites despite some bookmakers already paying out on the title for a team who were 5,000-1 outsiders when the season began, Ranieri says they have given hope to other clubs and players outside the traditional heavyweights.
"I think now we have opened the heart to everybody, the little normal teams and the normal players," Ranieri said.
"How many of our players were playing in non-league or small leagues a few years ago?
"And that is good for football. It's good publicity for everybody."
Jeff Schlupp returns to the Leicester squad after injury but, maintaining the theme of consistency, Ranieri is expected to keep faith with the regular starting line-up that has recorded five 1-0 wins in six games.
Even Sunderland manager Sam Allardyce accept a Leicester defeat against his relegation-threatened side would now represent a significant shock result.
"Yes, it would be a surprise because they have (Riyad) Mahrez and (Jamie) Vardy, two of the top scorers in the Premier League, and they have clean sheets running right through the team," he said.
"They are a hugely well drilled, well organised, highly confident side to play against, to break down and to beat. You have to keep two of the best goalscorers in the league quiet
"They have has grown in confidence as the season has gone on. And, just as I think we have managed the pressure really well in the position we are in, they have managed the pressure magnificently up to now
"They have performed in every game when everyone has been saying 'is this the one where Leicester are going to slip up?' And they haven't done."
Allardyce has also been impressed by Leicester's ability to adapt to their new status as title contenders in recent weeks.
"Earlier, on in the season maybe teams did not show them respect, but they gained everyone's respect when their form continued on into December," he said.
"You can see the change of tactics that they have used. They were an extremely good counter attacking side who they could break away and score two or three goals.
"The more teams have respected them, the more they have had to change the way they play to break them down - and they have still continued to do it. You have to admire what they have achieved."