Explaining the Leicester City story to Americans

Blackleaf

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If Leicester City win the Premier League, it will be one of the most captivating British sport stories in years. But how does a football-mad Englishman living in the US explain its importance to Americans?

Explaining the Leicester City story to Americans


By Tom Geoghegan
BBC News, Washington
22 April 2016



If Leicester City win the Premier League, it will be one of the most captivating British sport stories in years. But how does a football-mad Englishman living in the US explain its importance to Americans?

"Lie-kester."

"No, Leicester."

"Less-ester?"

"No, Leicester. As in Lester."

"Oh. Why is it pronounced like that?"

Trying, and failing, to explain the mystery of English phonetics can be a daily task for Brits living in the US.

But when it comes to the Leicester City story, the how-to-say is not the only part that's lost in translation.

For those not yet aware, a small, unfashionable team based in England's East Midlands has somehow stormed the Premier League.

With four games left, Leicester City are five points ahead of anyone and, barring a collapse, on course for their first top-flight league title in their 132-year history.

This team was in the third tier of English football in 2009, and after climbing to the top division, they spent months last season in bottom place.

They weren't just out of fashion, they were a byword for failure.



In 2008, when they were relegated to the equivalent of the third division, the Guardian newspaper wrote:

The crowds still filed in, greeting each new season with optimism, but all too soon the realisation dawned that the cheers from the stands were for nothing - everything the club once embodied had been hollowed out from the inside, leaving only a desiccated blue and white husk.

As recently as 18 months ago, the chairman of Marseilles said he would be a "sucker" to take an interest in signing any Leicester City player.

And their Algerian star player Riyad Mahrez says he thought they were a rugby club when they first expressed an interest in him (Leicester's rugby club is Leicester Tigers).


Riyad Mahrez knows what and where Leicester is now

Should they win English football's most prestigious prize, some say the feat would be the most unlikely event in the history of team sports. Globally.

Bookmakers' odds on them winning the Premier League were 5,000 to one last summer. So it was five times more likely that Hugh Hefner would declare himself a virgin.

For a British sports fan living in the US, there's a natural inclination to share this footballing fairytale with friends. This, after all, is a story as much about the human spirit as it is about scoring goals.

Writing in The Players' Tribune, their Italian manager Claudio Ranieri said: "This is a small club that is showing the world what can be achieved through spirit and determination. Twenty-six players. Twenty-six different brains. But one heart."

But mention Leicester City to American friends who don't closely follow English football and a blank look is the stock response. Or worse, a nod and a smile. Even from sports fans.

It's understandable. I'd have the same reaction if someone tried to enthuse me about, say, the San Diego Padres being on a winning streak.

So how to put it in terms that my American friends would understand? Has there ever been an American Leicester?

For help, I turned to team mates of mine on the football pitches of Shaw, a neighbourhood of Washington where every Friday night, the replica shirts of Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal worn by locals give the scene a semi-English flavour.

"Oakland As in baseball?" suggests Drew, a tough-tackling Wisconsinite, referring to the famous Oakland Athletics team under Billy Beane who used analytics to overcome more glamorous opponents, winning 20 games in a row in 2002.


The film Moneyball brought the success of Oakland As to a global audience

Nice story but they never won the World Series, which is the equivalent of what Leicester could achieve in the weeks ahead.

Next?

"OK, how about Minnesota Twins?" says Joe, who supports West Ham.

"In 1991, they went from bottom of the American League West to winning 95 games on their way to a World Series title.

"And in gridiron in 1999, the St Louis Rams accomplished a similar feat, following a last-place finish in '98 with a championship of their own the very next year. "

Both good examples of an amazing one-season turnaround, but for teams with pedigree that's admirable, not historic.


Leicester in disguise? The Twins and the Rams

There are structural reasons why the Premier League / US sport comparisons are imperfect.

There is no promotion or relegation in NFL or baseball, so a smaller team can't rise up through the ranks like Leicester has, in a way that pitches David against Goliath.

And the NFL operates a more level playing field than the Premier League, through a salary cap and by giving the weaker teams first pick of the best college players.

In English football, the reverse happens - the rich clubs tighten their grip on success because a higher placed finish gets a bigger cash reward and therefore they buy the better players. It's a virtuous circle of success feeding money feeding success.

As a consequence, only five teams have won the Premier League since it was set up in 1992 (Manchester United 13 times; Chelsea 4 times; Arsenal 3 times; Manchester City twice; Blackburn Rovers once). In that period, 14 teams have won the Super Bowl.

That's what makes Leicester's potential feat on a comparative shoestring so remarkable, breaking into a rich elite. When they beat Manchester City recently, they overcame a squad that cost 15 times their own.

If Leicester was in the US, it might be...


Leicester, Leicestershire, left, and Wichita, Kansas, right

Wichita, Kansas
, similar population (roughly 375,000)
New Orleans, Louisiana
, similar diversity (Leicester is majority non-white, 55%)
Belle Fourche, South Dakota
, similar location (the geographical centre of England is Fenney Drayton in Leicestershire)

So if it hasn't happened in the US, what WOULD be the nearest thing to a Leicester triumph?

"The idea of Leicester winning the Premiership would be like the Cleveland Browns winning the Super Bowl - unthinkable, and seemingly impossible," says Jeff Maysh, a British writer and football fan who is based in Los Angeles.

"In history there have been a couple of comparable performances in college basketball, which is more akin to a team winning the FA Cup on a lucky run, rather than Leicester's dominance in the league."

Grant Wahl of Sports Illustrated thinks there's no direct comparison but the nearest would be if an AA (third division) baseball team managed to find its way - magically - to the major leagues and then won the World Series.


Jamie Vardy scored and was later sent off after receiving two yellow cards as Leicester City only managed a 2-2 draw with West Ham United on Sunday, but they are still five points clear at the top of the Premier League table with just four games remaining


He puts Leicester's success down to the implosion of several of the big English clubs like Chelsea, some astute Leicester signings and new manager Ranieri.

After a troubled summer when the last manager resigned after a Thai brothel scandal involving his son, the club turned to a man whose Greece side had just lost to the Faroe Islands. Suffice to say, hopes were not high.

Now Ranieri is a folk hero in the East Midlands and there's even talk of a knighthood from the Queen.

There is also an English king's hand in their success, if you believe in superstition. Ever since Richard III's body was dug up from a car park in Leicester and restored to the city's cathedral a year ago, their fortunes have turned around.


The city turned out for the reinterment of Richard

The Very Reverend David Monteith of Leicester Cathedral has said that the re-interment added to the sense of civic pride.

"History has been buried and now it's revealed in all kinds of different ways, not least in the [football] match."

The Leicester story is so rich that sex scandals in the Far East and royal influence from beyond the grave are mere footnotes.

But back in Shaw, my footballing team mates have drawn a blank in trying to give it a US context.

"There really isn't an American sports analogy to Leicester," says Andrew, a Liverpool fan from Baltimore. "It has to be the most stunning underdog story in sports history."

Perhaps the best comparison lies not in sport but in politics, he says.

"Everyone said Donald Trump would falter in December but here we are in April wondering how he's defied the odds."

If England and America truly are two nations divided by a common language then sporting talk is where the chasm is at its widest. The different vocabulary used by fans in the US and UK - not just England - when discussing the same sports seems as entrenched as ever.

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Explaining the Leicester City story to Americans - BBC News
 
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coldstream

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Oct 19, 2005
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I think this will go to the wire. Tottenham is in full charge, and Leicester has looked out of form in the last couple of games... and Vardy is suspended for a game. I'm pulling for Leicester like most of the BPL fans except for those of Hotspur.

My predictions is that Tottenham will go 3 wins and a draw in the remaining four games. Which means Leicester, who have a 5 point advantage now, will have to win at least twice, because they are far behind on goal differential. I don't know who i'd put my money on if i was a betting man.
 
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Blackleaf

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Leicester City 4-0 Swansea City

Mahrez (10'),
Ulloa (30', 60'),
Albrighton (85')


Rampant Leicester City - without their suspended star Jamie Vardy - have destroyed Swansea City in a match which has just finished to go eight points clear at the top of the table, with second-placed Tottenham Hotspur having a game in hand.

'We're gonna win the league!' sing the Leicester fans with plenty of justification.



Leicester's win means that if Tottenham Hotspur lose tomorrow night against West Bromwich Albion, Leicester City will remain eight points clear over Tottenham Hotspur at the top of the table with both teams having just three games to play with a maximum of nine points for each to pick up. You do the maths. A defeat for Spurs tomorrow would mean that Leicester would almost have the title in the bag.

However, Leicester City do have a much more difficult run-in than Tottenham, but you just can't see Leicester losing all of their remaining three games.













I think this will go to the wire. Tottenham is in full charge, and Leicester has looked out of form in the last couple of games... and Vardy is suspended for a game.

I like this that somebody has posted on the online commentary of the game on BBC Sport website:



Stuart Chaplin
StuiC

A little gift for all those people who said Leicester would struggle without Vardy. #bbcfootball #LCFCSWA

5:05 p.m. - 24 April 2016


 
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Blackleaf

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Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 West Bromwich Albion
Dawson 33 (og).....................................................Dawson 73


Craig Dawson is the fourth Premier League player this season to score an own goal and a goal in the same match

Leicester City are on the brink of their first-ever league title after second placed Tottenham Hotspur could only manage a 1-1 draw with West Bromwich Albion at White Hart Lane last night.

Spurs were leading for 40 minutes after West Brom defender Craig Dawson bundled Christian Eriksen's teasing cross into his own net on 33 minutes.

But, after 73 minutes, he made amends by heading in Craig Gardner's corner from six yards.

The result means that if Leicester City beat record twenty times league title winners Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday, they will win their first-ever league title.


The Premier League title race has been delicately balanced - but the pendulum has swung even further in Leicester's direction after Spurs' draw


Tottenham Hotspur 1-1 West Bromwich Albion - BBC Sport
 

Blackleaf

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Various landmarks around Leicester are turning blue as the city's football club gets ever closer to winning its first ever league title.

The Foxes - who narrowly avoided relegation last season and were 5,000-1 outsiders at the start of this season - will achieve that incredible feat if they beat twenty-times title winners Manchester United at Old Trafford tomorrow.

Leicester turns blue in support of hometown Foxes


29 April 2016
BBC Sport


New Walk Museum is one of dozens of landmarks in the city that are "turning blue" in support of the team, which started the campaign as 5,000-1 outsiders for the title

Landmarks, fans and even sausages are turning blue in Leicester as its football team get closer to winning an unexpected Premier League title.

Leicester City Football Club - known as the Foxes - are just one win away from cinching the title.

Last season the team was fighting relegation from England's top flight.

But the club is seven points ahead of second-placed Tottenham and needs only three points from three games to be certain of finishing top.

More than 100 businesses, schools and organisations, including BBC Radio Leicester, are supporting the "Backing the Blues" campaign.


This Foxes fan decided not to "mask" his feelings


Country Fayre butchers in Leicester Market produced a special blue sausage in honour of the team - no reviews as yet


The city's mayor, Peter Soulsby, has thrown his support behind the team by bathing the town hall in blue


Graffiti artist Richard Wilson turned up in Leicester looking for a wall to paint a tribute to manager Claudio Ranieri


Radio Leicester reporter Helen McCarthy (in funny hat) interviews fans sitting in a giant blue chair



Bus driver Alex Vernon spent the day taking passengers from A to B dressed in his Leicester City colours


Leicester turns blue in support of hometown Foxes - BBC News




Unnecessary apostrophes

We're gonna win the league! Leicester City fans shake Claudio Ranieri's hand as the sporting world holds its breath for tomorrow's 5,000-1 title bid

Supporters turn the city's landmarks and other public buildings blue as part of the #backingtheblues campaign

The Foxes know a win against Manchester United tomorrow will secure the side their first ever Premier League title

Should Leicester City pull off the unthinkable, it will rank as one of the greatest achievements in the sport's history

Win would even see former player Gary Lineker present episode of next season's Match of the Day in his underwear


By Matt Hunter And Alexander Robertson For Mailonline
30 April 2016
Daily Mail

Leicester City fans are preparing to party all night tomorrow as they head to Old Trafford for a match which will see them crowned Premier League champions if they win.

Back in August bookmakers had The Foxes at 5,000-1 to be champions after last season's lowly 14th placed finish.

The club has never won the top-flight league in English football in their 132-year history, although they have won the second tier seven times.

The Foxes now sit seven points clear at the top of the league with three games to play and know a win against Manchester United tomorrow will secure the title.

Fans dressed up in the team's blue and white colours, including wigs, today to greet the team and manager Claudio Ranieri after they finished training.

A fan greets Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri dressed with a mad blue and white-coloured wig as he leaves training earlier today

Leicester winger, Riyad Mahrez, signs autographs on fans' club shirts as he leaves training in preparation for tomorrow's crunch match

Sir Peter Soulsby, Mayor of Leicester, prepares to hang a 10ft Leicester City FC scarf around the Liberty Statue in the centre of the city

Artist Richard Wilson spray paints a mural of Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri as the Italian's team looks to make history on Sunday

A Foxiccino and Vardyccino are pictured with staff from Bru Coffee shop, as they show their support for the team with facemasks

Leicester market, including Gary Lineker's family stall, is adorned with blue as the city's football club looks to win English football's big prize at the weekend

Should the Foxes pull off the unthinkable, it will rank as one of the greatest achievements in the sport's history.
A title win would even see former Leicester player and fan Gary Lineker present the first episode of next season's Match of the Day in his underwear, after getting carried away and promising to do so should they claim the title in a tweet sent out after the Foxes beat Chelsea in December.

Supporters have been encouraged to wear shirts and scarves as part of the #backingtheblues campaign which has also seen public buildings and landmarks turned blue.

Among the efforts made to show support was a mural which was painted on the grounds of the University of Leicester and a conga line formed to cheer on the side.

Karen Bignold was in the crowd, sporting a Foxes shirt with European Tour 2016/17 written underneath.

Ms Bignold, a fan since 1989, said she was 'very very nervous' ahead of the weekend. She said: 'I think we'll lose to Manchester United on Sunday, I'm a born pessimist.

'I'm not going to put a jinx on it. It's been a fabulous season, though. Just watching us carve Manchester City apart, carve the multimillion-pound players, was the best part for me.'

Alan Geary, who said he had been a Leicester fan 'since the beginning of the season', said he expects Claudio Ranieri's team to win 1-0 at Old Trafford and lift the title.

He said: 'It's been amazing, a phenomenal season really.

'Just seeing something that you never thought you would ever see. Your local team just getting into the Champions League, it's unpredictable, it's unbelievable.'

MEET LITTLE CLAUDIO: DIE-HARD LEICESTER CITY FANS PAY THE ULTIMATE TRIBUTE TO SIDE'S ITALIAN MAESTRO

It is fair to say that Leicester City fans have been fawning over manager Claudio Ranieri this season as he leads to them to most unlikely of title challenges in years.

But it is fair to say that one couple from the city has gone further than most in proving their admiration for the affable Italian, by naming their newborn after him.

Foxes fans Lindsay and Jake Hill have named their newborn son Daniel George Claudio Hill as a pointed reminder of the memorable year in which the little one was born.

The youngster was born on Friday at 9.20am at Leicester Royal Infirmary, weighing 5lb 7oz.

Parents Lindsay Hill and Jake Hill have named their son Daniel George Claudio Hill in tribute to the affable manager of Leicester City

A blue battered sausage and chips pictured at The Blaby Chippy during a city-wide Backing the Blues campaign in support of Leicester City

Ela Godek and Teresa Wall of Teresa's Salads were two of hundreds of city dwellers to show their support during the blue campaign

Former Leicester City player Steve Walsh pictured with Walkers 'special pies', featuring crusts with the team's logo and player numbers

A new beer called 'Crowning Glory' which has been produced by Everards Brewery in Leicester to celebrate the success of the city's football team

A somewhat premature t-shirt championing Leicester City as Premier League Champions 2016 on sale in JC Sports in Leicester

Adam Kenna, 32, said: 'I'm really confident about this weekend. We're going to go into it with no pressure at all.
'I just think they'll wrap it up, where better place to win it than Old Trafford?

'The fans have been through thick and thin, none of us could ever have imagined anything like this. We deserve this.'

Bunting with the club crest flutters from poles in the main shopping thoroughfares and shop windows are adorned with huge Leicester flags and blue and white balloons.

'It's had a massive impact, everyone's talking about it whether you're a fan or not,' said Ian Derry, 51, who went to his first game in 1969.

In a league dominated for the last 25 years by a select few rich, glamour clubs such as Man Utd, Chelsea and Arsenal, neutrals and supporters from other clubs are also rooting for Leicester, said shop-worker Derry.

'The great escape surprised us all and then to push on to the top and possibly, possibly win it, is unbelievable. All the planets just seem to have aligned.'




Sean Jeynes of W Archer and Son butchers pictured left with the Ranieri Sausages and Leighton Turner, landlord at the Steamin Billy Parcel Yard pub pulls a pint of 'Vardy's Volley'


A Leicester City pork pie at Walkers Pie in Leicester. Among the efforts made to show support was a mural which was painted on the grounds of the University of Leicester and a conga line formed to cheer on the side

Supporters have been encouraged to wear shirts and scarves as part of the £backingtheblues campaign which has also seen public buildings and landmarks turn blue

The Foxes sit seven points clear at the top of the league with three games to play and know a win against Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday will secure the title

 
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Blackleaf

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Soccer.


It's a sport, right?

Football is the most popular and greatest sport in the world and the Leicester City story is causing much interest amongst the world's hundreds of millions of football fans.

With Juventus winning the Italian title for something like the fifth season on the trot, Leicester City's unpredictable success shows how much more interesting the Premier League is compared to Serie A and other European leagues.

Even if Leicester City lose tomorrow afternoon against Manchester United to not clinch the title tomorrow, they'll win it anyway on Monday night should Tottenham Hotspur lose against Chelsea in the London derby then.
 

Blackleaf

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Just over an hour until Manchester United vs Leicester City at Old Trafford.

If Leicester City win at the world famous home of the record twenty-time English title winners, they will win the title for the first time ever.

When these two sides met at the King Power Stadium on 28th November, it finished 1-1.

However, the last time Leicester City beat Manchester United at Old Trafford was 31st January 1998.

Even if Leicester City lose today, though, they will win the title tomorrow night instead should Chelsea beat Tottenham Hotspur.


Leicester City owner and chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha arrives for the game on Sunday


Leicester City fans arrive for the Barclays Premier League match at Old Trafford


Fans outside the King Power Stadium this morning prior to leaving for Manchester


Fans Shaun and Adam Grant before the Barclays Premier League match at Old Trafford


A Leicester City fan poses outside the ground prior to the Barclays Premier League match
 

Ludlow

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It should be called kick ball like the game we played in grammar school. Although kick ball was more fun because there was more scoring . Never could watch soccer for any length of time because it is simply too damn boring. I feel the same way about Hockey. Baseball was fun to play as a kid but watching baseball is also kind of boring . I guess I'm burned out on sports any more as it has become highly over rated. My favorite thing to watch and do any more, would be fishing. Nothing like feeling a good size fish fighting on your line in a beautiful river or lake.
 

Blackleaf

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It's half time and it's 1-1. It was a great start for Manchester United and Martial put them in front after just eight minutes. However, captain Wes Morgan equalised for Leicester City after 17 minutes.

This match is being watched all over the world. A tweet being shown on BBC Sport website says that everybody in the tweeter's hotel in Costa Rica is watching it, and another shows a large crowd in Bangkok watching it on a big screen, including a Thai Manchester United fan and a Thai Leicester City fan standing together.

Someone Tweeting that they are watching the match on Easter Island.

Leicester City must wait to be crowned champions of England for first time

Manchester United 1-1 Leicester City

Martial 8...................................................Morgan 17

At Old Trafford


Leicester's goalscorer Wes Morgan was in this season's PFA team of the year

Leicester city will have to wait at least another day to win their first ever league title.

United led after just eight minutes when Anthony Martial converted Antonio Valencia's cross.

But Leicester - who have not beaten Manchester United at Old Trafford since January 1998 - were level nine minutes later when defender and captain Wes Morgan headed home a free-kick from Danny Drinkwater.

Leicester finished the game with ten men after Danny Drinkwater was sent off a few minutes from the end for receiving a second yellow card after he hauled down United's Memphis Depay on the edge of the Leicester penalty area. It looks like United were extremely unlucky not to be awarded a penalty as the foul looked to be just inside the area.



If second-placed Tottenham Hotspur draw or lose against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge tomorrow night, then Leicester will be crowned champions.

Otherwise, Claudio Ranieri's side - 5,000-1 outsiders at the start of the season - will have the chance to win the title in front of their own fans when they play Everton next Saturday (17:30 BST).

The streets of Leicester

Man Utd 1-1 Leicester



Iain Macintosh

iainmacintosh

Yeah, so if you're worried about a sense of anti climax in Leicester, it's okay. People are coping.

3:05 p.m. - 1 May 2016

***********************************************


Man Utd 1-1 Leicester

Posted at
16:04


Reuters

"We're gonna win the league! And now you're gonna believe us!" sing the Leicester fans still packed inside Old Trafford.

Everyone does believe you guys...


**************************************************

Breakfast of champions?



David Espinosa
davidg1972

Watching from #Titletown, Wisconsin..not 100% sure if I'm more excited about the match or brekkie. #bbcfootball

2:37 p.m. - 1 May 2016

********************************

Bouncing in Bangkok



Thanyarat Doksone
8td

#MUFCvLEI Leicester fans in Bangkok are waiting eagerly for the next goal to come. #BBCfootball

2:27 p.m. - 1 May 2016

*******************************************

Man Utd 1-1 Leicester



Thanyarat Doksone
8td

#ManUtd 1-1 #LCFC These two fans can still be friends. #Bangkok #BBCfootball

1:46 p.m. - 1 May 2016




http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/live/football/35718307
 
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Johnnny

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Jun 8, 2007
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Whats there to explain? It's soccer.... North Americans don't care for a bunch of puffs getting takin off the field on a stretcher because they stubbed their toe. We like watching athletes not actor's when we view sports