Tag: Leicester

  • WILFRED NDIDI: How Nduka Ugbade made me a toughie

    AT club and country, Leicester and Nigeria defensive midfielder Wilfred Ndidi has put in more game time than most of his teammates. In the Premier League, he has been nominated as the most successful tackler raking 138 successful tackles ahead of Idrissa Gueye and N’Golo Kante.

    In 2018, he was Leicester’s best young player and in the whole of Europe ranked the best young central midfielder. The prestigious France Football further named him among Africa Team of the Year. The list has Mohamed Salah and Mane Sadio among the Top 11.

    His consistency and toughness has earned him repeated invitations to the Super Eagles, and was part of every minute of the green and white World Cup campaign in Russia.

    At Leicester, while coaches have come and gone, Ndidi has remained a standing force in the middle of the pack. He is only absent when carded or injured.

    What Ndidi lacks in size and maturity (He is only 22), he has aplenty in inner strength and right attitude.

    “I never knew I could be called upon to be the strongman of any team because I have always been a small guy. In my youth club, I used to play as a defender but I was tiny and felt I needed to build up muscle,” he said of his budding teenage years.

    Two people, he said, influenced his career greatly and have made a difference in how he has turned out and what he has accomplished in about four years of professional football. He used to see himself as a lily-livered tiny footballer, but all that changed when he met ex-international and captain of Nigeria’s 1985 U16 team, Uduka Ugbade.

    It was Ugbade who fired him up and remodelled him into a man of steel.

    His childhood coach, who he affectionately called Coach Paulo throughout the online interview, he said, he owes his transformation and toughness to.

    “Coach Paulo is solely responsible for my toughness. He used to coach my youth team in the Army Barracks in Lagos when I was a teenager. He was such a hard worker that if you are not tough, you will run away. But he used to tell us that we would thank him later. Many of my mates ran away, but he would take some of us aside and tell us that what we needed was to be mentally tough and that size does not matter.”

    The skinny Ndidi almost quit. “At a point, I was tired and felt I could not go on given the tough training with him (Ugbade). It wasn’t normal training, he would push us beyond limit. He would ask us to keep running even when you were tired. ‘Just keep going’. There would be three sessions a day: morning, afternoon and evening. Most of the other players didn’t come because they were scared and couldn’t cope. But he kept pushing me and pushing me, saying that I should not worry about my age and that in football you could beat anybody.”

    That work ethic, he added, has helped him tremendously. “I am not afraid of any training regimen. I find the hardest of training comfortable and push more than any other player and that has helped me tremendously. I find that managers also love those who work hard in training.”

    The second man in his life he met at Leicester. N’Golo Kante. The diminutive strongman influenced Leicester’s English Premiership win and France’s World Cup victory in Russia.

    “When I transferred to Leicester, I was to understudy Kante. I had never worked with a stronger player and he taught me many things about defensive midfield. I am a keen learner and he impacted the mental belief in me that I could better his performance if I keep my head down. Kante is the man.”

    Ndidi returned to Nigeria last week for the Nations Cup final qualifying match against Seychelles and international friendly against Egypt and, again, he did not disappoint.

    “It’s great to play for the country again. We have a youthful team that share similar sentiment. We all want to play out our hearts for fatherland. That is what we need to do well,” added Ndidi.

    Meanwhile, Ndidi has spoken to TAIWO ALIMI on his humble beginning, his childhood team, Genk, English Premiership and playing for Nigeria.

    GROWING UP

    My father is a soldier, so I grew up in the military barracks. My father was always away on military mission and in his absence, I found football. Though he did not like me playing football whenever he was around; he was strict. He would tell me that football cannot take the place of education. I’m happy when he was away because I had ample time to play football. He never wanted me to play football. He wanted to make sure I was at school. Whenever he went anywhere I was, like: ‘Right, I’m going to play.’

    Along the way, Coach Ugbade saw me and took interest in me and I became one of his favourite students. By the time Ugbade was through with me and I got into Nath Boys’ Academy, I was ready for the world. I played many games for Nath Boys and due to my upbringing I always put my all in every matches, be it friendly or competition.

    Nath Boys also helped me grow into a team player. We knew ourselves from home, we grew up together; we had the opportunity to go to school together and we won the Academy league. It was amazing, and I keep in touch with my teammates and the chairman still. Most of the guys I played with are in the Nigerian league now. I always look out for what the fixtures are coming up for Nath Boys and their results. Unfortunately, I don’t get the chance to go back a lot now to see the new generation of kids coming through because of how busy our schedule is in England.

    In one of those competitions, a foreign scout was around and that was how I was invited for trial with Genk in Belgium. I played well and from the back initiated a goal, which impressed the foreign scout.

    Ugbade also took me to the Nigeria U17 team and that must have impressed Genk that offered me a contract when I was 17 and formalised it as soon as I turned 18.

    GENK

    Genk was a bit tough. I came to the club under a coach that wanted result from me quickly and he was not patient about it. I received the drill quite well, but sometimes I was under extreme pressure to deliver and that led to making mistakes.

    But I had help from the trainers and I soon realised I didn’t have to become a new player because I was playing in a new position, I didn’t have to copy anyone else.  That helped me realise I just needed to play my own way and how I feel comfortable.

    But that soon passed and I began to show what I am capable of doing and Leicester came for me. All the while, I did not know that big clubs where monitoring my progress, and that was how Leicester came for me.

    I was to understudy Kante. I had never worked with a stronger player and he taught me many things about defensive midfield. I am a keen learner and he impacted the mental belief in me that I could better his performance if I keep my head down. Kante is the man.

    Claudio Ranieri had done great for the team and I was beginning to enjoy his great experience when he was sacked. That was a big shock to many of us. Then, Craig Shakespeare stepped in. He’s a great coach too. He has a way of calming players and at the same time getting the best out of them. He’s a great tactician too.

    I also met country-mate Ahmed Musa here and that helped me to quickly settle down. Musa helped me a lot. He called me and advised me to come to England and helped me to settle in nicely when I eventually arrived in England. He made me feel at home. I remember when he was not making the team, he would offer to take me to the airport. He is such a great player and friend.

    THE VAN VLIERDENS

    The Van Vlierdens took me in when I first arrived Belgium and I won’t forget the impact they made in my life. They made the transition from Nigeria to Belgium so good that I did not feel that I was missing family life. In-fact it was difficult for me leaving Belgium because they were family and have remained my family even till date.

    I have always enjoyed a family setting and that is one of the reasons that I play well. It keeps me stable and focused. At Nath Boys, we were family and real close to Genk and my new family in Belgium.

    I had same mentality when I got to Leicester and that I had Ahmed helped me a lot. In no time, I had found another close-knit family and that helped me enjoy my game and life in England. They are always there for me and I love to do things for them too. It makes me to lock down my focus on football and what I need to do on the pitch knowing that this is my family. It is one of the things that keep me going.

    SUPER EAGLES

    It’s great to play for the country again. We have a youthful team and share similar sentiment to give our all for fatherland. That is what we need to do well. I can’t explain how proud I am to wear the colours of Nigeria. Every player wants to put on the shirt of their country, so many people look for this opportunity – the entire population in Nigeria would love to be able to do this. I couldn’t believe I would be at the World Cup for my nation. It’s amazing. The welcome we got in Russia was amazing. We were given a rousing welcome and that is special. We had a good tournament. And it’s not just about going to participate; it’s not about being happy that we are part of the World Cup. It is about showing that we can hold our shoulder high among other countries.

    THE PREMIERSHIP HONOURS

    I’m not playing for the hype, though it feels good to know that I am doing well for my club. I’ve always wanted to put up my best for team and country and so I ignore the hype and everything people say about me – that’s not important. Doing my job well is important. It’s a great thing that we’re doing well, because there are so many good European players, so as an African, you have to do extra. The English Premier League is one of the most competitive in the world and the destination of many soccer stars. In Africa, all youngsters want to play here and I’m happy that we are not doing badly. The continent is well represented and we have accomplished much. I love especially what Salah is doing here and it gives the rest of us the confidence to want to do more. It is all for the team. If the team is doing good, it means I’m doing a good job. I love to enjoy the game and play more for the team. I just flow with the tide and do not want to put too much pressure on myself.

  • Action packed 10 minutes for Iheanacho as Leicester fall 4-3

     

    Super Eagles forward Kelechi Iheanacho was as usual a late substitute for Leicester City on Saturday, playing for just 10 minutes which was however action packed.

    Iheanacho who came in as replacement for Danny Simpson in the 83rd minute had hardly played for five minutes when he got a bruised mouth from a header and goal attempt by teammate who had jumped to head the ball with intent to score but ended up heading Iheanacho’s jaw with produced instant bleeding.

    The clash did not however stop the Nigerian from continuing the match. He produced some shots in Leicester desperate last minutes move to remedy the situation after rampaging Wolves remained resolute in the seven goal thriller.

    Wolves hatrick hero Diogo Jota finally delivered the heart breaking master stroke within the three minutes of added time to hand Wolves a well-deserved 4-3 victory.

    It was equally a busy day for Leicester regular Wilfred Ndidi who worked round the clock but ended up bagging a yellow in the 58th minutes.

    Wolves had shot into the lead at the Molineux Stadium with Diogo Jota registering the first goal in the 4th minute Ryan Bennett increased the tally in the 12th minute before Demarai Gray reduced the tally.

    An own goal by Conor Coady put the score line at 2-2 after which the game turned into a ding-dong affair hitting the  3-3 goal mark  before Diogo Jota delivered the master stroke.

     

     

     

     

  • Ndidi scores in Leicester home defeat

    Nigeria international Wilfred Ndidi scored a 58th minute goal for Leicester Saturday but it did not prevent the foxes from losing at home to visiting Southampton.

    The visitors had shot into the lead as early as the 11th minute of the game as Ward-Prowse converted a penalty for the visitors. Shane Long increased the tally for Southampton just before the end of the first 45 minutes.

    Nidid’s goal raised hope for Leicester fans who remained optimistic that the team could consolidate afterwards and even pull a victory, but that was not to be as the Saints held their ground while defending their lead tenaciously despite the foxes dominance with 57% to 43% possession ratio.

    The day did not fair any better for Arsenal forward Alex Iwobi who saw 90 minutes action against West Ham. West Ham scored the only goal of the match in the 48th minutes thanks to Declan Rice.

    It was Arsenal who started the stronger, with Alexandre Lacazette forcing a 13th-minute save out of Lukasz Fabianski with a low shot, after his driving run from Alex Iwobi’s pass had taken him beyond the penalty spot.

    Iwobi and his teammate though hard working with intent to carry the day failed on several occasions to clear from a set piece and were made to pay as Rice showed admirable technique and composure to bend the ball beyond Leno from 15 yards out, Nasri registering the assist on his first Premier League appearance since August 2016.

    Fourteen-goal top-scorer Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang came to close to cancelling the goal with strike that unfortunately went above the bar.

    Leicester have a trip to Wolves next Saturday while Southampton play Derby County in their FA Cup third-round replay on Wednesday before hosting Everton on Saturday.

  • Arsenal, Leicester table N17b for Chukwueze

    Villarreal of Spain winger, Samuel Chukwueze has gained another heavy transfer boost to his growing value, as sports247.ng learnt he is now on the radars of Arsenal and Leicester City for a fee of N17b (£36m).

    So soon after reports emerged that former La Liga champions, Atletico Madrid are also interested in snatching Chukwueze from Villarreal, the Chile 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup revelation is now wanted in England.

    Though Chukwueze poured cold water at the weekend in the transfer link with Atletico, it is left to be seen what his reaction will be for the double focus coming his way from the English Premier League.

    Incidentally, both Leicester and Arsenal have very strong Nigerian connections, which could be instrumental in the possibility of the youngster opting out of Villarreal in the summer.

    Arsenal Nigerian connections, which began with Nwankwo Kanu in 1997, continue with Alex Iwobi on their cards, plus other youngsters in their youth teams, across all age-grade levels.

    Similarly, Leicester, who once had the duo of Yakubu Aiyegbeni and Ahmed Musa, still have Wilfred Onyinyen Ndidi and Kelechi Iheanacho in their main squad as well as some Nigerian-born kids in the youth squad.

    Dramatically, though, Arsenal turned down the opportunity of getting Chukwueze for a cheaper fee soon after the Cadet Mundial in 2015.

    Back then, Arsenal failed to reach an agreement with Chukwueze’s agent on a £4m deal, as they preferred 2015 Eaglets’ skipper, Kelechi Nwakali.

    Chukwueze is now rated £36m and The Gunners have joined the chase for the Diamond Academy product, who has four goals in 13 matches across all competitions for Villarreal this season.

    The 19-year-old, who debuted for the Super Eagles in a friendly match against Uganda in Asaba, was promoted to Villarreal’s main team in the summer, after impressive performances with their Segunda Liga squad.

    He could be on his way to Emirates Stadium in 2019, as Arsenal are determined to make up for what they missed in 2015.

    Where they missed out back then, though, The Gunners are back in the picture, as they aim to right all wrongs, but Leicester are also lurking.

  • Vardy earns Leicester narrow win at Chelsea

    Jamie Vardy’s well-taken breakaway goal helped Leicester to earn a 1-0 win at Chelsea on Saturday to ease the pressure on coach Claude Puel.

    The victory also inflicted on the hosts their first home English Premier League defeat of the season.

    The English striker’s goal in the 51st minute earned the visitors only their second win in six league matches.

    They also put up a determined defensive display to keep Chelsea forward Eden Hazard at bay.

    The Belgian winger, deployed in a false nine role by Chelsea coach Maurizio Sarri, came closest in the first half as he struck the crossbar with a fierce drive.

    The hosts dominated possession but failed to create many clear chances.

    Vardy made Chelsea pay shortly after the break, finishing lethally after James Maddison slipped him through at the end of a quick counter-attack.

    Hazard came close again but was denied by a brilliant Kasper Schmeichel save, while Cesar Azpilicueta’s last-ditch block stopped Vardy adding another with a clever backheel.

    Chelsea almost found an equaliser in the 90th minute but Marcos Alonso hit the inside of the post and the ball rolled agonisingly across the face of goal and out.(Reuters/NAN)

  • Leicester wants Tuesday’s Carabao Cup match postponed

    Leicester City which apparently lost its owner to the helicopter crash on Saturday, want Tuesday’s League Cup tie with Southampton postponed.

    The team on Sunday cancelled a scheduled light training session after owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha’s helicopter crashed outside King Power Stadium.

    As it stands, they are due to host Southampton in a Carabao Cup round of 16 tie on Tuesday night. However, in light of the potentially tragic situation, Leicester are set to seek to postpone the fixture.

    They will need permission from the English Football League and the Saints before it can be pushed back. Leicester will argue that the players and club management, who were still in the stadium when the crash occurred, are in no fit state to compete following the helicopter crash.

    The team are also due to travel to Cardiff on Friday for their next Premier League match although there is no suggestion as of yet that they are seeking to postpone Saturday’s clash as well.

    Leicester Women have announced that their game with Manchester United Women will be postponed. They tweeted: ‘In light and in respect of the recent events at King Power Stadium our @FAWC_ fixture against @ManUtdWomen has been postponed. A newly arranged date will be communicated once confirmed.’

    The seriousness of the situation was left in no doubt when footage of the wreckage emerged on Saturday night, showing the helicopter engulfed in flames after it lost control shortly after clearing the King Power Stadium.

    Witnesses described the aircraft taking off from centre circle before hovering above the south eastern corner of the ground near Filbert Way before spiraling to the ground and erupting into a fireball.

    Srivaddhanaprabha, who has owned Leicester since 2010, regularly left the King Power via his £2million Augusta Westland AW-169 helicopter but it remains unclear whether he was on it when it crashed. The club confirmed he had attended the 1-1 draw on Saturday night.

  • Kelechi, Ndidi on fire in Leicester City  5-1 victory

    Kelechi, Ndidi on fire in Leicester City 5-1 victory

     

    It was celebration galore for Super Eagles duo of Kelechi Iheanacho and Wilfred Ndidi and as they scored three out of the five goals against Peterborough United in the Federation cup clash on Saturday.

    Debutant teammate and Malian import Fousseni Diabaté had opened the floodgate in the 9th minute of the match, as if warning the hosts that Leicester have come for business and not to admire their jerseys and the faces of their fans.

    Three minutes later an impressive Iheanacho increased the tally in a strike that was adjudged to have been done with precision and finished with power. Again in the 29th minute, Iheanacho delivered with flourish converting a timely pass from Christian Fuchs.

    Prior to that the Nigerian international who appears to have adopted ‘operation convert every chance that comes your way’ as a slogan, narrowly missed scoring the third goal, but his two goals brings his total to nine in nine FA Cup appearances. Leicester maintained their 3-0 lead till the end of the first half and it took and it took the hosts eight minutes on resumption of the second half to earn their consolation goal thanks to Andre Hughes. Just when Peterborough fans were thinking that the goal but Hughes would serve as a turning point, Diabate hit them again to register his second goal of the match, but the icing on the cake came in the second minute of added time when Ndidi who came in as late substitute for Harvey Barnes announced his presence as if to tell the technical crew,” I am always ready send me”

    The impressive outings of the ‘Leicester Eagles’is coming at a time when Super Eagles coach Gernot Rohr is praying and hoping that Nigerian players play regularly for their clubs and be in a killer form ahead of the World cup in Russia.

    The highest Nigeria has reached at the World Cup is the round of 16 and the desire en-route to Russia is to possibly rush into the quarter finals and beyond , as that according to some analysts is the only way progress can be said to have been made in our appearances for at the Mundial.

    Eagles who have already chosen a camp site in the South of Russia, will be facing Croatia, Iceland and Argentina in the group stage.

  • Ndidi sees red in Leicester defeat.

    Ndidi sees red in Leicester defeat.

     

    It was double headache for Nigerian international Wilfred Ndidi Saturday as Leicester suffered a 3-0 defeat to business minded Crystal Palace, at the King Power Stadium.

    The defeat was not the only pain the Nigerian and his team had to suffer as he  equally saw red in the 61st minute of the game after double yellow cards first for diving and the secondly for rough tackle on Ruben Ruben Loftus-Cheek. Compatriot Kelechi Iheanacho was an unused substitute. Christian Benteke opened the flood gate for the visitors in the 19th minute after a timely assist from Andros Townsend. Benteke again provided the assist in the 40th minute which Wilfred Saha did not hesitate to convert. Leicester mounted pressure thereafter desperate to reduce the tally to no avails. The situation was rather compounded for the homers when Bakary Sako who came in as 88th minute substitute for Christian Benteke registered his name in the score sheet in the fourth minute of added time. The defeat marks the first for Leicester in five premier league matches.  The side prior to Saturday’s bashing had recorded four wins in four matches including two away victories against Southampton and Newcastle. Crystal Palace on the other hand have now recorded three victories in six matches losing none and pulling three draws.

    For Ndidi who incidentally turned 21 Saturday, victory at the King Power Stadium would have served as perfect birthday gift but with three goal bashing and a red card in the kitty,  it is likely  that the Super Eagles forward will settle for a low key celebration.

  • Baby born with heart outside body survives surgery

    Baby born with heart outside body survives surgery

    Vanellope Hope Wilkins, a baby born with heart outside her body has survived surgery to insert the heart back into her body, CNN has reported.

    Vanellope who is now three weeks old, was delivered by a team of 50 medical professionals at Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, UK, on November 22.

    The baby who underwent three intensive surgeries to insert her heart back into her body was reported to have been born with ectopia cordis, a congenital condition causing her heart to grow outside her body.

    According to Dr. Frances Bu’Lock, consultant in pediatric cardiology at Glenfield Hospital, Vanellope was the first baby to survive the operation in UK.

    “I deal with babies with heart problems all the time, some of them very complicated,” Dr. Frances Bu’Lock said.

    “This is only the second case in 30 years that I’ve seen this particular condition, it’s extremely rare.

    “Vanellope is the first baby to survive this operation in the UK.”

    CNN reports that an initial ultrasound scan at nine weeks had alerted Vanellope’s parents, Naomi Findlay and Dean Wilkins, that their baby’s heart and part of her stomach had begun to grow outside of her body.

    Another Ultra Scan at 16 weeks disclosed that while Vanellope’s bowel had moved back to the correct position, her heart was still out of place.

    Bu’Lock, who had fears that Vanellope might not survived, described the surgery a ‘challenging one.’

    “Now she’s out, she’s had three surgeries and her heart is covered — I think her chances are a lot better,” said Bu’Lock, who called the surgery “challenging (rather) than complicated.”

    Meanwhile, Naomi Findlay, Vanellope’s mother said she was not expecting her daughter to survive the surgery.

    According to Naomi, she had prepared herself for the worst.

    Naomi Findlay in a statement on Tuesday said: “I had prepared myself for the worst; that was my way of dealing with it.

    “I had brought an outfit to hospital that she could wear if she died.”

    “I genuinely didn’t think my baby would survive, but the staff at Glenfield have been amazing.”

  • Leicester eye state-of-the-art training complex

    Leicester eye state-of-the-art training complex

     

    Leicester are planning to move to a state-of-the-art training complex as the club’s Thai owners aim to become an established Premier League force.

    Sportsmail understands a site near the M1 has been earmarked for development, with relocation away from their current Belvoir Drive base potentially coming within two years.

    Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur, who have both recently built new training grounds, are both thought to have provided advice and the Srivaddhanaprabha family are ready to make another significant financial commitment.

    They have been generous with funding in seven years of ownership and have ambitions of cementing the side’s 2015-16 title win by upgrading the one area of the club that is still a little dated.

    At present the squad and staff must negotiate traffic in Leicester to reach a training base that is surrounded by residential housing, just two miles from the King Power Stadium.

    The complex has recently gone under significant refurbishment but space is at a premium to expand further and put Leicester on a level matching the Premier League’s elite sides.

    The new location is set to be on the outskirts of the city, more than six miles way from the ground, to provide better transport links for players who drive in from further afield. Belvoir Drive would be sold and the money used to help fund the construction of a modern facility, which could cost more than £60million.

    Claude Puel was told about the club’s plans during talks over his appointment as Leicester manager and is excited at the prospect.

    Puel said: ‘The [present] training centre is not new, but the feeling is very good and I found a good atmosphere. For the future they are modelling a new training ground and there will be new facilities coming. It is an exciting time and I am honoured to be here.’