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Leicester City v Tottenham Hotspur (2020-21)
Premier League new logo
HT:2–0
Report
EventPremier League 2020-21
DateSunday 23 May 2021
VenueKing Power Stadium, Leicester
Player of the MatchGareth Bale
RefereeAnthony Taylor
Attendance8,000
Weather12 °C (54 °F)
Leicester City - Chelsea
Spurs - Aston Villa
Leicester City - TBA
Spurs - TBA

Leicester City v Tottenham Hotspur was a match which took place at the King Power Stadium on Sunday 23 May 2021.

Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers says he has "nothing but pride" for his players despite seeing their hopes of Champions League qualification dashed by a dramatic final-day defeat by Tottenham.

Starting the last round of fixtures in fifth place, the Foxes knew their best chance of finishing in the top four was to win and hope Liverpool and Chelsea slipped up in their respective final games.

Chelsea did leave the door open, losing 2-1 at Aston Villa, but Leicester were unable to do their part and finished a point behind Thomas Tuchel's Blues.

It means the Europa League awaits the Foxes again.

"It's hugely disappointing for us," Rodgers told BBC Sport. "We fought so hard all season. I always said you're judged after 38 games, and unfortunately we couldn't quite make it.

"I have nothing but pride and admiration for the players. They've constantly had things go against them with injuries. If you look at the importance of the players out today, we were able to take it down to the last game and the last 15 minutes.

"The ownership have given me amazing support. The players have given me their heart and souls every day. I'm so disappointed for them we couldn't get over the line."

It was Gareth Bale who hammered in the final nails, finishing low into the bottom corner to put Spurs ahead in the game for the first time in the 87th minute, before following up his own shot that had hit the post to add a second in stoppage time.

In truth, though, it was an own goal from Kasper Schmeichel that really ripped the heart out of City's challenge, with the keeper punching a corner into his own net under pressure to make the score 2-2 with 14 minutes left.

Prior to that, with Chelsea losing at Villa, two coolly taken penalties from Jamie Vardy - both of which he was fouled for - looked to be sending the Foxes into Europe's premier competition for just the second time.

The match may also represent the final one in a Tottenham shirt for talismanic striker Harry Kane, who has signalled his desire to leave the club this summer.

If so, the England captain has signed off with the 221st goal of his Spurs career - a fine first equaliser from inside the box that also takes him to a Golden Boot-winning tally of 23 for this league campaign.

Whether a place in the new Europa Conference League - Tottenham's reward from this season through their seventh-placed finish - is enough for Kane, remains to be seen.

Sunday's game may also be the last for Bale, who ended his loan spell from Real Madrid in impressive fashion, and interim manager Ryan Mason, with the club considering numerous candidates as a permanent successor to Jose Mourinho.

Last season, defeats in their final two games saw Leicester drop to fifth and miss out on the Champions League after being in the top four since September.

It was a case of deja vu this time around, with this crushing loss coming after a 2-1 defeat at Chelsea in their penultimate game.

It will hit harder, though, as Rodgers' team had spent more days in the Premier League's top four than any other side this season - 242 in total - and yet failed to finish there.

It will not feel like it, but it has been another season of impressive progression for the Foxes, who have played some superb football, built around a trusty old guard and a host of exciting young talents, including Wesley Fofana and the resurgent Kelechi Iheanacho.

It was telling just how much an injury to the former in the first half affected the home side, with Tottenham coming back into the game and finding their first equaliser.

Either side of that, though, it was all about Vardy, who calmly dispatched the two spot-kicks he himself had won by drawing fouls from Toby Alderweireld and Davinson Sanchez - the first of which needed a pitch-side VAR check from Anthony Taylor.

These games are emotional affairs, with mental strength as important as physical.

Roared on initially, Leicester were typically aggressive and attacking, but as the game wore on, the clear nerves among the watching fans began to permeate onto the pitch, with the home players growing increasingly reticent to do anything that may cause a mistake.

The mistake did come, with Schmeichel misjudging a corner and punching into his own net, a blow from which they failed to recover.

The players were still cheered as they paraded the FA Cup after the game. When the disappointment of Sunday fades, they will begin to appreciate just what that trophy represents for their season.

"I said to the players before the game we've been playing non-stop - except for 21 days - for two years," added Rodgers.

"When we started work together we were mid-table and just over two years later we're challenging the elite and won the FA Cup for the first time in our history and we're on the right path without the resources [of other teams].

"We need a period to go away and recover and relax a little bit. Premier League management is intense. We have work to do to improve the squad and come back early July motivated."

Unlike Leicester, Tottenham have a summer of huge change ahead of them.

Their seventh place represents their lowest Premier League finish since coming eighth in 2008-09 and gives them a Europa Conference League spot - not good enough for a club believing itself worthy of a place in the now abandoned European Super League.

Top of Daniel Levy's in-tray is to resolve the future of Kane.

The 27-year-old once again showed that he is one of the best finishers in the business, firing in after Son Heung-min's cross looped to him in the box to make it an unmatched 23 goals in the division this campaign.

He has won the Premier League Golden Boot for a third season (also 2015-16 and 2016-17), becoming only the third player to win the award as many as three times, after Thierry Henry (four) and Alan Shearer (three).

Bale is also unlikely to be in a Spurs shirt next season, meaning Levy will have to find a way to replace almost half of the league goals his team have scored in 2020-21.

He also has to appoint a new manager.

This was Mason's fourth win from his seven games in charge and the most impressive, but whether that is enough to give the 29-year-old rookie the job remains to be seen.

"[We showed] immense qualities - to play, to be brave, to be aggressive, to work for the team," said Mason.

"There was an energy in here, you could feel there was a lot riding on the game. We used that to our advantage. We used the fact it was a big game for them, it was a big game for us.

"It's no secret - we want to finish higher. We're disappointed not to be in the Champions League.

"We have to respect any European competition we're in and we will. We'll have to come back stronger next season."

Match[]

Details[]

23 May 2021
GMT
Leicester City Leicester City FC 2–4 Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham King Power Stadium, Leicester
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: Anthony Taylor
Vardy Goal 18' (Pen)52' (pen) HT:2–0
Report
Kane Goal 41'
Schmeichel Goal 76' (og)
Bale Goal 87'90+6'
Leicester City
Tottenham Hotspur
01 Kasper Schmeichel
27 Timothy Castagne
03 Wesley Fofana Substituted off in the 21st minute 21'
04 Çağlar Söyüncü
11 Marc Albrighton Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
08 Youri Tielemans
25 Wilfred Ndidi
33 Luke Thomas
10 James Maddison Substituted off in the 62nd minute 62'
14 Kelechi Iheanacho
09 Jamie Vardy
Substitutes:
05 Wes Morgan
12 Danny Ward
17 Ayoze Pérez Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
18 Daniel Amartey
20 Hamza Choudhury
21 Ricardo Pereira Substituted on in the 62nd minute 62'
24 Nampalys Mendy Substituted on in the 21st minute 21'
26 Dennis Praet
28 Christian Fuchs
Manager:
Flag of Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers
01 Hugo Lloris
02 Matt Doherty
06 Davinson Sánchez
04 Toby Alderweireld
03 Sergio Reguilón
05 Pierre-Emile Højbjerg
08 Harry Winks Booked
23 Steven Bergwijn Substituted off in the 68th minute 68' Booked
20 Dele Alli Substituted off in the 68th minute 68'
07 Son Heung-min Substituted off in the 90+3th minute 90+3'
10 Harry Kane
Substitutes:
09 Gareth Bale Substituted on in the 68th minute 68'
11 Erik Lamela
12 Joe Hart
14 Joe Rodon Substituted on in the 90+3th minute 90+3'
15 Eric Dier
27 Lucas Moura Substituted on in the 68th minute 68'
45 Carlos Vinícius
53 Dane Scarlett
57 Nile John
Manager:
Flag of England Ryan Mason

Man of the Match:
Gareth Bale

Assistant referees:
Gary Beswick
Adam Nunn
Fourth official:
Keith Stroud

Match rules

  • 90 minutes, no extra time or penalties.
  • Three points awarded to winner, none to loser.
  • One point awarded to each in the event of a draw.
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Match Stats[]

Overall Leicester City Tottenham Hotspur
Goals scored 2 4
Total shots 10 11
Shots on target 6 4
Ball possession 47% 53%
Corner kicks 8 7
Fouls committed 9 8

See also[]

External links[]

Premier League 2020–21

Arsenal FC Arsenal · Aston Villa FC Aston Villa · Brighton & Hove Albion Brighton & Hove Albion · Burnley FC Burnley · Chelsea FC Chelsea · Crystal Palace FC Crystal Palace · Everton FC Everton · Fulham FC Fulham · Leeds United FC Leeds United · Leicester City FC Leicester City · Liverpool FC Liverpool · Manchester City FC Manchester City · Manchester United FC Manchester United · Newcastle United FC Newcastle United · Sheffield United Sheffield United · Southampton FC Southampton · Tottenham Hotspur Tottenham Hotspur · West Bromwich Albion FC West Bromwich Albion · West Ham United FC West Ham United · Wolverhampton Wanderers Wolverhampton Wanderers

Premier League match days 2020-21

Match day 01 | Match day 02 | Match day 03 | Match day 04 | Match day 05 | Match day 06 | Match day 07 | Match day 08 | Match day 09 | Match day 10 | Match day 11 | Match day 12 | Match day 13 | Match day 14 | Match day 15 | Match day 16 | Match day 17 | Match day 18 | Match day 19 | Match day 20 | Match day 21 | Match day 22 | Match day 23 | Match day 24 | Match day 25 | Match day 26 | Match day 27 | Match day 28 | Match day 29 | Match day 30 | Match day 31 | Match day 32 | Match day 33 | Match day 34 | Match day 35 | Match day 36 | Match day 37 | Match day 38 

Leicester City F.C. matches - 2020-21
2020-21 Premier League

Manchester City (a) · Arsenal (a) · Southampton (h) · Arsenal (h) · Manchester United (a) · Chelsea (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (h)

2020-21 FA Cup
Stoke City (a) · Brentford (a) · Brighton & Hove Albion (h) · Manchester United (h) · Southampton (n) · Chelsea (n)
2020-21 EFL Cup
Arsenal (h)
2020–21 UEFA Europa League
Zorya Luhansk (h) · AEK Athens (a) · Braga (h) · Braga (a) · Zorya Luhansk (a) · AEK Athens (h) · Slavia Prague (a) · Slavia Prague (h)
Tottenham Hotspur F.C. matches - 2020-21
2020-21 Premier League

Manchester United (a) · Arsenal (h) · Chelsea (h) · Arsenal (a) · Leeds United (a) · Leicester City (a)

2020-21 FA Cup
Marine (a) · Wycombe Wanderers (a) · Everton (a)
2020-21 EFL Cup
Leyton Orient (a) · Chelsea (h) · Stoke City (a) · Brentford (h) · Manchester City (n)
2020-21 Champions League
Lokomotiv Plovdiv (a) · Shkëndija (a) · Maccabi Haifa (h) · LASK (h) · Antwerp (a) · Ludogorets Razgrad (a) · Ludogorets Razgrad (h) · LASK (a) · Antwerp (h) · Dinamo Zagreb (h) · Dinamo Zagreb (a)