Last week saw the men’s team approach financial collapse and the women’s team engulfed in scandal once again. It’s a sign that nothing has changed at Leicester, even after the shock of relegation last summer.


The great hope among Leicester fans after our relegation in May was that a dramatic fall from grace would shock the club into life. Maybe, the theory went, getting relegated would be a net positive, allowing us to clear out the people whose decision-making had resulted in that relegation, reset the playing squad, and forge a new path back to the big time.

This hope was almost entirely based on wishful thinking. At no point did anyone at the club communicate a new vision, suggest they had learned anything from what happened, or explain how and why Leicester had ended up both with a) a squad that cost more than any other non-big six team in the Premier League and b) in the Championship. 

In fact, at no point did anyone at the club communicate at all, beyond a ghost-written statement from the chairman promising to “reflect on the processes and decisions that have brought us to this point”. This vague promise, famously, translated into zero changes at senior leadership level.

In recent days the extent of the rot at the core of the club has been laid bare for all to see. Leicester are staring at a significant points deduction, whatever league we happen to be in next season, a desperate firesale of talent in the summer, and have suspended the manager of their women’s team pending an investigation into a relationship with one of his players.

Throughout all this the club has issued two statements. One to claim victory over the Football League over an irrelevant technicality, and another to the Guardian pretending that Willie Kirk is “assisting the club in an internal matter”, as if he’s a research assistant loyally helping his boss use Google, rather than the literal manager of the first team under investigation for gross misconduct.

This attempt to stick their, and everyone else’s, heads in the sand is an embarrassment, that speaks to a lack of accountability and a culture of incompetence that runs through the heart of the club.

Trust issues

It has always been difficult to judge who is actually in charge at Leicester. While Top is the nominal leader, he is obviously absent from day-to-day operations. Underneath him, there is a management team whose job titles sound like a scene from the Life of Brian. After the CEO, we have a “Director of Football”, a “Football Operations Director”, and an “Operations Director”.

None of us have any idea who is making decisions. Who is responsible for the culture of the club, who is making financial decisions, who is communicating to the manager and to the owner. What we do know is that the club has got itself into a terrible state over the past couple of years, and their mistakes over a long period of time are now being exposed in the cold light of day.

It’s time for every single one of those people to go. It is clear now that they have presided over an abject failure that has seen Leicester go from a position of supreme strength as a team on the brink of the Champions League, to a Championship club in the midst of financial disaster.

Top’s statement at the end of last season was essentially asking the fans to trust him. To trust that he understood that there had been mistakes and that he would work to solve them. To trust that a successful ownership group can occasionally falter, but he would act quickly to right the ship.

It is clear now that this was all talk. Nothing changed in the summer, and in fact things have got worse. 

There have been hints at rank incompetence, perhaps worse, at the heart of the club for a while. It was only a few months ago that we were fined by the Competition & Markets Authority for colluding with JD Sports to fix the price of our kit. We also signed up a shady betting sponsor who used paid actors to pretend to be directors of the company

We have had a player fined for a serious drink driving offence who was then handed the captain’s armband a few days later. The club has, implausibly, now got two of its last three managers of the Women’s team accused of having a relationship with one of the players.

These are not the actions of a club with a healthy culture, or of one with competent people at the top. These are signs of a serious problem, where a lack of oversight and accountability means the club is being run by people who are, at best, out of their depth. 

Not learning lessons

That’s before we even get to the footballing side. The club is currently staring down the barrel of a points deduction because of a complete failure to manage its finances. A situation it has seemingly kept from successive managers, who are then forced out in front of the press to answer questions about issues they have no control over because everyone above them is too cowardly to do it themselves.

Brendan Rodgers, for all his self-serving talk, was obviously blindsided by sudden financial restrictions imposed on him when he was ready to refresh the squad. The club then did the exact same thing to Enzo Maresca this season. 

Those financial restrictions were the direct result of poor decision-making over a period of years, spending beyond our means, offering massive contracts to players who didn’t deserve them, or signing people who the manager refused to play. 

Yet again Leicester’s actions betray the fact that we’ve learned nothing from these mistakes. We have favoured empty words over actions, and the chickens are coming home to roost. When Top initially put the brakes on spending last summer, he said he was making “difficult short-term decisions that protect the club’s long-term interests”.

A few months later, Rodgers was permitted to spend £30m on players, before being sacked at presumably huge cost soon afterwards. Only one of those new signings is at the club even now, a year later, and he doesn’t get anywhere near the team. The club then committed to big financial outlays in the summer, on Harry Winks, Conor Coady, and obligations to buy Yunus Akgun and Abdul Fatawu, before slamming the brakes back on in January.

There is no coherence to our decision-making, other than the fact that they are repeatedly bad ones. The same people who made all these mistakes are still in charge, and still failing to take any public responsibility for the state we find ourselves in. 

Time for answers

There’s only so long you can blame a King’s courtiers for a country’s problems. Leadership comes from the top, pun intended, and we have less and less cause to trust that our main man has any handle on things.

There is no reason to have any faith that the current management has a plan to solve the mess we find ourselves in. They have repeatedly shown themselves incapable of rising to the challenge. In recent days, they have busied themselves with issuing statements in legalese to try to mask the problems they have allowed to fester, rather than address them head on.

They have made no effort to start an honest dialogue with the fans, explaining what our problems actually are and how they hope to fix them. They have hung the manager, perhaps the only person at the club who makes you believe in anything, out to dry, and surely jeopardised our chances of keeping him beyond this season.

It is time the club showed some accountability. Not only does there need to be a complete clear out of senior management, we need answers about the true scale of the financial problems and what the future holds. We need to understand how the club allowed a culture to fester where multiple managers were (allegedly) able to exploit their position of power to start a relationship with the players in their team.

More than anything, we need a complete cultural reset. We need new leadership and a new vision for what the future holds for Leicester City, one that unites us and gives us something to believe in. Right now all we have is unanswered questions and a lingering sense of doom.

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26 responses to “It’s time for changes at the top at Leicester City”

  1. Absolutely correct…visibly started with Rodgers being blindsided and told there was no money the day before the transfer window opened. Total financial incompetence and arrogant communication by Whelan and co. £100m+ of players let go for free. Then the inquest that was kept secret with Whelan and co keeping their jobs.

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  2. I suppose that all clubs keep their cards close to their chests, but without doubt the senior management have been found wanting.

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  3. Unfortunately we are not just seeing this type of behaviour at our club as the culture is affecting many.Just look at the goings on at Sheff Wed. Birmingham to get a comparative feel.Then you can take it up a league to sheer hypocrasy at clubs such as Chelsea & Everton.Then look at the Premier League body itself who are seemingly accountable to none but themselves.Bleeding the smaller clubs& never upsetting the FairPlay” schemes” of teams like Man City & Chelsea.This same Premier League who promised to feed down funds totheFootball League clubs, where many are on the brink of collapse .If we are to believe Peter Risdale ofPNE not one penny has been handed down to assist the smaller clubs to help in their everyday running.No wonder many of us are all losing faith in the sheer hypocacy& money grabbing ideals of the “ modern game”!

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  4. Couldn’t agree more, spot on

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    1. 100% – I have said for a long time that a DoF has to be accountable for contracts & Wages.. the fact we have lost players for zero return that we brought for big money says it all and has put us in this mess. Why is no one questioning the role the DoF has played in this decline.

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  5. It would have been remarkable and ruthless had Khun Top relieved his lieutenants, Whelan and Rudkin from their positions. Whelan is a part of the foundation of King Power and Rudkin very much a trusted right hand man, who Khun Vichai had previously leant on for advice. Our problems stemmed from the previous set up where Steve Walsh snr. left the club and Rudkins was then incharge of the running of the football side of things as the DoF. Rudkins dealings have brought us to this, with the negotiation of contracts and the valuation of incoming players. Over his tenure it has cost us millions and will continue to do so, until someone steps in and put a halt to any involvement by him in a footballing capacity. He has brought in some good players but paid over the odds, and more importantly gave them a wage that was far too generous. Why go to another club, for less money? Or any interested clubs could not match what they were currently being paid. The reason for our continuing financial loss every season is the amount of salaries that we are paying to players. They then run down their contracts and we get nothing at the end of their term which compounds the loss regarding incoming revenue. The club is hoping we go up first time and gave money to balance the books. The self sustainable idea was always a juggling act, they just cannot seem to keep two balls in the air, let alone one.

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    1. All true except Steve Walsh was never DoF, it’s been Rudkin for a decade. Walsh was head of recruitment and about 3 others have had the role since, JR as I understand it just handles the contracts and incoming player negotiations. Which is his real area of incompetence handing the likes of Slimani, Bertrand and Vestergaard hugely inflated deals.

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  6. I think we, as fans, need to be more vocal. I’d love to get something going but unfortunately living abroad it’s not really possible. But it’s time to put aside the – completely correct and justifiable – attitude of not doing anything which might seem like a criticism of Top because of all the amazing stuff we’ve acheived under him and Khun Vichai. The fact is, the club shows absolutely zero consideration for the fans on a number of levels and it’s time we let them know we’re not happy about it. The senior management continue to hide behind a wall of silence so it’s up to us fans to make that extremely uncomfortable for them to the point where it’s unsustainable. It seems odd for a team having a successful season to even be contemplating protests but honestly I think that’s what we should be doing. The way they are treating us fans makes my blood boil, but so does the fact that – by and large – the fan base just seems to accept the total lack of respect shown to us by the management. In my mind, that needs to change regardless of what’s happening on the pitch.

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  7. But fans also want signings every season and are vocal if we sign "nobodies" or pull out of a deal if it’s not financially viable. As fans we always want everything and none of us really know how difficult it is to keep your squad happy and the wolves from the door. We’re not a "big" club but we chased the dream after successive top 5 finishes and a Cup win following our amazing league win. We are now paying the long term price for that. Yes there has been mismanagement but we have to be realistic about the size of club we are and cut our cloth accordingly.

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    1. I agree, but I’d think – and maybe I’m being massively naiive here – that if the club were open with the fans and explained then there would be understanding. Obviously not everything can be laid bare, but there’s also absolutely no reason to explain NOTHING. And cutting our cloth accordingly – in my mind – is not breaching PSR / FFP or whatever and still being relegated… and then breaching it AGAIN! That’s just appalling strategic planning.

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  8. Very good article. I’m bit a concerned of the current strategy which obviously (hope not stop us from being promoted automatically to PL) has an impact on team performance. There is currently massive risk that we will go down the bottom of table and will fight in playoffs and with current form cannot see it progressing through. This will end up in disaster as this team will not exist as we know. Many will leave, there may be points deduction with catastrophic consequences. I’m certain unsure whatever I want to watch championship again with Rudkin on stand

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  9. I agree that everyone at the top needs to go, but how realistic is that? Top going, implies selling the club. Anyone want that? Rudkin is another matter – but getting rid of everyone would create the very instability and panic which would detrimental to our onfield performance. In reality the overhaul of senior management is likely to take five years – a lifetime in football – but that’s no excuse for not starting as soon as the pre-season transfer window closes this summer.

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  10. Well written article hitting the nail on the head. For a few years I have said that our problems are due to the Director of Football and I’m even more convinced that he is to blame and MUST be sacked. The financial situation is due to bad house keeping and that is due to the Financial Director who should be made accountable and therefore removed from his position. Then you have the one at the helm and that is not just Top as chairman but the person in charge and that is Susan Whelan. What kind of CEO does not see what is happening and take appropriate steps to stop it and remove the people responsible. We have got players worth quite a lot of money who will be leaving at the end of the season for nothing again. I’m dreading next season what ever division we are in because it could be a completely different squad and possibly even a new manager. There must be changes of board management NOW 🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊🦊 but I will always support LCFC Foxes 🦊 for ever We never Quit 🦊

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  11. It’s not the case that none of this has been said. I have banged on for some time along the same lines in another place (but far less eloquently) and very recently called for a hunt for a new professionally qualified DoF. The new ManU part owner is doing it, so why don’t we?The answer is we (Top) thinks we can prosper with a National League standard executive.Our executive has been routinely rescued by the players and coaching staff (like now). But the finances are not within their remit.What irritates/infuriates is that we fans are unable to exert any influence.I know more about North Korea.

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  12. Great article as are the other 2 posted today…. Here’s my thoughts!

    I’m honestly a bit baffled about the way I feel at the moment. After many years away, I managed over the last few years to build back to a season ticket this year and…. I don’t know what to feel.

    Clearly a reset was needed, and we are top of the league and still think we’ll go back up despite the recent wobble. Am I enjoying it. Not massively and it’s so hard to write that when you look from the outside. The football is boring but we are top of the league, but we are in the entertainment business but we are top of the league…. I think you get my point. I’m trying not to moan as we’re top of the league and I shouldn’t be needing to but his it’s a hard watch at times, sorry it’s true.

    Off the pitch, clearly Top isn’t no Vichai and have no doubt he means well but he’s not making the decisions he needs to do. I agree the hierarchy needs a refresh. All of them? Maybe not but it’s certainly contributed to our financial plight and thy feel good feel we had during the 2010s has slowly eroded away. It’s gonna be a few years of belt tightening, Premier League or not and we’ve probably wasted the position we got ourselves too and may never get back to that early Brendan Rodgers era where I honestly felt we could be that regular team chasing the big 6.

    What do I want? I’ve got no idea. Decent entertaining football from a well run club that the critics praise as an example. That’s the Leicester City I want to see, sadly it may take a while.

    Ditch the dreary football, even if it means the cost of Enzo staying on, get a new, we’ll known DOF and set a culture that is not above who we are as a club. Not sure any team will break the top 6 without the billions behind them, so be the best if the next bunch. Run the club well. That’s all I’m asking for.

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  13. Maybe this was what made some of the players give up the ghost last season. The lack of investment in the playing side from the day we won the league has contributed towards our issues today!! If we have invested the £100mill of the training ground cost into players that would have made us better as a side, we may have qualified for the Champions League for the two seasons we missed out on by a whisker. Thus would have earned us more income as a club, wider exposure around the world (especially Thailand) and we could have invested that money into the training ground at a later stage. Instead we signed players to new massive contracts and then some have gone for cut price deals etc. There’s blame from Top to Bottom for the situation we find ourselves in.

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  14. Remember the last time when we were promoted while in a similar financial predicament and Neil warnock being very vocal about it.Well now the EFL are really going to go for the Leicester City jugular with all of what happened previously clear in their minds!I have felt for a long time how nothing comes out of the club to supporters and that is financial to the playing side,ie Ricardo Periera’s injury status,all of a sudden one of our best players this season was/is out for who knows how long.Not important in the greater predicament we find ourselves in but another symptom of the poor relationship of club and supporters.All of this with us top of the league and a quarter final on Sunday,we should be rejoicing and be over the moon instead we will probably crash back down to earth.

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  15. An absolutely fabulous article which says it as it is. I agree the entire management structure needs to be replaced. Top as faithful as he has been to his fathers dream does not seem to know how to proceed and the trust he has put in others has been sorely misplaced.

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  16. Sorry all but not for me , you are whinging about this board like they are like the Shipman days or Mandaric of more recent times but whilst the ‘stories’ surrounding the Club are what they are right now ‘stories’ and you seem to think you have a say , newsflash, you don’t, City are owned by King Power, we are all part of a balance sheet, hence a CEO, CFO etc and us fans are at the bottom of their considerations.We are where we are to the Boards blind loyalty to Rodgers who had them believing like he did that he was an elite manager, when in fact an FA Cup win masked his true abilities.The Willie Kirk episode is nothing new to football, again Rodgers copped off with his Secretary at Liverpool (now his 2nd wife).If City fans spent as much energy down the KP as they do moaning on social media we might have an atmosphere down the KP of note !!So how about less negativity which will only lead to more negativity which could cost us the League ,and do what we can actually do and get behind Enzo as it’s the Team that counts and winning the League will defo put a spanner in the EFL/Prem works.

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    1. Honestly if – and as you rightly point out it IS still if – thee financial situation is as it appears then in my opinion this board is just as bad if not worse than the 2 you mentioned. Breaching PSR and still getting relegated is bad enough, but then breaching the rules AGAIN the season after is simply negligent. Not like they wouldn’t have seen it coming. And as you point out, we’re part of a balance sheet and that is their primary concern. Well that’s exactly the bit they’ve well and truly f-ed up. I can understand the negativity. There’s a very high chance that next season is going to be 100% certain relegation from the Premier League, or if we don’t go up, at best a lower mid-table Championship season because of the points deductions. Neither of those prospects fill me with joy to be honest.

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  17. You have said it all in a brilliant article

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  18. While this makes very hard and painful reading it is an accurate account of the truth. Nothing has changed since last season, invisible people and chairman need to put their cards on the table and either stick ( if they have the appetite and funds) or quit. For me a beer and cake at Easter together with a load of BS in the programme notes will not do this time. It’s not the players or the manager, the problem lies with the dinosaur(s?JR) at the top….

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  19. Excellent article. I agree with every word. Time for change 👏🏻

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  20. Agree 100%, really well written article.

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  21. I discussed the piece with a friend who was equally impressed but made a very valid point – it needs a bigger audience.We can debate the nuances of what is generally agreed to be the problem but this will not bring pressure to bear with the executive.Even if it is only shared with the Mercury/Leicestershire Live it would gain more legs and alert the main body of support who, we have to accept, do not spend much time on these blogs.Perhaps it’s time to call a public meeting for those of similar views. There have been crowded meetings over the ‘football czar’ initiative and the formation of the Foxes Trust.Or are we to continue to gaze at our navals, like the board?

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    1. Union FS fans forum next Thursday could be a good starting point

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