Ranking the squad, either for whether you’d want to snog them (purely from a football ability perspective of course) or how ready they are for Premier League life has become a bit of a summer tradition at the Fosse Way.

With a new manager at last, we’re trying to imagine how he’s assessing the squad as the 2025/26 season fast approaches.


The Championship season kicks off, for the Foxes anyway, on Sunday 10th August. With just over three full weeks to go until some version of Sheffield Wednesday rock up at the King Power, we’ve finally turned the lights on and hired a manager. No, it’s not Danny Rohl, Sky presumably disappointed that one key narrative has been removed from that opening fixture. Instead, it’s a Spanish hire. Possibly trying to recreate the Maresca vibes where nobody really has any preconceptions about him.
Unlike Cooper, or Van Nistelrooy, it’s pretty much an unbiased, fresh start where we can judge Martí Cifuentes on his record once he gets going. If you want something to get excited about, this piece he wrote in January certainly gets across his passion and the types of players and managers that inspire him. 
Nobody can question Cifuentes’s desire to be here. The new man at the helm has quite literally paid for the privilege to manage Leicester City. Something that reflects well on him, not so much on the club. He was, presumably incognito, in the stands at Seagrave as we took on Leuven and therefore got to see the entire squad play. Well, those who aren’t still injured. We’re sure somebody has explained why the treatment room is so big and already pretty full.
Since May, Leicester City have generally operated at the speed of a combine harvester taking great pleasure in being on an A road, holding up the cars behind. There’s been very little to whet fans’ appetites and even the transfer rumours have been pretty quiet. Now that we’re finally back in business, maybe incoming phone calls will be picked up and the transfer gears will also start turning.
It’s been generally the same rumours so far for who’ll leave, Wilfred Ndidi is probably on the way out as is Bilal El Khannouss and surely Mads Hermansen, all sales that would help fund the transfer kitty or keep PSR at bay again. We’ll need some money because, even with a willingness to look at the youth ranks, there are some gaps in the squad that really call for a little bit more experience.
Upon his appointment, the club said he was chosen above other candidates because of his “modern, progressive footballing philosophy.” The easy assumption to make is that we’re looking at Maresca 2.0 but while there are similarities, Cifuentes seems more interested in pressing, rotating positions and roles and isn’t afraid of a plan B. All things that should serve him well and hopefully ensure that fans find it a bit easier to get connected to the new man and enjoy his football more as well.
Having had his first look at the squad, we’re trying to imagine what he’s thinking. With Andy King the only real surviving staff member from last season, we’ll assume our club legend has briefed him on the problem areas and the gaps.
He already knows that our choices up front are down to a teenager who’s only just left school and the enigma that is Patson Daka, though we suspect he’ll like what he sees there. He’ll also know about the very public dressing down the entire squad got for the Copenhagen debacle and the Harry Winks/Jannik Vestergaard disputes.
It seems like losing Mads Hermansen and Bilal El Khannouss is certain, so we’ll discount them. Everyone else gets a rating of BUILD AROUND, SQUAD OPTION, SHOW ME THE MONEY or BUH-BYE, depending on whether they’re a long term solution, a good back-up, a sellable asset we could cash in on or those who should really have been out the door long before now. We’re also grading each area of the team for how strong it looks as things stand and where we really need to see some new faces coming in.


Goalkeepers

If injury hadn’t blighted part of his season, and if it wasn’t the end of the Jamie Vardy era, Mads Hermansen would have been last season’s Player of the Year. He’s too good for a second season back in the Championship and so we’re all resigned to seeing him sold and wishing him the best. However, unlike when we lost our last number one and found ourselves floundering, we have the next ready made number one in waiting.

Jakub Stolarczyk deserves his chance at the number one shirt, something poor Hermansen never actually got to wear because Danny Ward. Stolarczyk deputised calmly and as confidently as one can when the defence in front of you was riddled with errors. He’s going to love Cifuentes’ assistant, Xavi Calm, because his goalkeeping style is to so calm he’s practically laidback. It’ll be interesting to see whether he takes on more leadership and more of a vocal role once into the first choice role.

The academy graduate fits the profile wanted in most modern goalkeepers, he’s comfortable playing out from the back, he’s decent at shot stopping and he seems capable of organising on set pieces. Cifuentes may not have the luxury of Hermansen, but we’re in pretty good hands regardless.

The problem comes in the depth behind Stolarczyk. There is none. We’ve gone from having a ridiculous amount of goalkeepers on the books to just one first team goalkeeper the second that Hermansen leaves. Behind Stolarczyk, it’s just the academy kids. Steve Bausor has had some game time in pre-season but it’s unlikely we’d be comfortable relying on the 20-year-old if anything were to befall Stolarczyk.

Presumably a goalkeeper with some experience at this level, or higher, will be important. It wouldn’t be a surprise if we picked up an older keeper to add some experience into the mix.

Manager Verdict

C – From a first choice perspective, we’re an A. Stolarczyk is ready and should be able to hold his own. The backup options in case of injury or suspension are non-existent though. Getting the right man who’s happy to be on the bench but can add something to the squad can be tricky. Unless we somehow fail to sell Mads Hermansen and then there’s a different, happier issue.

Assessment

Jakub Stolarczyk: BUILD AROUND

Steve Bausor: SQUAD OPTION


Defenders

A lot of the early summer talk was thinking about the squad and whether those players who’d been out of favour or sent out on loan had a future. Some suggested the 2025/26 Vestergaard style redemption could belong to Harry Souttar. He’s likely to be out until the New Year so we’ll have to wait a little longer to see if that’s possible.

Crucially, past form suggests Cifuentes may prefer four at the back too, which also won’t help Souttar’s cause. That said, he does seem willing to adapt to the situation and squad around him. Given the current squad feels a little more geared to the traditional back four, this could be how we start even if it deviates over time.

Those hoping to get rid of Wout Faes and Jannik Vestergaard may need to wait a little longer. We’d need suitors offering money and particularly for Vestergaard, still only one year into a new three year contract, this feels unlikely.

Ben Nelson is the exciting prospect, back from a successful loan season in the Championship. Full-backs Cifuentes benefits from a few options and choices. A rejuvenated Luke Thomas and a versatile James Justin and Ricardo.

We never really saw where Woyo Coulibaly and Caleb Okoli fit in, so it’s hard to say whether they can adapt and become key men this time around.

Despite the ongoing rumours, Conor Coady remains at the club, he and Vestergaard the elder statesmen of the back line, along with Faes so you have to expect that at least one of them might feature. And who’d put it past Vestergaard to perform yet another redemption arc of his own.

Manager Verdict

B+ – Even factoring in those we hope leave, or who could leave, we aren’t lacking bodies. Cifuentes has a healthy choice of how to shape his back line and who could go in it. There’s already some versatility between the likes of Ricardo, Choudhury if you’d rather bring him here than as a midfielder, and Justin. He’ll have to wait to use Souttar but he should love Ben Nelson.

Assessment

James Justin: BUILD AROUND

Victor Kristiansen: SHOW ME THE MONEY

Ricardo Pereira: BUILD AROUND

Harry Souttar: BUILD AROUND (eventually)

Luke Thomas: BUILD AROUND

Wout Faes: BUH-BYE (realistically it’s probably going to be BUILD AROUND isn’t it)

Jannik Vestergaard: BUH-BYE

Conor Coady: BUH-BYE

Woyo Coulibaly: SQUAD OPTION

Caleb Okoli: SQUAD OPTION

Olubade Aluko: SQUAD OPTION


Midfielders

The keener tacticians out there have been studying how QPR set up and deployed, there’s a particularly interesting piece of analysis by a QPR fan if you want to know more about how he set up and played there.

The midfield was an area that let us down quite a lot last season and you’d think Cifuentes has his work cut out to implement the style he wants with the players we’ve got.

On the plus side, we’ve got some strong players that can sit ahead of and behind the midfield. The downside is that we don’t really have what feels like a strong technician, and definitely not one whose other key strength is to press.

The new man offers Harry Winks a fresh start and given the role he played for Maresca, it’s not hard to see him coming in strong again. He should be happier with the role asked of him too. Whether Cifuentes will develop the work started by Maresca with Ricardo where we’ll see him operate more in midfield and rotating his position. He’s not the only swiss army knife at the Spaniard’s disposal, Choudhury can be deployed in a few different ways too.

The loss will be Wilfred Ndidi who would thrive in the system Cifuentes is likely to work to and while there’s some exciting younger prospects in the list, Will Alves, Michael Golding, they’re not tried and tested with us or in this type of system.

A lot of focus will go to Oliver Skipp following on from his hefty transfer fee. There’s no reason he shouldn’t be able to perform well at this level and he may be the number six of choice. His role last year was a few cameos but on occasion, he did press quite well and recover the ball. He never really had a clear run at it and you always wondered what role he’d been asked to undertake.

Manager Verdict

C- – There’s a big ole gap in the midfielders we’ll keep, that being that none of them really fit the ball recovery, pressing profile. That isn’t to say that Cifuentes can’t convert one or two, but there’s three weeks until the season kicks off. And we’re lacking depth in the type of central midifelders that would thrive in his team in particular. It makes last season’s outcast Harry Winks vital.

Assessment

Hamza Choudhury: SQUAD OPTION

Harry Winks: BUILD AROUND

Oliver Skipp: BUILD AROUND/SQUAD OPTION

Boubakary Soumare: BUH-BYE

Michael Golding: SQUAD OPTION

Will Alves: BUILD AROUND

Kasey McAteer: BUILD AROUND

Wilfred Ndidi: SHOW ME THE MONEY

Sammy Braybrooke: SQUAD OPTION


Forwards

Because our ‘list’ of out and out forwards is more like a singular line, we’re throwing wingers into the mix too because we’re going to need every inch of attacking support unless we bolster. Except the official site wants to list Kasey McAteer as a midfielder, not a forward. We’ll go with it for now.

Fortunately, Cifuentes doesn’t seem averse to playing a false nine, which could see Stephy Mavididi moving more into the middle. But essentially if you’re looking for the out and out strikers it’s the polarising Patson Daka and 16 year old Jake Evans. Unless you are one of the few Daka-heads still out there, this is clearly not ideal going into a Championship season.

Jake Evans is clearly a player we’re keen to hang onto, one of the many we’re committing to a professional contract once old enough. It’s still unlikely he’ll be drafted into a starting role every game. He’ll be a key member of the squad and it’s going to be about building up his experience and getting more first team minutes.

Daka was arguably at his most effective, albeit still missing some insanely easy to finish chances, under Maresca so the Cifuentes style of play should lend itself more to suit him again. While it may not be the popular choice to say that he could be the main man next year, it’s also unclear exactly who would be coming in to buy him? And quite what money or abilities we have to go out and get a different striker/s; so if Cifuentes can make him feel loved again, we may as well try to use him.

As far as wingers are concerned, it’s a little healthier but we could still do with some more reinforcements. Particularly if Mavididi does end up in a more central role. While we’re all foaming at the prospect of Abul Fatawu’s return, it is worth noting that he still hasn’t played a match yet in this pre-season, much as he is getting closer.

Then there’s the wildcard, the young ace up our sleeve: Jeremy Monga. He had moments of brilliance and was a crowd pleaser. He may not start every game but he’ll be a player Cifuentes should love and imagine having terrorised a defence with the likes of Fatawu and being able to give him a break to throw Monga on instead. Glorious.

At the other end of the scale, we have Jordan Ayew and Bobby De Cordova-Reid, bags of experience between them and both should be more than capable of doing something at this level, assuming both stay. Again, it’s hard to see where either could be offloaded to. It’s not quite so obvious where they fit in, but they’re squad options.

The official site doesn’t want to consider Kasey McAteer as a forward, cue his inclusion above. But he’ll likely be deployed in the wide areas too. And there’s still Wanya Marcal-Madivadua as well, back from a weird season of being out on loan in the Netherlands. If he’s ever going to make it at Leicester, this has to be the season.

Manager Verdict

B – Mixing wingers and strikers makes ranking this a little harder. Because from a winger point of view, we’ve got a few options. For pure strikers it’s less than convincing but if Cifuentes can get the most out of the options we do have, we could still be pretty potent on the attack.

Ideally, he’d probably want another striker but you can expect to see others stepping into the false nine role.

Assessment

Jake Evans: SQUAD OPTION

Patson Daka: BUILD AROUND

Abdul Fatawu: BUILD AROUND

Stephy Mavididi: BUILD AROUND

Jeremy Monga: BUILD AROUND

Jordan Ayew: SQUAD OPTION

Bobby De Cordova-Reid: SQUAD OPTION

Wanya Marcal: SQUAD OPTION


The work ahead

From what we know about Cifuentes, his biggest issue looking at our current squad is the lack of midfielders that spring to mind who are true technicians that can apply the pressing, quick ball recovery style he looks for. Wilfred Ndidi springs to mind, but it seems unlikely we’ll hold onto him.

He’s likely to want to buffer the goalkeeping options to mitigate risk there and ideally, he’d probably want another more experienced striker. But it feels like he could deploy the players we do have well and get the best out of some who were overlooked or poorly used by his predecessors.


Official results:

BUILD AROUND: Jakub Stolarczyk, James Justin, Ben Nelson, Harry Souttar, Luke Thomas, Ricardo Pereira, Kasey McAteer, Oliver Skipp, Harry Winks, Will Alves, Abdul Fatawu, Stephy Mavididi, Patson Daka

SQUAD OPTION: Steve Bausor (we can’t have literally just one goalkeeper), Caleb Okoli, Hamza Choudhury, Woyo Coulibaly, Olabade Aluko, Michael Golding, Sammy Braybrooke, Jordan Ayew, Bobby De Cordova-Reid, Wanya Marcal

SHOW ME THE MONEY: Victor Kristiansen, Wilfred Ndidi, Bilal El Khannouss, Mads Hermansen 

BUH-BYE: Wout Faes, Jannik Vestergaard, Boubakary Soumare, Conor Coady


3 responses to “Which players will Martí Cifuentes build around and who should be packing their stuff up: It’s the annual LCFC squad evaluation”

  1. skipp, daka,decordova Reid need to be binned. There is no building around rubbish.

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  2. I usually agree with most of the articles here, but anyone who doesn’t think Daka, Decordova-Reid, Ayew and Skipp need to be binned is living on some strange planet nowhere near Leicester 😀 As you pointed out for Faes and Vestergaard, the question isn’t who WILL leave, it’s who SHOULD leave.

    I’d also argue that Justin has been around getting gradually worse (and stinking the place up in fact last season) for far too long and he should do one too. Don’t forget, initially he couldn’t get in Maresca’s side ahead of Callum Doyle in the Championship either.

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    1. Totally agree about Justin – he had one good season in a good city team and, due to being the only english left back in the world scraped an england call up. Since then he’s got progressively worse, he is suspect defensively, has one of the lowest pass completion rates in the squad and, frankly, isn’t getting any younger or cheaper. I’d say sell – but clearly no other club has ever taken an interest in him. I just pray we don’t offer him a new deal.

      This article doesn’t feel the lest bit subjective – really just a list of the writer’s own personal likes/dislikes.

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