There’s something a little more exciting about getting up and going to an FA Cup game. For all of the cliches, the magic of the cup is one you hear every year. But it delivers. Whether that’s Wrexham upsetting Nottingham Forest, trips to grounds you couldn’t imagine yourself at otherwise and it doesn’t get much bigger an upset than non-league Macclesfield knocking out FA Cup holders, Crystal Palace. Despite everything else going on in the game, it’s still special.
It’s not just Leicester City fans currently experiencing a lot of anger and apathy lately. West Ham fans voted with their feet for their last league game, Tottenham fans are wildly unhappy and that’s just naming two examples from the last week. Football in 2026 gives you a lot of reasons to dislike it, to question the direction it’s heading in or to make the average fan feel wholly disconnected. Yet the magic of the FA Cup holds up.
For some, this was a chance to see a new stadium. Competitively, Leicester and Cheltenham have only met twice, in our 2008/09 League One campaign. Whether a new ground or not, there’s something romantic about the old school grounds where you’re on top of the pitch and there’s no electronic advertising hoardings forcing sports betting websites down your throat on a loop.
Perhaps it also cascades us all back to our childhood memories of football. Upsets away to Premier League opposition, for me that’s Charlton away in 2005, or comebacks when all hope seemed lost, Tottenham in 2006. Put yourselves in the shoes of a Cheltenham fan and they must have fancied themselves for the possibility of an upset this time.In Leicester’s current trajectory, how many other games will you go to where you have a view of the rolling Cotswolds from your seat, or where you end up in the club bar post-match and get introduced to the groundsmen, the stadium announcer and have them be graceful. With a tight, sold out away end, this had everything you’d hope for to make for a loud display. A chance to forget the pressures and strains of the league.

This only made the largely silent showing from the away end even stranger. Chants weren’t catching on, people weren’t especially negative but it was easier to hear the Cheltenham fans at the other end of the stadium, or for single cries to be heard. You could attribute this to the early kick-off, the cold or the general hangover of us not exactly being thrilling to watch lately.

Or maybe the divide between fans that we’ve seen expanding over the last couple of weeks has taken its toll. Either way, for a change, it’s difficult to attribute the crowd reaction to the players and the performances. This was a professional showing from Marti Cifuentes’ side.

A controlled first half

Cifuentes made eight changes, capitalising on a chance to rest some key players and give more responsibility and opportunity to the younger players he’s been bringing off the bench. After some impressive cameos, Louis Page started in place of De Cordova-Reid, Hamza Choudhury replaced Jordan James, there were starts on the right for Olabade Aluko and Silko Thomas, Jannik Vestergaard came in for Caleb Okoli and there were starts for Patson Daka and Asmir Begovic.

Jakub Stolarczyk and Abdul Fatawu were rested completely, neither included in the squad, but most of the other key names were on the bench, an insurance policy should plan A not have played out as hoped.

It was a tricky opening for Leicester, Cheltenham started fairly brightly while not hugely closing us down and the game felt a little disjointed for the first ten minutes or so. Eight changes can do that to a side, particularly one with younger players settling into new or different roles. The frozen part of the Cheltenham pitch, Leicester’s end to defend in the first half likely needed some adjustment too.

Once Leicester did seize control, it was about how we’d carve out chances and take anything we did create. Of the 41 goals we’d scored this season prior to kick-off, only 7 of them had been scored from players who started this FA Cup tie. Two of those goals belong to Vestergaard, who is hardly expected to score often.

Given that Patson Daka ended 2025 with just one goal, which took him until November to score, him opening the scoring just 10 calendar days into 2026 probably wasn’t on anybody’s bingo card. After some clever footwork started by Daka, added to by Page and with a cheeky flick over from Stephy Mavididi, Daka turned and fired into the net without any hesitation. It was a well worked goal and a great finish.

This was Daka’s first FA Cup goal, thankfully he didn’t attempt another neck-breaking backflip on the hard ground, but it should have boosted his confidence after grabbing a goal for Zambia at AfCoN recently as well.

It looked like Vestergaard was set to add another to his tally this season, a good save from goalkeeper Joe Day prevented his set piece header from going in. Day has experience of beating Leicester in the FA Cup, from his time at Newport where he made plenty of saves against us in that 2-1 loss.
But the game was effectively wrapped up on the half way mark. Mavididi got some glory for himself.

Page was involved again, and Oliver Skipp played his part, but Mavididi made the cutting run inside with the ball and it was a smart finish to double the Foxes lead. This is the exact type of game Mavididi needed, one to build some confidence and in which he took players on and ran at them more, arguably where he’s also at his most dangerous.

He’s had a largely frustrating season so far, often caught not making the right decisions and definitely not running at defenders enough. There’s an argument to be made for the level of the opposition, but Mavididi is such a confidence player, that the output is more important. Leicester could do with him carrying this mindset and output into the next game.

A key trio

Three players caught the eye more than most today, for varying reasons. If it was a focus on the first half, Louis Page may not have scored or got a direct assist, but he was brilliant. He’s looked great in the bursts we’ve seen of him so a start felt incredibly deserved. He’s energetic and determined, a livewire whose composure defies his age. The lack of CryptoBros on his shirt is the only reminder that he’s still just 17.

Page wasn’t even born when the two earlier mentioned FA Cup victories (against Charlton and Tottenham) played out. Against Cheltenham, he was involved in the bulk of our attacking plays in the first half. There’s still things he can improve on but the first forty five minutes in particular showcased why we’re excited by what he could do.

He also took over set piece duty with James on the bench and it’s not something Leicester fans have really had the chance to watch him do. Virtually every corner either found a blue shirt or caused enough chaos to feel dangerous. The aforementioned Vestergaard chance came from one of those corners.

Putting the shift we know he’s capable of, but doesn’t deliver often enough with consistency, Mavididi made his mark today in a visible way, and the fans did reward him (including the selfies he paused to take after being substituted) but the chants were the loudest for Oliver Skipp. The midfielder continues his redemption arc transformation from lost, incredibly expensive acquisition to the controller in our midfield, chipping in wherever needed and seemingly always in the right place.

Skipp was unlucky to see his volley saved, denying him a second of the season and Leicester’s third goal. He’s become a reliable cog in the midfield in recent months, every team needs a player who spends the whole game grafting and never complains. He may well be ours.

He made some crucial blocks and tackles in our own box, including after one particularly wayward pass that looked like Cheltenham would have their consolation goal.

While Skipp and James have looked to be our best midfield duo, there have been Championship games where they haven’t been able to execute control over the opposition. Or where one of them going forward has left us open defensively if there’s one wrong move. Based on today’s display, there’s an argument for how Page could support this.

The third player worth a small mention was Ben Nelson. Perhaps there needs to be a study on why watching Nelson on the ball is, firstly, so visually pleasing, but also just breeds calm and confidence amongst fans. He’s the player Cheltenham fans seemed to be commenting on the most as well.

Those comments were interesting. He wasn’t wholly perfect, a couple of times he did get caught out but either he or his team mates recovered and it didn’t impact us. Partnered with Jannik Vestergaard this time, Nelson seems adept whoever he’s alongside but it has looked more convincing with Okoli of late.

A clean sheet, Marti? Are you insane?

Clean sheets from a Leicester perspective felt like they were becoming mythical, no more real than the Loch Ness Monster or ever seeing Harry Souttar play in blue again. Bizarrely, Leicester’s last clean sheet came against Championship’s leading scorers, Coventry City, back in September. Since then it’s been reluctantly accepted that to win we definitely need at least two goals and that we’d need to be defending better than normal to limit what we concede.

The biggest positive to take from this fairly uniform win was the clean sheet, featuring two of the regular starters. It was good to have Aluko given another chance in a less pressured situation. He did well for the most part, he’s deceptively stronger than his slender frame would suggest and he’s got enough pace to track back. He also offered some overlaps going forward with Silko Thomas, something we’ve not had much of lately.

There’s a counterargument that Leicester City should be keeping a clean sheet against Cheltenham. Especially when the League Two side, in the bottom half of the table, had goalscorers Isaac Hutchinson and Ethon Archer recalled by their parent clubs. But this Leicester side haven’t done a lot of what anybody would expect from them this season, so keeping a clean sheet for the first time in 21 games wasn’t a given.

The Robins had sporadic moments to lift the crowd. Their best chance was a Jordan Thomas shot that Begovic had to reach to see it over the bar. Thomas was given the Man of the Match from the home crowd, the player who had the most chances. It was largely comfortable for our veteran keeper otherwise and there weren’t as many ridiculous, individual errors as we’ve come to expect.

If there was one thing to be disappointed in from this tie, it was the lack of time for Jake Evans. If you can’t bring him on while 2-0 up in the FA Cup against a League Two side, when is he going to be given a chance? There’s surely a time limit on the successful benefits of travelling with and observing the first team without ever being given a chance to test himself.

Bringing on Jordan Ayew didn’t particularly make sense when the game felt won and even he seemed characteristically not into it. It took him a ridiculous amount of time by his standards to win a free-kick. Cifuentes may have taken longer to integrate the academy players than fans wanted, but he’s been generous with the minutes for many since bringing them into the squad. Even Wanya Marcal got some minutes today, what exactly does Evans need to do?

While we wait for the FA Cup draw, there’s preparation to get straight back to. Coventry away is the next game up. The league leaders haven’t been as perfect lately but with January reinforcements, it’s unlikely to be an easy tie. The added discourse of the M69 derby and a sold out away end should make this a fiery game that surely can’t end 0-0 again.

11 responses to “Cheltenham Town 0 Leicester City 2: A professional outcome”

  1. jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334 Avatar
    jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334

    Thanks Helen, The FA Cup is a wonderful event. I always looked forward to the 3rd round match and to other team’s third round matches. It has been devalued by the big clubs getting replays cancelled and its trajectory mirrors football as a whole – downward and money based but as you say, at the moment it still remains special. The match against Shrewsbury will always be the greatest game of football I’ve ever seen. The greatest cup competition in the world.

    I think your match report is very true and accurate. Page was good, great for a 17yo. He seems to have grown (physically) even in the last 6 months. Mavadidi after a little petulance at the beginning was magnificent. He plays better when given responsibility, but he has been poor and petulant most of the season. Skipp did well but I’m not with this “redemption arc” story being pushed. He’s had a few okay matches but overall he’s not had a good season. Hamza is the better DM and should start over him alongside JJ and Page. Nelson does have the calming effect and must be the only CB worth keeping past the end of the season. JV had a great header but really didn’t look as good as he should have against 4th division opposition. Okoli is the better partner for his physicality. JV slowed the match down badly again yesterday.

    I think Silko deserves a mention too. He has a lot of hate on FT but again he made good runs and played well in the first half. Aluko did not impress me as much as in pre-season but he did seem to be an added threat on set pieces. I think we should be playing him week in, week out to see if he’s the keeper we hope he is.

    I thought their Jordan Thomas did look good, worth an enquiry, especially if Fatawu leaves. Bringing ayew on was the only cifuentes blemish for me. It probably shows how Evans hasn’t progressed. He didn’t look good in pre-season and hasn’t managed to break into the squad. Again FT are ranting but it’s easy to overestimate young kids and their progression to first team football. He’s young and should be looking at a league 2 loan, even Braybrooke and Alves are still on that trajectory. Marcal is much older and far more ready for first team football than Jake – next we’ll be seeing shouts for Motsi to start!!

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  2. Cifuentes has his faults but his backing of young players is excellent. In 70 years of following the foxes, I cannot recall any city manager playing so many. Of course most managers had vastly better senior players to work with, and this is our poorest group since our season in league one. But Marti has had the guts to prefer the kids whereas his predecessors were sticking with the wretched dross like Faes.

    On the other hand, Marti’s football IQ seems limited. He said Choudury was very good against WBA when his second half was full of dreadful mistakes. Of course, it was really Marti’s fault in playing Choudury completely out of position on the left side.

    But, on balance, I would stick with Cifuentes and let him develop our prospects, of whom Page may be the best of all.

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  3. Michael Hryniszak Avatar
    Michael Hryniszak

    Agree completely about Evans. I was screaming at tv with frustration when Ayew came on. 2-0 game over. Maybe he hasnt progressed but giving him a run out would surely give his confidence a boost and point him in the right direction.

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    1. jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334 Avatar
      jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334

      How any LCFC fan can suggest that 2-0 is game over for Leicester at the present moment amazes me. Having said that I would have brought him on instead of Ayew too.

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  4. noisilystrangerfef58960dd Avatar
    noisilystrangerfef58960dd

    it was a professional performance and the biggest pluses are the clean sheet,Mavididi’s performance,goal and Daka’s goal,all confidence boosters to those that needed it.Page and Aluko have bright futures and along with Nelson,Monga,Evans the beacon of hope for the club.Skipp was very good but I still think we need an Ndidi figure and a target man,both to help attack and defend setpieces.Page corners were delivered well but Cheltenham weren’t anywhere near as strong as the average championship side.Hopefully this transfer window we make the right decisions

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  5. jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334 Avatar
    jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334

    If we have learned anything about Daka from the last 3 years, it’s that there are no pluses. Mavadidi should gain confidence but if he’s the type that loses it so quickly it means little, the clean sheet was against a 4th division side. Agree with the rest though.

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  6. Yes , Daka is a dead loss and needs to be jettisoned alongside Faes and Winks asap.

    It is the most negative, worrying time for City. Few good players , potential bankruptcy, a disinterested owner , and uninspiring executives.

    Yet it is the most exciting time ever for young prospects. Exhilarating are the grace and balance of Page, the power and speed of Aluko. With a lot of luck, best of all may be the finishing skills of Lorenz Hutchison.

    It’ s unlikely we can keep them all . If we did in a year or two our side could be totally home- grown, say:

    Stolarcyk , Aluko, Cover, Nelson, Gray, Page, Braybrooke, Alves, Evans Hutchison, Monga.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Expanding a bit on that, we could , very optimistically, in 2 or 3 years, field an entire 20 from academy lads, say:

    Stolarcyk, Aluko, Cover, Nelson, Gray, Page Braybrooke , Alves, Evans, Hutchison, Monga

    Bench: Bausor, Joseph, Wilson-Brown, Cartwright, Onanye, Silko Thomas, Joshua King, Marcal.

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    1. jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334 Avatar
      jovialunabashedly72a7bc2334

      Not while we have Rudkin and Top. We’ll be selling them off as quickly as possible to fund wages of veterans who don’t even play.

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  8. oops, left out Briggs

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  9. Yes, jovialu, we badly need to change our owners and executives. But in these gloomy days, the academy is clearly being well run. Over the last 70 years our production of top talent has been pitiful , averaging about 3 players per decade. Compare that with now, when we have two dozen bright young prospects , many playing in England age teams. Of course not all will.make it but quite a few already look like they will. As you say, we must try to hang on to as many as possible.

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