Tonight’s big scoreline (so far) comes from the Copa del Rey, where a Barcelona side including Rakitic, Griezmann, De Jong, Lenglet and the highly-rated whippersnappers Riqui Puig and Ansu Fati is a goal down at Ibiza, having had only one shot in the first half.
Two changes for Leicester, for whom Youri Tielemans and Ben Chilwell come in. West Ham make one change, bringing Arthur Masuaku in and dropping Pablo Fornals to the bench.
The teams!
Tonight’s game will be played by humans with the following names:
Leicester: Schmeichel, Ricardo Pereira, Evans, Soyuncu, Chilwell, Mendy, Perez, Tielemans, Maddison, Barnes, Vardy. Subs: Justin, Morgan, Gray, Albrighton, Ward, Iheanacho, Ndidi.
West Ham: Randolph, Diop, Ogbonna, Cresswell, Zabaleta, Snodgrass, Rice, Noble, Masuaku, Lanzini, Haller. Subs: Reid, Balbuena, Sanchez, Fornals, Martin, Ajeti, Antonio.
Referee: David Coote.
Hello world!
Poor Leicester. Just a few weeks ago (around 12 December, to be precise) they were in second place, six points ahead of Manchester City and a potentially recoverable eight adrift of Liverpool having played the same number of games, the title challenge very much on. But then, the wheels came off. Over their last six games they have won a mere seven points, just-about-relegation-dodging form, and suddenly they are 19 points behind Liverpool having played a game more, and six behind City having played one (this one, to be specific) less.
A match at home to the 17th-best team in the division might look like an excellent opportunity to resume normal service, but that would ignore the disappointing results against Aston Villa, Burnley and Southampton over the last couple of weeks, the fact that since early-mid December West Ham have precisely as many points as them, and their recent record of two points from their last four home games. As for West Ham, their home defeat to Leicester last month was the death knell for Manuel Pellegrini, who got the boot that very evening. Since then, the Hammers have, er, beaten Bournemouth. Still, it’s early days for David Moyes.
The Scot insists that he has discerned an improvement in his players. “It’s down to the players’ attitudes, and their attitudes have been so good,” he says. “I’ve seen it in their stats.” Which is good, because he sure as hell hasn’t seen it in the team’s results.
Last night there was all sorts of madness going on – ludicrous stoppage-time comebacks, ludicrous stoppage-time winners, teams that had completely forgotten how to win remembering how to win, teams only having two shots of any description in the entire game and scoring with both of them – and with any luck there’ll be more of the same tonight. Fingers crossed, eh?
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