Opinion: Kante success shows Mahrez was wrong to stay loyal to Leicester

Published February 6th, 2017 - 04:54 GMT
French midfielder is headed for two titles in two seasons - and a possible player of the year award - while ex-colleague struggles against the drop
French midfielder is headed for two titles in two seasons - and a possible player of the year award - while ex-colleague struggles against the drop

"The last time I sat in this chair, the next day I was sacked," said the Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho when addressing the press from Leicester City’s media room following his team’s comprehensive 3-0 victory.

Leicester – en route to supplanting Chelsea as Premier League champions – fired the final, fatal arrows at Mourinho’s increasingly paranoid regime in December 2015. Because of that season, Mourinho knows all about what it’s like trying to hoist a sagging team who can’t – or won’t – put in the effort which earlier brought them success.

Mourinho’s calmer now; he probably relayed to Claudio Ranieri after this game the lessons he learned from the end of his Chelsea days. Not that it would do much good. It’s clear what’s wrong with Leicester. The qualities which brought them the Premier League title – hunger, togetherness, discipline – have been thrown into the wind.

Maybe the title win defined too many of these Leicester players’ professional lives. Real champions toss the medal aside and look for the next challenge. Too many of these were fattened by one feast.

Last summer was the time for Leicester’s key players to look around, and seriously consider, whether the club had achieved all it could. Sure, to stay would guarantee a pay rise of hundreds and thousands of pounds but what further glory could be gleaned at a club whose one title success was an absolute, bona fide, 5,000/1 moon shot?

Now is a good time to consider both sides of that decision – to stay or go.

There is a fair chance that Chelsea will win the Premier League title this season and that N’Golo Kante will win the Player of the Year award. There is a fair chance that Leicester City and current award holder Riyad Mahrez are getting relegated.

Kante was the under-rated attraction in Leicester’s run to the throne. He was offered “a substantially improved, long-term contract” to stay at the King Power Stadium but the France midfielder himself admitted that the opportunity to go to one of the biggest clubs in Europe and work with Antonio Conte was too good to turn down. Ranieri mock-strangled his former charge when he visited last month and conducted a 3-0 victory for his new club.

At times last season it appeared as though Leicester were playing with 12 men - just as it does for Chelsea this term. Kante’s ability to cover the midfield like no other player had the twin benefits of masking the deficiencies in the play of Robert Huth and Wes Morgan at centre back as well as ensuring Ranieri could play with two up front. Even when outnumbered in midfield, Kante and the dogged Danny Drinkwater often got the better of three-man combinations up against them.

This season it appears at times that Leicester are playing with 10. They have tried to replace Kante with Nampalys Mendy, Wilfred Ndidi and Daniel Amartay at different times but to no avail. Happily for Chelsea it is they who are benefitting most from Kante’s unique levels of application and control.

Winning the Premier League – even once – is going to be the peak of a lot of these Leicester players’ careers whereas Kante is going to win it twice in succession. Wes Morgan, Kasper Schmeichel, Andy King and Jamie Vardy have put in the hard yards down the lower reaches of English football. This is their crowning glory.

Vardy did the right thing by leveraging Arsenal’s interest last summer to sign the biggest contract he’s ever had put in front of him. At his age, at this stage of his career, he’ll never surpass what he did last term. Similarly, the likes of Christian Fuchs and Robert Huth would never in a million years dreamed of signing for Leicester and winning the league. They were probably preparing to stay in the league first and foremost.

Kante and Mahrez are different. They were scouted well – by Steve Walsh – and clearly moved to Leicester with the progression of their careers in mind. They are, and still should be, on the rise.

By Peter Staunton

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