Leicester show ‘big heart’ to keep hopes alive at Sevilla, says Claudio Ranieri

‘The first half was very tough but we didn’t give up,’ says manager
Jamie Vardy’s late goal gives Leicester genuine chance to progress
Leicester City, second left, congratulates Jamie Vardy
Leicester City, second left, congratulates Jamie Vardy after the striker scored his first goal in the Champions League in the 2-1 defeat at Sevilla. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City FC via Getty Imag

Leicester show ‘big heart’ to keep hopes alive at Sevilla, says Claudio Ranieri

‘The first half was very tough but we didn’t give up,’ says manager
Jamie Vardy’s late goal gives Leicester genuine chance to progress

Claudio Ranieri praised his Leicester City players for showing “big heart” to fight back and keep alive their hopes of reaching the quarter-finals of the Champions League after Jamie Vardy scored a crucial away goal in a 2-1 defeat at Sevilla.

They were outplayed for so much of the match and trailed to goals from Pablo Sarabia and Joaquín Correa on a night when Kasper Schmeichel was outstanding and made a number of superb saves, including keeping out a first-half penalty. But Leicester departed Spain in positive mood after Vardy’s goal totally changed the complexion of the tie. It was the England international’s first in the Champions League and only his sixth of the season for Leicester but could not have been better timed.

“The first half was very tough, we were a little scared, nobody wanted to show for the ball and Kasper kept the team alive, saving the penalty and some shots,” Ranieri said. “The second half was much better and we believed we could do something good. When we played our football in our good moment they scored the second goal, but we didn’t give up and then we went back and scored a goal that was important for three things: it gave strength to us, Vardy goes back to scoring, and it reopens the match in the second leg.”

Sevilla dominated possession to such an extent that Samir Nasri and Steven N’Zonzi completed more passes than the entire Leicester team, yet the English champions now have a genuine chance of reaching the last eight, with a 1-0 home win in the second leg, at the King Power Stadium next month, enough to see them through.

“We know they are better than us, a very high-quality team, a lot of experience,” Ranieri said. “But we have a very big heart, very big effort, we helped each other and I think we deserved this goal. I think we are still the underdogs because they have high quality but we will try to do our best – if we lose it’s because Sevilla made a fantastic performance.”

As well as missing a penalty Sevilla also hit the woodwork on two occasions, with the Leicester goal living a charmed life at times. “When we play with this character, also the luck comes on your side,” Ranieri said. “We have to continue in this way and keep going. Now we know our focus is on the Liverpool match [on Monday]. It could be a turning point, but it’s important to make another good match against Liverpool.”

Vardy, who had not scored since his hat-trick against Manchester City in December, dedicated his goal against Sevilla to Finley, his son, who was born last month. “My celebration was for little Finley,” he said, explaining why he put a thumb to his mouth. “He’s probably asleep but that was for him. Danny Drinkwater got through and put it on a plate for me. But we worked so hard. We all gave 110%.”