Leicester team on defensive breaking silence on Ranieri exit

In this Saturday, May 7, 2016 file photo Leicester City team manager Claudio Ranieri has the crown of the trophy placed on his head by Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel as they celebrate becoming the English Premier League soccer champions at King Power stadium in Leicester, England. Leicester City announced Thursday, Feb. 23, 2017 that they have sacked manager Claudio Ranieri less than a year after their incredible run to the Premier League title.
In this Saturday, May 7, 2016 file photo Leicester City team manager Claudio Ranieri has the crown of the trophy placed on his head by Leicester goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel as they celebrate becoming the English Premier League soccer champions at King Power stadium in Leicester, England. Leicester City announced Thursday, Feb. 23, 2017 that they have sacked manager Claudio Ranieri less than a year after their incredible run to the Premier League title.

LONDON-Two days after Claudio Ranieri's firing, Leicester players went on the defensive on Saturday to insist they didn't play any role in the manager behind their astonishing English Premier League title triumph losing his job.

"There is speculation I was involved in his dismissal and this (is) completely untrue, unfounded and is extremely hurtful!" striker Jamie Vardy wrote on Instagram. " The only thing we are guilty of as a team is underachieving which we all acknowledge both in the dressing room and publicly and will do our best to rectify."

The social media posts and interviews followed a noticeable lack of tributes from the championship-winning players in the day after Ranieri's firing. They came as Leicester's fight for top-flight survival became tougher, with the team sinking into the relegation zone of the league they won barely nine months ago due to Saturday's results going against them.

Leicester's Thai owners were reported to have consulted key players before dismissing Ranieri on Thursday.

"We are players and we can only affect (things) on the pitch, what happens above our heads at boardroom level is completely out of our control," goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel told the BBC. "All these reports about meetings, I don't know where they've come from. What I can say is our owners are very hands on. They are in and around the club all the time.

"They come to practically every game, they come to the training ground and they speak to all the players regularly. We talk to them about all manner of things from the weather to the pitches to whatever. These guys are very successful businessmen and have taken this club from the bottom of the Championship to the top. They're not going to let themselves be influenced by any players."

Many of those players were turned into champions by Ranieri, a feat they never envisioned when joining a provisional club which hadn't won the league since being formed in 1884 until last May.

Vardy was signed by Leicester in 2012 as a non-league player and his 24 goals powered the team to the title last May. But the England striker has found the target only five times this season in the league, an alarming drop by a player who was pursued by Arsenal in the summer transfer window.

"What we achieved together and as a team was the impossible!" Vardy said on Instagram. "(Ranieri) believed in me when many didn't and for that I owe him my eternal gratitude."

Seemingly explaining the delay in paying tribute to the Italian, Vardy wrote: "I must have written and deleted my words to this post a stupid amount of times! I owed Claudio to find the right and appropriate words! Claudio has and always will have my complete respect!"

Defender Danny Simpson said Ranieri helped him "become a better player and person."

"A lot of you don't know but my Leicester career was over, he believed in me and gave me a chance," Simpson wrote on Instagram. "Thats something else i will also never
forget."

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