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Game played on 28 May 2023


28 May 2023
 
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Leicester City 2-1 West Ham

Premier League    2022-23Match review
Filbert Street   32,183
  SubsGoals  
1Lukasz Fabianski    
5Vladimir Coufal    
24Thilo Kehrer    
27Nayef Aguerd    
3Aaron Cresswell    
41Declan Rice    
12Flynn Downes    
8Pablo Fornals 1  
11Lucas Paqueta    
22Said Benrahma    
9Michail Antonio    
18Danny IngsSubed #9  
20Jarrod BowenSubed #22   
14Maxwel CornetSubed #11   
33Emerson PalmieriSubed #3   
10Manuel LanziniSubed #12   
 PosTable as at 28 May 2023PlWHDH LHFHAHWADALA FAAAPts
1Manchester City3817 116017114 4341689
2Arsenal3814 325325123 4351884
3Manchester United3815 31361083 8223375
4Newcastle United3811 62361488 3321971
5Liverpool3813 51461765 8293067
6Brighton and Hove Albion3810 45372184 7353262
7Aston Villa3812 25332165 8182561
8Tottenham Hotspur3812 16372565 8333860
9Brentford3810 72351857 7232859
10Fulham388 56312972 10242452
11Crystal Palace387 75212345 10192645
12Chelsea386 76201954 10182844
13Wolverhampton Wanderers389 37192025 12123841
14West Ham United388 47262433 13163140
15AFC Bournemouth386 49202852 12174339
16Nottingham Forest388 65272415 13114438
17Everton386 310162729 8183036
18Leicester City385 410232743 12284134
19Leeds United385 77263723 14224131
20Southampton382 512193742 13173625
match review copied from www.theguardian.com

Leicester relegated from Premier League despite victory over West Ham
Ben Fisher at the King Power Stadium
Date published: Sun 28 May 2023 22.15 BST

For Leicester City, never has a win felt so utterly crushing. Victory over West Ham on the final day of the season was insufficient to avoid relegation to the Championship, seven years on from lifting the Premier League title here, six on from reaching the Champions League quarter-finals and two on from winning the FA Cup.

A bereft James Maddison, among those set to depart, crouched on the grass at the final whistle and Leicester's players huddled around the phone of Victor Kristiansen, who was not in the squad, praying for a late twist in their favour as stoppage time continued at Goodison Park. A couple of fans had radios glued to their ears in hope of a swing that was not forthcoming.

Twenty-four hours earlier Leicester's women avoided relegation on the final day of the Women's Super League season but a repeat proved wishful thinking. "Come on Bournemouth," was the desperate chant from the Leicester fans.

During the game there were a couple of false alarms, moments whereby the anxious home support thought Bournemouth had scored at Everton, but Leicester's nine-year top-flight stay was up. Confirmation brought a mixture of jeers and cheers and the players orbited the centre circle applauding downbeat fans. Youri Tielemans, among eight players out of contract this summer, waved goodbye before trudging down the tunnel. "Say hello to Millwall," came the sarcastic chant from the West Ham supporters looking forward to a Europa Conference League final in Prague next month.

Things had all been going so well for Leicester until news of Abdoulaye Doucouré's goal for Everton filtered through here. Harvey Barnes's fine first-half goal paved the way to victory but suddenly a revved-up crowd was decidedly flat, silenced as reality set in. A couple of minutes later Saïd Benrahma rattled a post and any hope of a late, great escape was nearly all over there and then. The beaming smile on the face of Wout Faes after the defender headed in a Tielemans free-kick to double Leicester's lead felt somewhat cruel. Who was going to tell him?

A few minutes before kick-off, the unmistakable sound of the bugle as Paul Hing performed the post-horn gallop he has played on Filbert Street for the past 14 years. Then the Premier League's psychedelic pre-match anthem kicked in. It remains to be seen when it will be heard again here. A Leicester win was imperative if they were to have any chance of overhauling Everton. Dean Smith, who took charge with seven weeks and eight games remaining, laboured the point that Leicester had to focus on doing their bit, and they did. But the galling thing was that it was not enough.

In recent weeks there has been an air of resignation among Leicester supporters. And who can really blame them? They had won one of their previous 16 matches. But Smith pointed to Monday's draw at Newcastle, in which they kept a first clean sheet in the league since November, as character-building. That result also ensured Leicester started the final day above Leeds in the table. Nevertheless, safety was always out of their hands. "The odds may be against us, but we've overcome the odds before," the Leicester chairman, Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, said in his programme notes.

Leicester had a few nearly moments before seizing the lead through Barnes. Kelechi Iheanacho, preferred to Jamie Vardy in attack, pulled a shot wide after Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall's shot pinballed off Vladimir Coufal and then Nayef Aguerd. Soon after Aguerd was alert to steal the ball from Iheanacho after the striker collected Jonny Evans's arcing diagonal pass. Iheanacho was busy and he grazed the woodwork approaching the half-hour. Iheanacho plucked Barnes's cross out of the air, collected a one-two off Maddison and clipped the top of the crossbar.

Iheanacho looked to the skies in frustration but six minutes later every outfield player ran to a corner of this bouncing stadium to celebrate Barnes's brilliantly taken goal. Barnes burned down the left flank and then punched a pass into Iheanacho, who had pinned Thilo Kehrer, one of six changes made by David Moyes. Barnes did not stop there and carried on into the box, ghosting past Flynn Downes and Iheanacho cleverly slipped his teammate in with a first-time pass. Barnes composed himself before steering a shot into the far pocket of Lukasz Fabianski's goal.

Declan Rice again captained West Ham, with Moyes resisting any temptation to rest his star man. "I thought he played great, he put in another swashbuckling-type performance," Moyes said. "I have been really pleased with how well he's played over the season, he's been exceptional the way he's played and the way he's conducted himself. Now he's got the big moment to see if he can lift a trophy for West Ham, he needs to try and get ready and see how that looks."

The sight of Daniel Iversen claiming a dangerous Aaron Cresswell in-swinging corner, moments after Evans came close to scoring an own goal from one, was greeted by rapturous applause from the home support.

The West Ham substitute Danny Ings should have got the visitors on the scoreboard before Pablo Fornals fired a shot past Iversen in off a post but this was an afternoon when the result turned out to be immaterial. Leicester emerged for the second half to a hero's welcome but there was an altogether different, more sombre mood at the final whistle.

Daily Mail: MATCH FACTS AND RATINGS
LEICESTER CITY (4-2-3-1): Iversen 6.5; Castagne 6, Faes 6, Evans 5.5, Thomas 4.5; Soumare 6, Dewsbury-Hall 6.5 (Mendy 71); Maddison 7, Tielemans 6, Barnes 8; Iheanacho 7.5 (Vardy 77)
Substitutes not used: Smithies, Souttar, Amartey, Praet, Tete,
Manager: Dean Smith 8
Scorer: Barnes 34, Faes 62
Booked: Evans
WEST HAM UNITED (4-2-3-1): Fabianski 6; Kehrre 6, Coufal 6.5, Aguerd 6, Cresswell 6 (Emerson 71); Downes 6 (Lanzini 86), Rice 7.5; Benrahma 7 (Bowen 62 7), Lucas Paqueta 6.5 (Cornet 71 6), Fornals 6.5; Antonio 5 (Ings 62 5)
Substitutes not used: Areola, , Soucek, Ogbonna, Zouma
Manager: David Moyes 7
Scorer: Fornals 79
Booked: Ings
Referee: Simon Hooper 7
Read full Daily Mail report:

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much respect to John Northcutt, Roy Shoesmith, Jack Helliar, John Helliar, Tony Hogg, Tony Brown, Fred Loveday, Andrew Loveday, Steve Bacon, Steve Marsh and all past/current West Ham players and supporters