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Leicester City 2-0 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Sunday, 18th May 2025 17:01

Town dropped to 19th in the Premier League table after a 2-0 defeat to Leicester City at the King Power Stadium with Jamie Vardy scoring his 200th goal on his 500th and final appearance for the Foxes, who move above the Blues. Vardy saw the home side into the lead in the 28th minute, then Kasey McAteer adding a second on 69 with Town creating plenty of chances throughout but unable to take any of them with Leif Davis going closest when he struck the post in the first half and had an effort ruled out for offside late on.

Town boss Kieran McKenna made four changes from the team which lost 1-0 at home to Brentford last week with George Hirst, Leif Davis, Jens Cajuste and Jack Clarke returning to the XI.

Hirst came in as the number nine with Liam Delap dropping to the bench, while Davis was back after his three-match ban at left-back with Jacob Greaves moving into the centre and Cameron Burgess out of the squad.

Jens Cajuste returned to the midfield having been managing his ongoing knee injury in recent weeks with Jack Taylor among the subs.

Clarke was on the left of the trio behind Hirst with Conor Chaplin dropping to the bench and Julio Enciso switching to the middle. Nathan Broadhead was among the subs following his spell out with a thigh injury.

Leicester made one change with Boubakary Soumare replacing Oliver Skipp in their midfield.

Vardy started his 500th and final game for the club looking for his 200th goal and fans all round the ground waved flags bearing the legend ‘Thank you Vards’ for some minutes prior to the teams coming out, the 38-year-old former striker leading out the Foxes.

The Blues, in their pink third kit, were the first to threaten in the third minute, Dara O’Shea dinking a ball over the top from deep for Hirst to chase and the Scotland international only just failed to get his toe to it before it ran through to Jakub Stolarczyk in the home goal.

Four minutes later, skipper Sam Morsy fed Enciso, who moved it on to Davis in space on the left. The full-back, whose only Premier League goal came against Leicester at Portman Road, saw his first shot blocked, then, after the ball returned to him, struck an even better effort which cannoned off the inside of the near post and ricocheted across goal and out for a throw on the far side.

Town continued to take the game to the Foxes and in the ninth minute Morsy unleashed a 30-yard strike which flew not too far over Stolarczyk’s bar.

On 17, Enciso worked an opening a few yards outside the box but scraped his shot wide of Stolarczyk’s left post.

After Omari Hutchinson had had his ankle inadvertently and painfully trodden on by Luke Thomas after being brought down by the Leicester wideman, Hirst flicked a header from Morsy’s free-kick beyond the far post.

Vardy had been a largely peripheral figure, Leicester having failed to mount a serious attack, but in the 20th minute Jordan Ayew threaded a pass for him to chase. O’Shea dived in but made no contact with either ball or player, but, with Vardy through on goal, Davis did exceptionally well to get back and drive him wide and his shot hit the side-netting.

Two minutes later, a Bilal El Khannouss free-kick from the right was played into Vardy’s feet in the box with his back to goal but the Foxes’ skipper’s shot was into the netting on the other side of the goal.

Town had been the more threatening side, however, and in the 26th minute they went close again. Davis curled over a deep cross from the left beyond Hirst but found Hutchinson behind him, the former Chelsea man volleying over.


The Blues were made to rue their misses two minutes later when Vardy bagged his perhaps inevitable 200th goal for the Foxes.

After Clarke had slipped when in possession midway inside the Leicester half, the home side broke and James Justin played in the day’s main man, who wrong-footed Alex Palmer with his deft first-time finish across the keeper and into the net.

Vardy celebrated by waving a corner flag at the delighted home supporters before being joined by all his teammates right in front of the Town supporters.

The goal seemed to rock the Blues, who until then had been on top for the most part, and within a minute Ayew waltzed into the area unchallenged, his shot scuffing off O’Shea and going wide, a fortunate escape for Town.

As the half approached the 40-minute mark, Hutchinson crossed from the right and O’Shea’s header caught a defender and looped wide.

The corner came to nothing but two minutes later, Davis, far more involved in attack than almost any game this season, got to the byline and chipped over a cross which reached Hutchinson 10 yards out. The England U21 international chested it down, then volleyed over the bar when he should have been celebrating his fourth goal of the season.

That was the last serious action of a half in which the Blues had been the better side and had had enough chances to put themselves in front prior to Vardy’s goal, Davis having been unlucky to hit the post, while Hutchinson’s late opportunity really should have got them back on terms. As so often this season the Blues had been unable to make the most of their opportunities with Stolarczyk not forced into a serious save.

At the other end, Vardy had had one chance before his goal but other than that and Ayew’s effort immediately after the Foxes had taken the lead, the Blues had limited the home side.

Town began the second half positively, Clarke winning a free-kick on the left after being brought down by McAteer, who was shown the game’s first yellow card. Davis whipped the ball over only just too far in front of Hirst.

Five minutes after the restart, Enciso beat Thomas, then cut in and shot low from the right into Stolarczyk’s hands.

Soon after, Hutchinson brought the ball across the edge of the area from the right before hitting a shot which was blocked. Town kept hold of the ball and Enciso stabbed it back towards the middle of the area from the left but found a Leicester defender.

On 55, the Paraguayan shot low but wide of Stolarczyk’s right post after the ball had fallen to him 25 yards out after Clarke had brought it in from the left and had been challenged.

Two minutes later, with Town having dominated the half up to that point, Hutchinson crossed from the right and Cajuste headed over when stretching for the ball.

Town threatened again just before the hour, Clarke breaking into the box, then feeding Cajuste on the left, who crossed low for Enciso, whose shot on the turn from eight yards was blocked.

The on-loan Brighton man had an even better chance having blocked Stolarczyk’s clearance. The ball looped away just beyond the keeper’s right post but the Paraguayan reached it but it spun off his foot into the grateful Stolarczyk’s arms with Hirst frustrated that it hadn’t been laid back to him.

On 62, McAteer hit a low shot which was no trouble for Palmer as Leicester broke with the game becoming more open, before the Blues had another chance, Hutchinson cutting into the box on the right but again his strike hit a defender.

McAteer went close to making it 2-0 in the 64th minute, again breaking forward on the right before hitting a shot across Palmer and off the far post.

Leicester subsequently made a double change, 15-year-old Jeremy Monga and Ricardo Pereira replacing Ayew and Justin.

The Blues had another chance in the 67th minute, Hirst getting behind the defence on the right of the box and, with no option in the middle, shooting from a tight angle but finding Stolarczyk in his way.

Two minutes later, the Foxes doubled their lead. El Khannous brought the ball forward towards the left, then played inside to Wilfried Ndidi, who diverted it first time to McAteer, who smashed a low effort past Palmer at his near post.

Town immediately made quadruple change, Delap, Taylor, Chaplin and Broadhead replacing Hirst, Cajuste, Enciso and Clarke.

The Blues continued to create chances and continued to waste them. In the 77th minute, Hutchinson crossed from the right and Broadhead swept the ball wide from just outside the six-yard box.

Two minutes later, the Foxes replaced Vardy, the 500-appearance, 200-goal man given a standing ovation from fans and a guard of honour by his teammates as he left the field, the PA haling him the club’s greatest ever player. Patson Daka took over, while McAteer was replaced by Jake Evans.

With two minutes of scheduled time remaining, Town switched Morsy for Massimo Luongo and Leicester swapped Ndidi for Skipp.

Town finally found the Foxes net in the final minute, Davis slamming home a volley at the far post, only to be flagged offside. VAR correctly upheld referee Andrew Kitchen’s decision.

The incident summed up the Blues’ afternoon which was brought to an end soon afterwards by referee Kitchen.

Frustrating afternoons have been two-a-penny for Town fans this season as the Blues have struggled to cope with established Premier League sides, often hanging on by their fingernails for long periods before falling to defeat.

This was a frustration of a different kind with the Blues in control of the game for long spells and having more than enough chances to have won the match. Their 20 shots and 31 touches in the opposition penalty area - to the Foxes’ 12 - were both the highest of the season but they were unable to take any of their opportunities.

And it wasn’t as if the shots were speculative efforts, Davis may have been unlucky with his strike off the post but Hutchinson will feel he should have done better with his two volleys and Hirst, Enciso and Broadhead also had chances.

At the other end, it was inevitable Vardy would get one or two chances, Davis defending the first well before the England international sent the majority of the fans in the ground home happy from the second.

McAteer’s second on the break as Town started to commit more men forward in the second half all but sealed the three points and only Leicester’s fourth Premier League home win this season and their second in a row.

The Blues have now gone 11 games without a win at the King Power Stadium since a 2-1 victory under Joe Royle on their first visit on Boxing Day 2002.

The result moves the Foxes three points ahead of Town into 18th - the first time the Blues have been 19th since February 15th - with each position in the division worth around an additional £3 million from the Premier League’s prize pot.

Town, who have a superior goal difference, will hope to move back ahead of them when they host West Ham United in their final Premier League game next Sunday with Leicester at AFC Bournemouth.

Leicester: Stolarczyk, Justin (Ricardo 64), Faes, Coady, Thomas, Ndidi (Skipp 88), Soumare, El Khannouss, McAteer (Evans 80), Ayew (Monga 64), Vardy (c) (Evans 80). Unused: Iversen, Okoli, Kristianesen, Buonanotte.

Town: Palmer, Tuanzebe, O’Shea, Greaves, Davis, Morsy (c) (Luongo 88), Cajuste (Taylor 72), Hutchinson, Enciso (Chaplin 72), Clarke (Broadhead 72), Hirst (Delap 72). Unused: Walton, Woolfenden, Godfrey, Johnson, Luongo. Referee: Andrew Kitchen (Durham). VAR: Neil Davies.


Photo: Action Images via Reuters



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blueoutlook added 17:55 - May 18
Sorry, but this just isn’t good enough. KM needs to sort it pretty smart for next season or he will be out on his ear by Xmas. He has credit at the moment, that won’t last long in the championship if he doesn’t get off to a decent start.
11

Bert added 17:59 - May 18
We needed to avenge the Portman Road robbery but failed to do so. This hurts. Plenty for KMcK to think about.
11

Rimsy added 18:03 - May 18
Well, this shows next season won't be a walk in the park. A poor Leicester team still looked a class above us. How on earth did we spend near on 150 million and end up like this, something obviously amiss. First time I've thought McK may not be the way forward, maybe we need someone with different ideas.
13

Carberry added 18:13 - May 18
We can't keep hearing about 'fine margins' or being competitive, we have been relegated with an appalling record.
Recruitment was part of our downfall. hopeless naivety bringing in players who couldn't match the physicality of the Prem and expecting them to do well.
And the manager, no Plan B, no inspiration, no hope of success.
There's an old saying, 'Whom the Gods wish to destroy, they first call promising'.
14

herfie added 18:15 - May 18
Everyone associated with today’s abject performance - including the manager and his coaching staff - should be thoroughly ashamed. Some very serious post-season reflection required by the owners, MA and KM. The oft repeated mantra of ‘lessons will be learned’ has rung increasingly hollow as the season progressed and, in truth, got worse. Enough said.
12

EssexTractor added 18:17 - May 18
The most disappointing season coming to its end , and yes it is true that had KM been at another club he would not be at that other club by now!
But here in Suffolk there is a sense of loyalty , has it been misplaced ..a reasonable argument could follow .have we expected more because of the previous two seasons?
We can see that because the Premier League boasts some fantastic individuals , superb teams with an understanding ..for us those abilities were just too strong for a squad that really was a Championship squad. We have been supported and funded by keen Americans, but Americans love success. Their investment is not one based on loss making , hopefully they will have that Suffolk sense of loyalty .
Between now and August having now the fundamental knowledge of that massive gap between Championship and Premiership teams , those in power, investors, CEO , management have a vital task to ensure that the great success of 2022-23 and 2023-24 does not just fade away into our memories, learn from the errors made and strive to bring smiles back to the loyal supporters of Ipswich Town Football Club.
3

chepstowblue added 18:19 - May 18
Be careful what you wish for people. There are some staggeringly moronic people on this forum who shouldn't be allowed to drive.....or vote !
-6

ArnieM added 18:20 - May 18
Too many changes to the team EVERY WEEK, yet again. Zero continuity tinuity therefore.

Same old bloody tactics every game, no matter who we play, and clearly an inability (or willingness?) to mix it up.

Predictable, one track manager. He's been well and truly found out.

More of the same next season?
11

OliveR16 added 18:21 - May 18
This is getting really poor. Without doubt KMcK is surviving on the back of two wonderful seasons because no manager would have been retained on this season's debacle. This is such an ambarrassing end to a wretched season.
17

TimmyH added 18:39 - May 18
RobsonWark - add Philogene to that list.
5

TimmyH added 18:41 - May 18
Should also say Mr Ashton has been very quiet of recent months and haven't heard from him and also Brett Johnson of GameChanger - remember him?
10

yorkieblue62 added 18:46 - May 18
Too much stating the obvious on here but losing matches is sometimes a hard habit to break and if McK does not start next season well, just like Burley in 2002 he will be out of a job. In order to turn things round he needs to seriously strengthen midfield as without a combination of solidity, energy and creativity in that area there is a significant negative impact on both attack and defence.
9

blueboy1981 added 19:01 - May 18
And STILL people condone FAILURE - this season has been a DISGRACE to the name of IPSWICH TOWN FOOTBALL CLUB.
People will now be talking about us for all the WRONG, but CORRECT reasons.
This Season HAS tainted our Proud Name.
Rest Peacefully Sir Bobby and Sir Alf - you would have been ashamed of such.
-2

TubbyToast added 19:05 - May 18
ffs - played 23 and have 22 points!
Keirin on a muti million manager contract without winning anything! Says what football is all about.
Get rid of and others and plough that money into care homes and hospices in Suffolk.
-4

Carberry added 19:06 - May 18
I would think Ashton is under as much pressure as McKenna. He would have sold the idea to the Americans that spending £150M of their money (and it is theirs, wherever it came from, the EPL or investment) and keeping McK on a massive contract would be the answer. It has backfired dramatically, not just missing out on Premier League status by a fine margin but flying headlong back to the Championship.
The Americans would have invested to build the value, ready to sell on and make a tidy profit - that's out of the window now.
Would love to be a fly on the wall when that gets discussed.
7

bluebullet29l added 19:12 - May 18
Kmk does not walk on water and is not the messiah...he's been found out big time...not many clubs if any would accept his performance this season. One win at home is down right pathetic and embarrassing
8

SickParrot added 19:18 - May 18
Another low point in a dreadful season. We're going down with a whimper. Couldn't score or keep a clean sheet against a poor Leicester team. We're basically hopeless in both penalty areas and poor in midfield. Given our results against the other relegated teams it's difficult to see how we're going to shake off our losing habit and be a force in the Championship next season.



12

Reuser2000 added 19:20 - May 18
We are way too slow and predictable with everything!! What happened to turning over the possession like we used too in the championship with players overlapping, working tirelessly to get in the box! All we do now is slow down possession, pass it out to Hutchinson he tries too either beat his man and cross it to nobody or pass it back too tuanzebe who passes it too morsy and then we go backwards... 0 creativity. Sad day, can't wait to be back in the championship but we need a strong start
8

RobITFC added 19:23 - May 18
Another game where we have the chances to win , but too weak in defence and lose! Well; done Leicester who ended the match with a 15 and 16 year old. We as a club don't have anyone seemingly ready for 1st team , maybe give Boniface, Taylor etc from u23's a chance in last game?

1

jon_talbot56 added 19:44 - May 18
Very disappointing. To be fair Leicester defended very well, closing down and blocks aplenty. By both goals came from players with time and space in the box. This and the home defeat to Saints the hardest results to take. The worst season in the history of the club. I don’t like to criticise but persisting with Clarke is flogging a dead horse.
4

delias_cheesy_flaps added 19:46 - May 18
Poor recruitment, tactics, management!
5

atty added 20:01 - May 18
We don’t have a PL squad, training ground, academy or recruitment resource. All of those will take time. Do we have a PL manager though?
4

tractorcolls added 20:08 - May 18
And that ladies and gentlemen is a stark reminder for anyone who thinks we're come straight back up with the majority of this team today!!! Mid table at best. Half of whom are probably on the phone to their agents and playing the new reality game show......"I'm a premier league player.....get me out of here". Don't want to here the quote " fine margins" either. Couldn't beat the teams around us in the bottom 3, home or away all season either. Sad day
5

oioihardy added 20:28 - May 18
I'll back mckenna and hope he's not sacked ... only sack him if it goes bad start of next season ...
BUT he deserves all the criticism he's getting now
Why not try something different, we are relegated already. Play delap and hirst together. Try something different. What's the point playing excatly the same as last 20+games we have played this season and lost most of them..... it clearly doesn't work .

It's just looking very russle Martin at this point

I know they recruited for the likelihood of us going down but still it's been poor recruitment all together.
8

blueboy1981 added 20:36 - May 18
Guess Who’s been Found Out ?? - Big Time too ! - and after taking ‘positives’ from every game supposedly !
You have to ‘pinch yourself’ to realise, and accept, how disgraceful this season degenerated unabated from September onwards.
To the deluded condoners and deniers - you only serve to make yourselves look FOOLISH !!
-2


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