LONDON: Leicester's Premier League title
defence got off to an embarrassing start as the champions crashed to 2-1
defeat at troubled Hull in the season opener on Saturday.
Just
three months after their astonishing title triumph, Claudio Ranieri's
side were brought back down to earth by a team whose preparations for
the new campaign were marred by the resignation of manager Steve Bruce
and their failure to sign a single player.
Adama
Diomande gave Hull a first-half lead before Riyad Mahrez brought
Leicester level with a penalty shortly after the interval.
Robert
Snodgrass drove in the winner 12 minutes into the second half as a team
in crisis on and off the pitch became the first to beat the defending
English champions on opening day since Manchester United defeated
Arsenal in 1989.
Hull have approached the season in a
state of turmoil, with no permanent manager following Bruce's
resignation on July 22, and a thin squad stretched to its limits by
injuries.
Caretaker manager Mike Phelan went into the
game with just 13 fit senior players, and named a substitutes' bench
consisting largely of untried youngsters, including three teenagers.
Hull's
supporters have blamed owners Assem and Ehad Allam for a lack of
investment in the squad, and graffiti calling for them to sell the club
was found daubed on the outer walls of the stadium on Saturday morning.
As
stewards hastily tried to paint over the vandalism before kick-off,
supporters gathered outside to display banners and chant for the Allams
to leave.
A Chinese consortium, led by businessmen Dai
Yongge and Hawken Xi Liu, has expressed an interest in buying the club,
and its key figures were at the match to watch the Premier League season
begin.
Leicester were sharper for the opening 30
minutes, but were unable to capitalise on the chances they created, with
Jamie Vardy a particular culprit.
Thwarted
Vardy, who scored 24 league goals last season, miskicked
horribly after new signing Ahmed Musa had darted down the left to roll
the ball back to him 16 yards from goal.
After Danny
Drinkwater had screwed wide from Mahrez's inviting right-wing cut-back,
Vardy was then thwarted by some dogged Hull defending.
Christian
Fuchs got clear after playing a one-two with Musa and, when goalkeeper
Eldin Jakupovic raced out to block, the ball ran loose to Vardy - but
Jake Livermore threw his body in the way of the shot.
Vardy,
part of the England team beaten in the last 16 by Iceland at Euro 2016,
then skied an easy chance after Musa had dashed past the flat-footed
Curtis Davies.
Hull rode the pressure, though, and took the lead in the second minute of first-half stoppage time.
Kasper Schmeichel clawed out Davies' near-post header from a Snodgrass corner, but Diomande's overhead kick flew into the net.
Leicester
responded immediately after half-time, winning a penalty within 20
seconds of the restart as Tom Huddlestone was judged to have clipped
Demarai Gray inside the area.
Television replays
suggested the contact may have been outside the area, but Mahrez sent
Jakupovic the wrong way with a cool spot-kick.
However, spluttering Leicester were only level for 10 minutes.
Ahmed
Elmohamady was quick to intercept a Schmeichel throw, and raced down
the right to create space for a cross that Danny Simpson half-cleared,
before Snodgrass drove in the loose ball.
Ranieri's
response was to throw on Shinji Okazaki and Daniel Amartey in a bid to
find an equaliser, and Mahrez almost delivered with a 25-yard free-kick
that Jakupovic shovelled away.
Snodgrass almost caught
out Schmeichel with a free-kick from wide out on the right, which the
goalkeeper had to beat away at his near post.
By the
time the match entered its closing stages, the Hull fans were singing
'Can't Help Falling In Love With You' and chanting 'We are top of the
league'.
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