Leicester: Anger, toxicity and growing disconnect – what next for Foxes?
The disconnect between the club and the fan base is only growing, which proves on Friday.
Whelan and the club director did meet with Foxes Trust co-chair Lynn Wyeth and Steve Molds, members of the supporter engagement team, and last week Representatives of supporters on the LCFC Fan Advisory Board, this is described as a candid and candid discussion.
“When something goes wrong, you need some leadership. You need people to come out and assure us,” Wyeth said.
“Lack of communication can lead to frustration, anger and toxicity at the Olympics.
“Other fans can’t understand. They’re like,’ Leicester fans are so ungrateful, they’re so qualified. They think because once they don’t know how lucky they are with the host, they won the Premier League.”
“It’s not that. We’re so grateful for what that family did (the owner is the Srivaddhanaprabha family), we had a great time, but how much mistake it has happened in the last few years.”
Van Nistelrooy is going to get adjustments from what he has, but no one has a consistent impact on the summer purchase at Leicester.
Midfielder Oliver Skipp, a £20m signing from Tottenham, fought for form while defender Caleb Okoli was 1,500 The £10,000 worth joined from Atlanta, and he only started for the first time under the Dutch last week.
Moroccan attacker El Khannouss, a £21m Genk, has shown potential flashes – including the Spurs winner – but remains green for the Green League.
Odsonne Edouard made only four appearances in the top flight, with the forward turning from Crystal Palace to a significant loan seat without any use, while right-back Woyo Coulibaly was the only January arrival.
“It’s really hard to judge him (van nistelrooy) because he doesn’t have a team,” Whees added. “They’re not good enough to stay up late last time, and now our players are getting worse now.”
Despite the poor performance, Leicester is by no means cutting its drift on the table.
They kept scoring against Ipswich at No. 18 and trailed only Wolves at No. 17, although they played more than both.
Foxes’ Premier League-winning captain Wes Morgan also helped them avoid the 2013-14 drop, and he believes they can resist the odds again.
“It has been proven to be possible (the team can get rid of the relegation war). I’m part of the team that does that,” he said.
“I’m sure fans are disappointed in the past few weeks. Things may change and we know this is happening in the past.
“It’s not too late.”