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Vardy urges Leicester to ‘do Vichai proud’ after helicopter tragedy

By AFP
02 November 2018   |   1:44 pm
Jamie Vardy has urged his Leicester teammates to honour the memory of Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha as they prepare to return to action following their owner's shocking death in a helicopter crash.

Leicester City’s English striker Jamie Vardy looks at the floral tributes left to the victims of the helicopter crash which killed Leicester City’s Thai chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, outside Leicester City Football Club’s King Power Stadium in Leicester, eastern England, on October 29, 2018. – Leicester City’s chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha was among five people killed when his helicopter crashed and burst into flames in the Premier League side’s stadium car park moments after taking off from the pitch, the club said on October 28. A stream of fans already fearing the worst had laid out flowers, football scarves and Buddhist prayers outside the club’s King Power stadium after Saturday’s accident in tribute to the Thai billionaire boss — the man they credit for an against-all-odds Premier League victory in 2016 (Photo by Paul ELLIS / AFP)

Jamie Vardy has urged his Leicester teammates to honour the memory of Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha as they prepare to return to action following their owner’s shocking death in a helicopter crash.

Vichai and four other people died when his helicopter plummeted to the ground just outside the King Power Stadium following the game against West Ham last weekend.

Leicester’s midweek League Cup tie against Southampton was postponed but the Premier League match away to Cardiff on Saturday will go ahead as planned.

Vardy and his Leicester teammates have posted regular messages online, paying tribute to the man they called “The Boss”, and the former England man has opened up about how he found out about the accident.

“I was just on my way home with my wife and kids and I got the news,” he told Sky Sports. “Obviously straight away it’s shocking and you can’t really believe it’s happened.

“You try to get in touch with everyone but no one was picking up their phones so that’s when I knew something was different.”

Vardy, whose goals fired Leicester to the Premier League title in 2016, urged his teammates to produce a performance to honour Vichai.

“We all spoke about wanting to play, it’s what Vichai would’ve wanted and that’s what we are going to do,” he said.

“We need to make sure we go out there and honour his name and put in a performance that will hopefully get the win. I know people are saying the result doesn’t matter but for us as players we want to get a positive result.

“It’s going to be tough and very emotional and what the lads wanted to do was play this game and honour the man himself.

“The main thing is we all come together even stronger and do Vichai proud.”

Vardy said the late owner was like a member of the extended family.

“It didn’t matter who you were, he always made time for you, and as all the pictures that have been put out have shown, he was always smiling,” he said. “Those are the things you will never forget and which will stay engraved in your mind.

“From day one, literally from when I first met him, up until now, he’s always been really friendly and always wanting to be involved. He wasn’t just a chairman, he was part of the squad itself and was always here and always giving you encouragement and wanting to be involved with the lads and that’s credit to him.”

Manager Claude Puel said on Thursday that he would give the players the opportunity to travel to Thailand for the funeral, which is due to begin on Saturday, and Vardy is keen to be there.

He said: “It’s been the hardest week of everyone’s lives. It’ll be massively important we attend. We are a close-knit group and one big family and one of the main reasons for that is Vichai so it’s massively important.”

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