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Leicester fans demand change as Rowett urges action after relegation

BBC Sport

Leicester City fans gathered outside King Power Stadium to demand change after the club were relegated to League One just 10 years after their famous Premier League title win. There had been boos from supporters during Tuesday's 2-2 draw with Hull City that sealed the Foxes' fate, but there was a largely gloomy - almost resigned - atmosphere throughout a game played in front of stands in which a huge amount of seats were left empty. Those feelings intensified outside the ground, with a series of players lambasted when they emerged, while there were renewed calls for chief football officer Jon Rudkin to leave the club and owner Khun Aiyawatt 'Top' Srivaddhanaprabha to sell up.

Khun Top, as well as manager Gary Rowett, listened to what some fans had to say, with the owner also issuing a statement , external saying there were "no excuses" for dropping to the third tier a decade after the 5,000-1 Premier League title win, and just five years on from lifting the FA Cup. "Responsibility sits with me," said Khun Top when he addressed the club's third relegation in four years. "We have experienced the highest highs and now the lowest lows, and the pain is shared by all of us.

"I am truly sorry for the disappointment we have caused. "I understand the strength of feeling among our supporters, and we do not take your support for granted, especially at moments like this. " We need 'a full clear-out' and to 'stick together' - fans react to relegation How Leicester went from champions to League One in a decade Khun Top went on to say "necessary decisions" will be made to "rebuild, improve and restore the standards expected" at Leicester.

Manager Rowett, who succeeded Marti Cifuentes in February, had 14 games to save the club from the drop. They were relegated after 12. Leicester had already been docked six points for historical spending breaches when Rowett took the job, but the 52-year-old told BBC Radio Leicester he "will be the first to hold myself accountable" for the part he played in the relegation.

But Rowett is just one of six permanent bosses to have been involved in the club's three recent relegations. It started with FA Cup-winning manager Brendan Rodgers, who was replaced by Dean Smith in 2022-23, while Steve Cooper was succeeded by Ruud van Nistelrooy last term. Enzo Maresca, the only manager to see out an entire campaign in the past four seasons, oversaw 31 wins when he guided Leicester to the Championship title two years ago.