Jamie Vardy the New Cover Page Guy
Jamie Vardy has set the record
of scoring in 11 consecutive premier league games and Leicester City and
Manchester United drew 1-1 and still everything is nail biting in the top 3 of
the EPL table.
Vardy's
unerring 24th-minute strike, at the end of a counter attack synonymous with the
Foxes this season, sealed his place in the record books, surpassing Ruud van
Nistelrooy's record of scoring in 10 straight English top-flight games.
Bastian Schweinsteiger also
made history by becoming the first German player to score for Manchester
United. He equalized for Manchester United as they still keep their hopes of
making it to the top of EPL. Both teams got 1 point from this game. Not the EPL
table is very tough as Leicester City and Manchester City are the joint toppers
of the group and Manchester United are few centimeters away from them.
All the focus ahead of kick-off
concerned man of the moment Vardy, who stood on the brink of history following
his strike at Newcastle last weekend.
Claudio Ranieri made just one
change to his side which won at St James' Park, with Shinji Okazaki replacing
Leonardo Ulloa, while Louis van Gaal was forced to reshuffle his side in the
absence of injured duo Marcos Rojo and Jesse Lingard.
Yet,
despite their four changes, United began well at the King Power - a stadium
where they slipped to a 5-3 defeat last season - patiently building attacks
against a well-drilled Leicester side.
However, having controlled the
majority of the opening 20 minutes, the visitors were punished by a devastating
Leicester counter.
Kasper
Schmeichel initiated the move - a move associated with Manchester United of old
- finding Christian Fuchs on the right flank before the Austria international
produced an exquisite disguised pass to play Vardy through on goal.
And the Leicester striker made
no mistake in drilling the ball beyond the on-rushing David de Gea to cap off a
flowing attack and seal his place in the history books.
It was
a moment everyone in attendance had come to see and, such was the importance of
the strike and the moment, the intensity of the game dipped in the aftermath,
allowing United to get a foothold on the cusp of half time
Okazaki failed to keep tabs on
Schweinsteiger in the area and the German rose highest to head powerfully
beyond Schmeichel a minute into added time, his first goal since signing from
Bayern Munich.
The
goal boosted United and took a degree of intensity out of Leicester's play
after the break and, having scored his first, Schweinsteiger came close to his
second in United colours, only for Schmeichel to expertly keep out his header
on 49 minutes.
Leicester opted to sit back and
looked to catch United on the break, as they had done to great effect in the
first. And they almost repeated their first-half exploits on 68 minutes as
Riyad Mahrez and substitute Ulloa combined brilliantly, but De Gea was on hand
to keep parity.
Memphis
Depay's inclusion improved United's chance in front of goal but the Dutchman
was culpable for wasting the Reds' best openings late on as United failed to
snatch the limelight away from Vardy.
Even big names like Depay,
Rooney and Darmian were unable to handle the intensity of this game.
Rooney was just out of form, he
was not in the game like he used to be.
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