Leicester City hardest hit of Premier League clubs by Africa Cup of Nations departures
Defending champions will be without three key first-team squad members for up to a month
Manchester United and Liverpool have each lost an important player, but in the Premier League it is Leicester City for whom the Africa Cup of Nations is the biggest inconvenience.
While United centreback Eric Bailly has been called up by the Ivory Coast and Liverpool have lost Senegalese flier Sadio Mane, Leicester have had to cede Riyad Mahrez, Islam Slimani and Daniel Amartey.
Fifteenth in the table, Leicester are fighting to avoid being dragged into a relegation dogfight and leftback Christian Fuchs says it is a chance for the squad’s fringe players to prove their worth.
“These are very essential players for us,” Fuchs told local newspaper the Leicester Mercury.
Mahrez, 25, was named African Player of the Year last week for his starring role in Leicester’s 5,000-1 title triumph, having also been named England’s Players’ Player of the Year for last season.
Although he has gone off the boil this term, the quicksilver Algerian winger remains a key figure for Leicester and with seven goals in all competitions he is the club’s leading scorer.
He is joined in Algeria’s squad by Slimani, who has scored six goals since his club-record £29 million (HK$273.3m) switch from Sporting Lisbon.
Completing the triumvirate is Ghana midfielder Amartey, but his compatriot Jeff Schlupp remains at Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri’s disposal after missing out on selection by Avram Grant.
Nigerian forward Ahmed Musa scored twice as Leicester came from behind to beat Everton 2-1 in the FA Cup on Saturday and his international teammate Wilfred Ndidi has just arrived in a £15 million move from Genk.
Bailly’s departure leaves Manchester United light in central defence, particularly with Marcos Rojo having sustained a muscular injury during Saturday’s 4-0 FA Cup win over Reading.
Chelsea, the league leaders, have learnt to rue the Africa Cup of Nations in the past, having seen stars such as Didier Drogba, Michael Essien and Salomon Kalou wrenched from their grasp mid-season.
But with Nigerian Victor Moses the only African player in Antonio Conte’s first-team squad, they will be completely unscathed by the latest edition of the tournament.
Yaya Toure having retired from Ivory Coast duty and Kelechi Iheanacho’s Nigeria having not qualified, Manchester City are in the same boat.
Everton have also released only one player, but Senegalese midfielder Idrissa Gueye has become a vital cog since his close-season switch from Aston Villa.
Crystal Palace manager Sam Allardyce will be lamenting in-form winger Wilfried Zaha’s decision to switch allegiances from England to the Ivory Coast, particularly having also lost Bakary Sako to Mali.
The tournament could have weighty consequences at the foot of the table.
Sunderland will miss Lamine Kone (Ivory Coast), Didier N’Dong (Gabon) and Wahbi Khazri (Tunisia), while bottom club Hull City are now without Ahmed Elmohamady (Egypt) and Dieumerci Mbokani (DR Congo).
“It will put us at risk as far as numbers in our squad go, but some of these players could be back in three weeks,” said Sunderland manager David Moyes.
“We just don’t know how long they will be in the tournament.”