Leicester City’s drop into League One is leaving former winger Marc Albrighton stunned, with a 2-2 draw against Hull City at King Power Stadium confirming relegation. Leicester led in the 54th minute, yet could not hold on, and results elsewhere meant a first season in England’s third tier since 2008-09, a decade on from the club’s Premier League title triumph.
Albrighton, who played 313 games for Leicester across 10 years, described a club unrecognisable from the one left two years earlier. The 2025-26 campaign ended with Leicester’s relegation from the Championship officially sealed, and the club now faces League One football along with deep questions about direction, planning and leadership on and off the field.
For Albrighton, the scale of decline is linked to strain throughout the club structure, from the boardroom to the terraces. “Yeah, it’s sad more than anything. I think there’s a sadness that probably surrounds it about how it can just allfall apart so quickly,” Albrighton exclusively told Stats Perform. “I think there’s probably been signs over the last few years, but I think it’s got to a point now where it just shouldn’t be happening.”
Albrighton pointed to a broken connection between key groups that once felt united during Leicester’s most successful era. “I think there are so many factors. Just the fact of how disconnected everything is, in terms of hierarchy, playing staff, fans, city, everything that was sort of brought together 10 years ago seems to be the complete contrast now, and like I say, just so disconnected.”
Leicester’s on-field numbers underline the collapse. Only Sheffield Wednesday, with 83 goals conceded, let in more than Leicester’s 67, a figure matched only by QPR. More striking, however, was the 30 points surrendered from winning positions in the 2025-26 Championship season, the highest tally for any side in the division and a recurring theme in their campaign.
Those problems came despite a squad containing several players with recent Premier League experience. Asmir Begovic, Jannik Vestergaard, Ricardo Pereira, Oliver Skipp and Patson Daka all featured, yet Leicester still slipped into the bottom three. Albrighton highlighted that mix of experience and struggle as evidence that basic defensive issues and game management, rather than talent alone, dragged the side towards relegation.
Albrighton also questioned how the club had been run in recent seasons, especially around key decisions. “When I see fans protesting against the ownership, I can’t believe that this is the same football club because even five years ago, six years ago, I would never have believed you if you had told me that.” Managerial turnover, transfer planning and a lack of clear vision all contributed, in Albrighton’s view, to the feeling of drift.
Off the pitch, instability grew after Marti Cifuentes was dismissed in January following a poor sequence of results. Former Leicester midfielder Andy King temporarily steadied performances before Gary Rowett arrived, yet Rowett could not lift the team clear of danger. In February, a six-point deduction for breaching English Football League financial rules further deepened trouble and left Leicester facing a steep climb to safety.
Albrighton felt the squad quality should have been enough to avoid such a fate. “I think there hasn’t really been a strategy off the field in terms of managerial appointments, player recruitment. There’s been no alignment there,” Albrighton, who won the Premier League and FA Cup with Leicester, added. “I think player performances have been poor. The team, for me, the team that they’ve got should be nowhere near that position, regardless of wage bills. As players, just as players alone, they should not be in that position. But they are, and that’s down to not defending properly, just basics, not defending properly, being too easy to score against, being too easy to give up leads against, and probably just having a bit of fear. There seems to be a lot of fear in that dressing room over the course of this season. I think it’s probably got worse as it’s gone on, but I think that’s disappointing.”
Key figures from Leicester’s Championship season show both defensive weakness and repeated collapses after taking the lead.
| Team | Goals conceded | Points dropped from winning positions (2025-26) |
|---|---|---|
| Leicester City | 67 | 30 |
| Sheffield Wednesday | 83 | Not specified |
| QPR | 67 | Not specified |
As Leicester prepare for life in League One for the first time since 2008-09, Albrighton’s comments underline the scale of work required. The club must repair trust between ownership, players and supporters, resolve financial issues and rebuild a clear strategy if Leicester are to move back towards the heights reached during that Premier League title season 10 years earlier.
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Story first published: Wednesday, April 22, 2026, 23:32 [IST]
