
The Leicester striker, who has also been fined £10,000, will now be
forced to watch from the stands for the second game in succession. He
served his mandatory one-match ban on Sunday, when Leicester hammered Swansea City 4-0,
and that result and performance has given Claudio Ranieri and his
players the belief that they can cope without their leading goalscorer.
Leicester were meanwhile fined £20,000 after admitting an FA charge of
failing to ensure their players conducted themselves in an orderly
fashion.
Vardy will be available for the last two fixtures of the season, at
home to Everton on Saturday week and away at Chelsea on the final day,
when he will hope to add to his tally of 22 Premier League goals. Monday
night’s draw between Spurs and West Brom means Leicester can claim their first-ever championship with a victory at Old Trafford.
The red card that Vardy received against West Ham
was highly controversial and his first as a professional footballer.
Jon Moss, the referee, was at the centre of several contentious
decisions that day and his handling of the game has been widely
criticised. Vardy picked up two yellow cards, the second for allegedly
diving, and he was unable to conceal his anger as he left the pitch,
leading to Moss mentioning the 29-year-old’s behaviour in his match
report.
Roy Hodgson, the England manager, took it upon himself to speak out
in defence of Vardy three days later, insisting that the player was the
victim of an injustice. Vardy’s reaction to his sending off was “human”,
according to Hodgson, who also claimed that the forward was not guilty
of an act of simulation.
While it was seen as a blow to Leicester at the time, in particular
that idea that their most prolific player could potentially miss two
games at such a critical stage, Leonardo Ulloa proved to be a capable
deputy for Vardy with two goals against Swansea City. Leicester will now
hope for more of the same from the Argentinian at Old Trafford.
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