Southampton v Leicester City
The match programme cover
Event2019–20 Premier League
Date25 October 2019 (2019-10-25)
VenueSt Mary's Stadium, Southampton
Man of the MatchJamie Vardy (Leicester City)
RefereeAndre Marriner (Birmingham)
Attendance28,762
WeatherRainy
15 °C (59 °F)
88% humidity[1]

The 2019–20 Premier League match between Southampton and Leicester City at St Mary's Stadium, Southampton, took place on Friday 25 October 2019. Leicester won the match 9–0, equalling Manchester United's 9–0 win against Ipswich Town in 1995 for the largest win in the history of the competition. The result also set the new record for the biggest away win in the history of English top-flight football.[2]

Fifteen months later, on 2 February 2021, Southampton were beaten 9–0 again, this time to Manchester United. The 2021 loss to United made Southampton the first team to lose as such twice, let alone in consecutive seasons.[3]

Background

Leicester started the match in third, level with Chelsea on 17 points but ahead on goal difference. Southampton were in 17th place, tied on 8 points with Newcastle United but also ahead on goal difference.

Match

Summary

Ben Chilwell opened the scoring in the 10th minute. Ryan Bertrand of Southampton was dismissed for a studs-up challenge in the build-up to the goal, confirmed by the video assistant referee (VAR), two minutes later. Leicester were 3–0 up by the 19th minute, thanks to Youri Tielemans and Ayoze Pérez. Pérez added the fourth on the 39th minute, with Jamie Vardy scoring on the stroke of half-time to send Leicester into the break ahead 5–0. Pérez completed his hat-trick on the 57th minute, with Vardy adding his second and Leicester's seventh a minute later. James Maddison scored a 85th minute free-kick before Jamie Vardy completed his own hat-trick with a penalty four minutes into stoppage time. The final whistle blasted after the penalty was made.[4] It was only the second time in Premier League history that two players scored a hat-trick for one team in the same game,[2] last coming in an Arsenal 6–1 win over Southampton on 7 May 2003 with Jermaine Pennant and Robert Pires scoring three goals apiece.[5]

Match details

Southampton0–9Leicester City
Report
Southampton
Leicester City
GK28England Angus Gunn
CB35Poland Jan Bednarek
CB3Japan Maya Yoshida
CB4Denmark Jannik Vestergaarddownward-facing red arrow 45'
RWB43France Yan Valerydownward-facing red arrow 70'
CM16England James Ward-Prowse
CM14Spain Oriol Romeu
CM23Denmark Pierre-Emile Højbjerg (c)
LWB21England Ryan BertrandRed card 12'
CF9England Danny Ingsdownward-facing red arrow 45'
CF22England Nathan Redmond
Substitutes:
GK1England Alex McCarthy
DF5England Jack Stephensupward-facing green arrow 45'
DF38Austria Kevin Dansoupward-facing green arrow 45'
MF17Scotland Stuart Armstrongupward-facing green arrow 70'
MF19Morocco Sofiane Boufal
FW7Republic of Ireland Shane Long
FW10Scotland Ché Adams
Manager:
Austria Ralph Hasenhüttl
GK1Denmark Kasper Schmeichel (c)
RB21Portugal Ricardo Pereira
CB6Northern Ireland Jonny Evans
CB4Turkey Çağlar Söyüncü
LB3England Ben Chilwell
DM25Nigeria Wilfred Ndidi
RM17Spain Ayoze Pérezdownward-facing red arrow 74'
CM8Belgium Youri Tielemans
CM10England James Maddison
LM15England Harvey Barnesdownward-facing red arrow 72'
CF9England Jamie Vardy
Substitutes:
GK12Wales Danny Ward
DF2England James Justin
DF5Jamaica Wes Morgan
MF7England Demarai Grayupward-facing green arrow 74'
MF11England Marc Albrightonupward-facing green arrow 72'
MF20England Hamza Choudhury
MF26Belgium Dennis Praet
Manager:
Northern Ireland Brendan Rodgers

Man of the Match:
Jamie Vardy (Leicester City)

Assistant referees:
Scott Ledger
Simon Long
Fourth official:
Andrew Madley
Video assistant referee:
Mike Dean
Assistant video assistant referee:
Andy Halliday

Match rules

  • 90 minutes
  • No extra time or penalties
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of three substitutions

Statistics

Statistic Southampton Leicester City
Goals scored 09
Total shots 625
Shots on target 315
Ball possession 27%73%
Corner kicks 27
Fouls conceded 312
Yellow cards 00
Red cards 10

Post-match

The match was played at St Mary's Stadium in Southampton.

Leicester moved up to second in the table, while Southampton dropped to 18th. As the match took place two days before the first anniversary of the 2018 Leicester helicopter crash, several players dedicated the win to their late owner, Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, who died in that incident.[6] Southampton players and coaching staff later donated their wages from the day of the game to a charity run by the club, Saints Foundation.[7]

Later that season, the two sides would play each other again in the return fixture at the King Power Stadium, in January 2020. Southampton went on to win the match 2–1.[8]

References

  1. "Weather History for Southampton, United Kingdom". Weather Underground. The Weather Company. 25 October 2019. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  2. 1 2 Sutcliffe, Steve (25 October 2019). "Southampton 0–9 Leicester City: Foxes equal record for biggest Premier League win". BBC Sport. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  3. Stone, Simon (2 February 2021). "Man United 9–0 Southampton: United score nine against Saints". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  4. Butler, Michael (25 October 2019). "Southampton 0 Leicester City 9: as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  5. "Arsenal hit Saints for six". BBC Sport. 7 May 2003. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  6. Wakefield, Mark (26 October 2019). "The heartfelt messages Leicester City players past and present sent after record-equalling win". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  7. "Southampton 0–9 Leicester City: Saints players give wages to charity". BBC Sport. 27 October 2019. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  8. Bulin, Matt (11 January 2020). "Leicester City 1–2 Southampton". BBC Sport. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
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