Meet the soccer team poised to beat 5,000-1 odds
Loyal fan plans to buy house after well-placed bet on underdogs Leicester City FC
With a win this Sunday, Leicester would clinch the English Premier League title.
"At the start of the season, I would have been happy with 17th place," said longtime fan Charlie Cranston. "That would have been a good season for us."
After spending much of the past decade in lower leagues, Leicester now sits atop English Premier League soccer with three matches left to play. The Foxes, as they're known, stand a real chance of winning it all for the first time in the club's 132-year history.
Big winnings
Not only does the team represent a city smaller than Halifax, Leicester's payroll is only a fraction of those of internationally renowned clubs such as Chelsea and Arsenal. Manchester United is expected to become the first English team to earn £500 million — about $910 million Cdn — in one season, despite sitting four spots behind lowly Leicester.
"It's unheard of, really, for a club of Leicester's size to win the league title, so completely out of the blue," Williams said.
The feat was so implausible that, at the start of the season, bookmakers gave Leicester 5,000-1 odds of winning it all.
Leigh Herbert was one of the few to place a bet on the club.
He put down £5 and has already cashed out some of his earnings. Herbert is in line to win a total of £20,600, roughly $37,700 Cdn, by the end of the season.
"I'm going to put it down on a deposit on a house in about a year's time," Herbert said. "I'm going to do the sensible thing, I think."
He acknowledges his stake in the Foxes' success has made their matches "really hard to watch."
Help from beyond the grave?
The team's fortunes took a turn for the better late last season, and some superstitious fans say they have a late king to thank for it.
Richard III's bones were discovered in a Leicester parking lot in 2012, more than five centuries after he was killed. Right after his March 2015 reburial received worldwide attention, Leicester City started winning. And they haven't stopped since.
Other fans point to the team's unlikely star striker as a reason for the success. Jamie Vardy, a former factory worker, has now scored goals in more back-to-back games than anyone else in league history. Vardy, though, had to sit out Sunday's match against Swansea and will have to miss another game, charged with improper conduct on the pitch.
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The underdog story doesn't end there. The club's manager, Claudio Ranieri, got sacked from his last job after only four matches.
Despite Leicester's success, Ranieri shows no sign of overconfidence.
"We are doing the maximum," he said after the Foxes' 2-2 draw with West Ham United.
"If there is another team who plays better and wins more than us, congratulations to them."
Leicester's next match is on Sunday, against Manchester United. A win would guarantee them the title.