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Leicester City have named former Queens Park Rangers head coach Marti Cifuentes as their manager on a three-year deal.

The 43-year-old Spaniard replaces Ruud van Nistelrooy at the Foxes' helm with less than a month until the season starts.

Cifuentes takes charge of a Leicester side that finds itself in the Championship for the second time in three years, having been immediately relegated from the Premier League after going up as second-tier title winners under Enzo Maresca in 2024.

Cifuentes now joins Maresca, who left Leicester after promotion to take the job at Chelsea, as one of the six permanent managers the Foxes have had in just over two years.

Just as the Italian was tasked with returning the East Midlands club to the top flight during his tenure, promotion will also be expected of Cifuentes.

In his time at QPR, the Spaniard, for whom the Foxes will pay Rangers an undisclosed compensation fee, oversaw 18th and 15th-placed finishes.

Leicester say they feel the Spaniard will bring "a modern, progressive footballing philosophy" to the club, while chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha says that Cifuentes "is an excellent fit".

"We felt strongly that bringing him to the club would help us to create the success we all want in the years ahead," Srivaddhanaprabha added.

Cifuentes took charge of QPR when they were second-from-bottom in the Championship in October 2023 and escaping relegation was first asked of him at Loftus Road.

His latest campaign ended with him on gardening leave after the Hoops suffered a 5-0 defeat by already-promoted Burnley in April.


At the time, Cifuentes was also being linked to a move away from the west London club.

It was not until late June, two months after being stood down, that the former Hammarby boss officially parted ways with QPR.

He was seen as a popular figure among Hoops fans, but was also viewed as a head coach that only got "streaky" results out of his side.

His appointment at Leicester, however, is seen a shift back to Maresca's approach to the game, with the Spaniard sharing the Italian's possession-heavy, high-pressing style.

Cifuentes has described taking on the job at the King Power Stadium as "a great honour".

"This is a fantastic club with a proud history and it's a privilege to me to be asked to help write the next chapter," he said.

Cifuentes has had eclectic coaching career to date, with a spell working at Ajax's famed youth academy in the Netherlands in 2007 followed by a stint at Millwall, before he went on to coach in Spain's lower leagues.

He relocated his coaching career to Scandinavia after that, working in Norway, Denmark and Sweden, where he guided Hammarby to a third place top-flight finish in 2022.


Cifuentes takes the Leicester job on almost 10 years to the day after Claudio Ranieri became what would be the most famous managerial appointment in the club's history.

In his only full season at Leicester, the Italian miraculously guided the little fancied Foxes to the Premier League title.

A decade on, and the anniversary of the club's most glorious achievement will be celebrated while they are in the second tier and up against numerous on and off-field issues.

Not only will Cifuentes have less than four weeks to get to know his players, it is also a squad that is yet to get attention since relegation.

Leicester legend Jamie Vardy left at the end of the campaign, and is yet to be replaced.

Just how much business the East Midlands club can do remains unclear, with Leicester charged with allegedly breaching the English Football League's financial rules when they won the Championship just over a year ago.

It also means that Cifuentes might also have a points penalty to deal with in the coming season.

The leadership that Cifuentes has previously shown when working in difficult situations, as well as his history in youth development and track record for promoting young talent, are understood to have appealed to Leicester's hierarchy as they approach what are sure to be trying times at the King Power Stadium.

'Work to do but little time'

Nearly three months after relegation was confirmed and three weeks since Ruud van Nistelrooy eventually left the club, Leicester City finally have their man.

Marti Cifuentes arrives at King Power Stadium with plenty of work to do and not too long to get it done.

In terms of the football, I'm told we can expect something similar to the style implemented by Enzo Maresca during his time at the club, with possession a key focus.

That may have frustrated some of the Foxes fans, but we know it's a way of playing admired by the players who were part of the 2023-24 Championship winning team.

But with the squad off to Austria this week and the start of the new season less than four weeks away, time is already against Cifuentes to get his ideas across and his players ready. He also needs to target new recruits with not much money to play with.

The fans would have wanted this appointment confirmed much, much earlier. But hopefully now it's finally done, it's one they can get behind.
Why should a man go to work, if he has the health and strength to stay in bed?
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Marti departs always an odd fit
Why should a man go to work, if he has the health and strength to stay in bed?
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#3
Marti Cifuentes has been sacked as Leicester City boss after just six months in charge with the Foxes in the bottom half of the Championship table.

The 43-year-old's final match as manager was Saturday's 2-1 home defeat by lowly Oxford United - Leicester's 11th loss in 29 league games under the Spaniard.

Cifuentes took over in July with the aim of restoring the Foxes to the Premier League after their second relegation from the top flight in three years last season, but has been sacked with them sitting 14th, six points short of the play-off places.

"This has been a difficult decision and not one I have taken lightly," Leicester chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha said in a statement., external

"I would like to thank Marti for the total commitment he has shown during his time at Leicester City. He gave everything to the role and worked tirelessly to help us achieve our targets."

Inconsistent results have defined Cifuentes' time in charge at the King Power Stadium.

They have strung together back-to-back wins in the league only twice this campaign, while their longest unbeaten run was an eight-game sequence between late August and mid-October that included five draws.

Leicester are 13 places and 31 points worse off than Enzo Maresca's Championship title-winning side at the same stage of the 2023-24 season.

They are nine points clear of the bottom three but with the threat of a points penalty still looming for alleged spending rules breaches relating to the 2023-24 season, their true position in the table remains uncertain.

"I believe this is the right step at this time to improve performances and results, and to act in the best interests of Leicester City Football Club," Srivaddhanaprabha added.

"Marti leaves with our thanks and our best wishes for the future."

Leicester say first-team coach Andy King will take charge on an interim basis, pending the appointment of a permanent replacement.

The Foxes' next Championship fixture is at home to Charlton Athletic on Saturday.



Cifuentes left Queens Park Rangers to take over at the Foxes, and the demands and expectations on him were high from the outset, with this season marking the 10-year anniversary of their stunning Premier League title win of 2016.

When Cifuentes was named as Ruud van Nistelrooy's replacement in July, he spoke of wanting to bring a brand of "fearless" football back to the King Power.

There was a sense of that in December's wins against Derby County and Ipswich Town - the latter game including Abdul Fatawu's sensational strike from well inside his own half - but it has been combined with a complete inability to keep clean sheets.

The 43 goals they have conceded in 29 league games is the third-worst defensive record in the division.

When Cifuentes came in, he was given less than a month to prepare for the season after Van Nistelrooy's protracted exit.

At the time he was lauded as a manager who fit the mould of Maresca - the Italian boss who guided the club to promotion before leaving for the Chelsea job.

It was to be a return to a possession heavy, high-pressing style, but, whatever the aim, the results have been nothing alike.

Like Maresca before him, Cifuentes had a side stacked with Premier League experience to call on.

But with talismanic striker Jamie Vardy among those to leave after last season's relegation, Cifuentes has not had the same quality to rely on.

No money was made available to buy a forward to replace Vardy, with funds raised from the sale of Mads Hermansen, Kasey McAteer, James Justin, Wilfred Ndidi and Conor Coady going towards efforts to balance the books at a time when the club's finances have been heavily scrutinised.

Leicester were one of only three clubs in the division - alongside Oxford and the now administration-hit Sheffield Wednesday - not to pay for a permanent summer transfer.

Instead, Cifuentes could only bring in midfielders Jordan James, Aaron Ramsey and forward Julian Carranza on loan - the latter of whom rarely featured and has left - and pick up veteran goalkeeper Asmir Begovic as a free agent.


Marti Cifuentes' short spell at Leicester City started with such enthusiasm, but in the end he went out with a whimper.

The promise of a fresh start, a rebuilding process, and introducing younger players felt like the kind of rejuvenation the Foxes needed.

However, slow work in the transfer market hampered that process and Cifuentes, by his own admission, was left to work with players who no longer wanted to be at the club.

The performances, though, never really got going and were fabulously inconsistent.

Incredibly, everyone seemed to know Cifuentes' time was up before he was even told, after the chairman admitted to the media his position was under consideration.

Just hours later, it was officially confirmed.

Where on earth do Leicester City go from here?
Why should a man go to work, if he has the health and strength to stay in bed?
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