I wouldn't put anything past Leicester City chairman Aiyawatt (Khun Top) Srivaddhanaprabha, nor Foxes director of football Jon Rudkin in an organisational sense. The undesirable duo have shown themselves to be inscrutable and unethical when it comes to LCFC's evolution and its recruitment.
The team's progress is nonexistent: the East Midlands side has massively regressed on the field of play and as an organisation because of the aforementioned pair's mismanagement. They signed ineffective, cheap and poorly skilled players. Then basically acquired hardly anyone for a few years; loans and free transfers appear to be our only commerce amid restrictions and a Profit and Sustainability disaster.
Not to mention that a negative, acquisitive element has unfortunately crept in at King Power Stadium. They tried to charge to watch friendlies and raised ticket prices unfairly, for just two examples. The philanthropic Khun Vichai, Leicester's beloved late owner, would surely not approve of his son and his lackey's modern practices.
To get themselves out of the mess they are in and to balance the books, I am almost positive that the City powers-that-be will agree, or look for an opportunity to, sell a star asset of the squad. Hopefully this won't be Abdul Fatawu. But LCFC bosses may discuss selling homegrown, in demand talent Jeremy Monga as their ticket to respectability once more.
Should Leicester City supporters be worried about The King Power International Group trying to sell starlet Jeremy Monga so to alleviate their own fears while simultaneously resolve financial problems?
Most journalists and outlets speaking on Monga appear not to have done their due diligence. They allege that the winger will be easy to sign without a professional contract.
That stance is incorrect: it is easy to find Rob Tanner's New York Times article stating that an automatic pro deal is awaiting in July. Although, this only means the troubled Leicester owners could arrange a lucrative transfer in the summer with notable clubs apparently waiting. Naively, I wish things had been handled differently so Monga would not be used as a pawn.
"We can reveal that Tottenham have been pushing very strongly in recent weeks, but Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Newcastle United have all laid out their plans to the Coventry-born star."TEAMtalk
