Leicester City drew at home against Wrexham. Given that the Welsh side is predicted to be promoted automatically, this might not look like a bad result. But it was. Any game that Leicester doesn't win in the Championship is a bad result.
Leicester were so close to winning the game, but a momentary defensive lapse cost them the three points. The home supporters had every reason to throw their arms in the air, because the goal they conceded could have easily been avoided.
In the 77th minute, Nathan Broadhead, who arrived in the summer from Ipswich Town, netted a goal after it was served to him on a plate by Oliver Skipp.
Leicester make a painful Oliver Skipp realization Tottenham already knew
Yes, Oliver Skipp is almost entirely to blame for Leicester conceding the late equalizer.
It was his responsibility to mark Broadhead. He was doing so for a while, but stopped in his tracks entirely. This gave Broadhead a yard, which he obviously used to his advantage - Why wouldn't he?
It was a complete gift, that goal. It could have been avoided easily if Skipp followed football rule number 1: never lose your man. It's what they teach in primary schools, let alone elite academies like Tottenham's.
All in all, it was a frankly woeful cameo from Skipp. He was booked within five minutes of coming on, and practically scored an own goal with how obvious that defensive error was.
He had every right to look to the floor and hang his head in shame; he did nothing good after coming on the pitch. Instead, he dropped two points for the team.
And we're not talking about some new recruit. He literally played for Tottenham, and has started in the Champions League in the past. This sloppiness, and let's face it, laziness cannot be excused.
Unfortunately, Tottenham was probably forward-thinking when they sold Skipp. He is not up to scratch for the Premier League, and he proved that last season with the Foxes.
Of course, the right decision was made to keep him in the summer. Perhaps he would do a job for Leicester in the Championship, right? After all, he has cracking Championship experience with Norwich.
Well, it hasn't turned out that way so far, and he is making Leicester look silly for ever signing him in the first place.
Tottenham obviously didn't complain; they got £20m out of a player who is not fit for their standard. The question must be asked, then - At which standard do Leicester view themselves?