Leicester moves up to third place with win at Newcastle

Leicester City moved up to third place in the Premier League as second-half goals by James Maddison and Youri Tielemans secured a 2-1 victory away at Newcastle United.

Published : Jan 03, 2021 22:35 IST , Newcastle

Leicester City's James Maddison celebrates after scoring a goal.
Leicester City's James Maddison celebrates after scoring a goal.
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Leicester City's James Maddison celebrates after scoring a goal.

Leicester City moved up to third place in the Premier League as second-half goals by James Maddison and Youri Tielemans secured a 2-1 victory away at Newcastle United on Sunday.

Substitute Andy Carroll's strike for the host set up a tense finale but Leicester was the worthy winner.

It moved above Tottenham Hotspur with 32 points from 17 games played, one point behind co-leaders Liverpool and Manchester United, who have played one game less.

Maddison blasted Leicester in front in the 55th minute, and when the outstanding Tielemans produced a great finish to double the lead after 72 minutes it seemed that Leicester's seventh away win in the league was in the bag.

Carroll's first Premier League goal for Newcastle for 10 years offered a late twist.

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"When we got the goal against us, we started panicking and stopped playing really. In general, we played well and the win is the most important thing," Tielemans said.

Leicester began well, and Maddison came close to giving them an early lead with a curling effort that fizzed just wide.

Manager Brendan Rodgers was livid when Jamie Vardy and Tielemans were guilty of over-elaborating once they had sliced open Newcastle shortly after, while Vardy also had a goal from a tight angle disallowed for offside.

Newcastle was well-organised without offering much in attack in a largely forgettable first half, but the host started the second half with greater purpose.

It was stopped in its tracks though when Harvey Barnes surged forward and slipped a pass to Vardy who held the ball up before teeing it up for Maddison to lash home.

Leicester's slick attacking football was evident again for its second goal as Marc Albrighton slid an astute pass inside towards Tielemans, who did not even need a touch before burying the ball past a helpless Karl Darlow.

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Newcastle manager Steve Bruce sent on Carroll, and the big striker rewarded him almost immediately with a clinical volley -- his first league goal since returning to the club in 2019.

Suddenly the host came alive and Leicester was living dangerously at times until it was relieved to hear the whistle.

Newcastle's winless run in the league now extends to five games and it stays in 15th spot with 19 points.

"All game it was there and obviously when I came on, we got the goal and put the pressure on them so could have nicked something. It wasn't a great first half. It's hard this time of the year with all the games," Carroll said.

"We came out in the second half and played a lot better. I thought we deserved something."

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