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A Lasting Legacy: The Leicester Helicopter Crash One Year On

Almost one year to the day since the tragic helicopter accident which claimed the life of Leicester’s owner and chairman, Vichai Srivaddhanaprahba, they produced the biggest away win in Premier League history beating Southampton 9-0. On the pitch after the game Jamie Vardy uttered the words “I hope you were watching boss!”

The more you follow football the more it becomes clear in the modern game that very few owners are liked, let alone adored.

Vichai was the absolute exception to this. Loved not only by fans of his team but those within the city and in fact the wider football community.

This was epitomised in the first home game after the Leicester owner’s death when the travelling Watford fans displayed a banner reading “Thank You Vichai For Allowing Us All To Dream”. As a West Ham fan it is impossible to disagree with this statement.

By guiding Leicester to the Premier League title, defying the odds of 5000/1, Vichai made the impossible possible not just for Leicester fans but for all football fans.

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I was there on the night last year as an away supporter when Vichai’s helicopter crashed in a car park behind the King Power Stadium after Leicester’s underwhelming draw with West Ham.

In the days after, I was lucky enough to be in Leicester and that is when it became clear to me just how special a man he was.

My lasting memory of the events of October 27 last year will not be Vichai’s legacy on just Leicester City Football Club, but more so his legacy with the people of Leicester

In the days and weeks after the crash the people of Leicester came together as a community, to honour their beloved owner.

One of the many fans who has been impacted by Vichai is Andrew Smith.

Andrew has been a Leicester City fan since the mid-seventies when he first went to games in Filbert Street on the back of his dad’s motorbike.

Since then he has been through the ups and downs of being a Leicester fan, but when Vichai bought Leicester in 2010, that changed.

“He has changed the club I have supported since I was a young boy, from a local club to making us fans feel part of something. He made everyone feel we are a family and he was the head of the family. Someone, unlike other owners, who cared about the fans.”

Vichai bought Leicester City in 2010 and took over from Milan Mandaric as chairman in February 2011, with Leicester marooned in the championship.

In the subsequent years he steered Leicester into an excellent financial position and back into the Premier League before his finest act.

“He gave me the greatest moment of my life winning the Premier League and it still gets me emotional now thinking of the journey he has taken the club on.”

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It was a 5000/1 shot, yes. The greatest underdog story in football? Probably. But because of the way Vichai had built the club up and all the decisions he made, it was by no means lucky.

He had this remarkable power of making anybody and everybody related with Leicester City Football Club believe they were special and that the impossible could be achieved.

Boy did he deliver.

“I never forget how his input into the club changed the way I looked at football and gave me opportunities to witness things such as the Champions league matches and the party to celebrate the Premier league win,” Smith added.

In 2014, Vichai donated £2 million towards the Leicester Children’s Hospital Appeal in 2016. Since his death a foundation has been set up in his name and it has continued his legacy.

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This year the foundation donated £610,000 to various groups in memory of his 61st birthday. Recently they donated £800,000 to the redevelopment of Leicester Cathedral.

At the centre of the community however, was his beloved Leicester City  and what he did for their fans cannot really be put into words.

Smith said: “For the club he made us feel like a family club but also a big club. He looked after all the fans, including giving away scarfs, hats and flags at away games, free beers at games for the fans, donations to local charity and hospitals and seemed to care about Leicester as a city as well as a club.

“It was like magic, the way he has bucked the trend of owners people never saw. He was part of the community and people’s hearts.

“This may all sound very cheesy, but in watching football for 45 years , the last few years have been like a dream and the Boss gave us all that feeling.”

The fans have paid tribute one year on, in the same way they did a year ago, in their masses, celebrating what Vichai did for their club.

“Last week the fans did the walk for Vichai. We all stood in silence with scarfs held high against Burnley,” said Smith, before adding that every fan will have had their own private thoughts.

“My thoughts are simple, he made my dreams come true and continues to make me think the impossible,” Smith said.

The memory that stuck with me close in the days and weeks after the tragedy, is that Andrew’s story and connection with “The Boss” is not alone.

That win on Friday night fittingly took Leicester to second in the Premier League. Even a year after his death, the legacy of Vichai Srivaddhanaprahba continues to live on.

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Author

  • Alex Bartlett

    Alex did his undergraduate degree in History at the University of Leicester. A lifelong sports enthusiast, his first experience of journalism came working for his university magazine, where he went on to edit the sports section. He has also hosted a weekly football talk show for three years, discussing a wide range of topics including the misfortunes of his beloved West Ham. He has a particular interest in the relationship between sport and politics, which formed the basis of a dissertation project on sports role in ending apartheid in South Africa.