As the half-time whistle sounded at Craven Cottage last Monday, a cacophony of boos rang out from the away end. Leicester's travelling support had just watched their team gift Fulham three goals, while scarcely venturing into the opposing penalty area themselves. This was supposed to be the turning point in a dire season. Instead, it was another nail in the coffin for the relegation-threatened Foxes.
Almost exactly seven years earlier, those same supporters were packed inside the King Power Stadium, waiting for Andrea Bocelli's rendition of Nessun Dorma - the perfect prelude to them getting their hands on the Premier League trophy. More recently than that, these fans had also been treated to a Champions League quarter-final, regular Europa League matches and an FA Cup final triumph at Wembley.
Now, barring a miraculous recovery in their final three games, Leicester are set to swap night outs at the Wanda Metropolitano to a brief layover at Taunton Dean services en route to Plymouth Argyle.
Their downfall has been spectacular, and although expectations were not sky-high heading into the current campaign - with the long-promised summer rebuild failing to materialise - no one was expecting them to be scrapping for their lives as we reach the business end of the season. How has it come to this?
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