Leicester 2-0 Sevilla (agg 3-2): Wes Morgan and Marc Albrighton put Foxes in Champions League dreamland as Kasper Schmeichel saves penalty
Barcelona, Real Madrid, Bayern Munich, Juventus, Borussia Dortmund, Leicester. As it stands, the quarter-finalists of the Champions League, 2016-17.
Drink it in. Roll it around on your tongue. Laugh. Smile. Marvel at its sheer audacity. But do not be amazed, or shocked. This Leicester team are capable of quite incredible feats; when they want to be.
And now they do. Previously, this season, it seemed they didn't. Who knows why? Yet here were a Leicester team back to their lunatic best, playing for a new manager in a way they no longer did for the old one, and taking their place among a European elite that would once have sneered at their very presence.
Leicester captain Wes Morgan roars in celebration after giving his side the advantage on the night and in the tie
Morgan slides on his knees in front of the home fans after his big goal that changed the direction of the Champions League tie
Marc Albrighton is mobbed by his Leicester team-mates after doubling their lead and putting them ahead on aggregate
Sevilla star Samir Nasri was sent off for a second bookable offence after clashing with Leicester striker Jamie Vardy
Kasper Schmeichel made a vital penalty save from Steven N'Zonzi to prevent the game from going to extra time
Leicesters player celebrate in a bundle on the King Power turf after a memorable Champions League last-16 victory
Christian Fuchs holds his arms aloft after the Foxes' progress into the Champions League quarter-final was secured
Shinji Okazaki had a shot blocked, it travelled out to Riyad Mahrez, who crossed urgently. Adil Rami half-cleared, the ball fell to Marc Albrighton and he brought it under control and capitalised on Sevilla's sluggishness to finish smartly past goalkeeper Sergio Rico.
Sevilla fought desperately to get back in the game but were sabotaged from within and resisted without. Samir Nasri had already been booked when he clashed with Jamie Vardy. The pair ducked their heads towards each other, Vardy the better actor, as ever. Referee Daniele Orsato rightly showed a yellow to each player, but it was enough to see the last of Nasri.
He left reluctantly, making several attempts to return to Vardy and arrange a rendezvous in the tunnel. Few would make him favourite in that match, either.
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