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The Thai owners of Premier League champions Leicester City aim to keep the victorious squad together despite expectations that many players will be lured away by lucrative offers from richer clubs.

The vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha, son of club chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, attended Monday’s game between Chelsea and Tottenham which ended in a draw, meaning Leicester cannot be overtaken for the title.

Aiyawatt, speaking on Thai television, said: “We are not selling anyone. We are not a team who produces players to be developed later by other teams.”

Aiyawatt added: “All players want to stay and keep on fighting together to see how far they can go. So selling players is not on our agenda.”

Leading Foxes players such as midfielders Riyad Mahrez and N’Golo Kanté, striker Jamie Vardy and goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel are expected to attract big-money offers from rival clubs, but the revenue from competing in the Champions League next season will aid Leicester’s bid to retain them.

Leicester were 5,000-1 outsiders at the start of the English top-flight competition, and Aiyawatt said when his father Vichai, head of the duty free company King Power, invested in the club six years ago, winning the title “was not what we dared to dream”.

“He was already proud of being the owner of an English Premier League team. Now he has owned an English Premier League champion team, he can’t be prouder,” Aiyawatt said of his father, known more simply as Khun Vichai.

“I have to say on his behalf that he has managed the club with his heart and he just hopes to gain a reputation for the country.”

Aiyawatt said that when the trophy is presented to Leicester’s squad at this weekend’s home game, it will be decorated with ribbons of blue and yellow; blue as Leicester’s colour, and yellow as the colour of Thailand’s royal house.

He said there are plans to bring the Leicester City team out to Thailand for a visit during the off-season, even though a similar visit last year resulted in some youth team players involved in a scandal which contributed to the departure of manager Nigel Pearson.

“They are coming to Thailand very, very soon,” Aiyawatt said.

“This is unbelievable. Thai people should be given a lot of credit as all players acknowledge how much support they have been given.”

Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha’s King Power has a monopoly on retail operations at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi and Don Muang airports.

His surname, meaning “light of progressive glory” was bestowed by Thailand’s revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

King Power’s revenues were up on a rising influx of Chinese tourists, its biggest customers.

It also runs three shopping complexes in Bangkok.

An avid polo player, he owns dozens of ponies and sponsors the All Asia Cup.

Vichai boasts a lifetime membership at London’s Ham Polo club, frequented by the British royals, and has a stable of horses and players on retainer in Bangkok

 

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