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Jamie Vardy celebrates scoring Leicester’s second goal at Watford
Jamie Vardy celebrates scoring Leicester’s second goal during their convincing win at Watford. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City FC/Getty Images
Jamie Vardy celebrates scoring Leicester’s second goal during their convincing win at Watford. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City FC/Getty Images

Jamie Vardy and Harvey Barnes help Leicester sweep aside relegated Watford

This article is more than 1 year old

Roy Hodgson admitted he “wouldn’t kick up any fuss” if asked to step aside and allow his successor Rob Edwards to take charge of Watford’s season finale at Chelsea, after the former England manager’s last home match as manager of the relegated club ended in a humiliating 5-1 Premier League thrashing at the hands of Leicester.

Hodgson is scheduled to end his short tenure after the trip to Stamford Bridge next weekend, before the former Forest Green manager Edwards takes over for Watford’s Championship campaign next season. The 74-year-old Hodgson has no intention of walking away prematurely and, should the club propose an alternative, would advise his replacement to stick to the initial agreement.

“If the club want to do that, I would understand it,” Hodgson said. “I wouldn’t kick up any fuss about it, not at all. But if I was the new manager, I wouldn’t take it at this moment in time. I think the new manager now would be in his rights to say: ‘Look, this season has not been the season it should be, I’ve got a job on my hands from pre-season, let the others that have been there for the last four to five months continue and I’ll come in and do my stuff.’

“But if the club think it would be advantageous to bring the new guy in now then I will more than happily step aside and give him the chance to go to Chelsea next week – I’ve been to Chelsea lots of times.

“I don’t believe in walking away. I wouldn’t be upset or complaining, if that’s what the club would like to do. It wouldn’t hurt me particularly; I would understand it because I’m sure they would explain it in the right way.

“If that’s what they want me to do, then that’s what will happen but it’s not going to come from me.”

Edwards – who guided Forest Green to the League Two title this term – was unveiled before kick‑off. The afternoon began brightly for the injury-hit hosts as João Pedro’s effort deflected in off Timothy Castagne inside six minutes following Ken Sema’s corner. But things swiftly went downhill as a catalogue of defensive errors allowed Jamie Vardy and Harvey Barnes to each score twice after James Maddison’s leveller.

Watford’s latest defeat equals the overall top-flight record of 15 home reverses in a season and leaves the 39-year-old Edwards in little doubt about the summer overhaul required. Barnes made it 3-1 approximately 17 seconds into the second half, much to Hodgson’s frustration. “It’s the antithesis of what we were hoping for,” said Hodgson, who was without a host of first-team players because of injury and will depart Hertfordshire without winning on home soil.

Harvey Barnes celebrates scoring Leicester’s final goal at Vicarage Road. Photograph: Plumb Images/Leicester City FC/Getty Images

“I must say that at half-time, I didn’t really see it coming. I didn’t think we’d been particularly outplayed in the first half and I was a bit angry by the mistakes we’d made.

“But that was nothing like the disappointment, stroke anger I felt after conceding a goal 30-odd seconds into the second half from our kick-off. It decided the game because at 3-1 we had to take even more risks going forward. It’s a very, very bad afternoon.”

Brendan Rodgers was delighted with his side’s response to conceding from a set piece for the 26th time in the league this season. The result leaves Leicester well placed to secure a fifth-successive top-half finish.

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“We got over the disappointment of the own goal from the set piece and then really showed our spirit and our quality; some great football, some real attacking verve in the team,” Rodgers said. “But, not only that, we turned up to defend as well.

“I think we were aggressive, we were strong and we did everything to protect our goal and, when you do that and you have the quality that we had in our attacking play, then it ended up being a really good performance and result.”

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