Rodgers lauds ‘perfect’ Leicester performance as Saints are hit for nine

Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers hailed a “perfect performance” after his side equalled the biggest win in Premier League history by demolishing 10-man Southampton 9-0.

Ayoze Perez and Jamie Vardy both scored hat-tricks as the Foxes matched Manchester United’s thumping March 1995 victory over Ipswich. It was also the biggest away win in the English top flight.

Ben Chilwell, Youri Tielemans and James Maddison were also on the scoresheet at St Mary’s as Leicester climbed up to second place in the table.

Embarrassed Saints played for 78 minutes a man light after Ryan Bertrand became the first top-flight player to be shown a red card following a VAR review after his dangerous challenge on Perez in the build-up to Chilwell’s early opener.

“It was the perfect performance. From the very first whistle in the game we showed our intent,” said Rodgers.

“I’m so pleased with the performance, it had everything you could want.

“We went in front, deservedly so. And then when Ryan got sent off, we showed a wonderful demonstration of how to play against 10 men.

“The players made it look a lot easier than it actually is.

“All round collectively it was an absolutely outstanding night and brilliant for the supporters to travel all the way down here on a wet night.

“To see the team score nine goals and be very focused, hopefully they will be very proud.

“It’s a brilliant win that equals records.”

The sensational scoreline inflicted a record defeat on the desperate hosts.

Perez and Vardy, meanwhile, became only the second set of team-mates to score trebles in a Premier League after Jermaine Pennant and Robert Pires managed it against Saints for Arsenal in May 2003.

They each left the stadium clutching a match ball.

After being five goals up at the break, Rodgers was thrilled to see his players maintain their ruthless display in the second 45 minutes.

“The message at half-time when it was 5-0 was to see it as 0-0 and go out and show we’re a really, really good side by pushing and showing a hungry mentality,” he said.

“To go out and do what we did and show that ruthless streak, it shows we’re making steps to being a ruthless side.”

FourFourTwo Staff

FourFourTwo was launched in 1994 on the back of a World Cup that England hadn’t even qualified for. It was an act of madness… but it somehow worked out. Our mission is to offer our intelligent, international audience access to the game’s biggest names, insightful analysis... and a bit of a giggle. We unashamedly love this game and we hope that our coverage reflects that.