weller54 Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Anyone know who came second and third? 2nd.. Vards 3rd..The Elephant Man
Buzzell Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Well deserved. Surely that adds another £20m to his price tag.
hairy Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 When he finds out he is the first African to win it https://amp.twimg.com/v/79de4151-505c-47e6-b47b-25938877d17f
Julian Joachim Jr Shabadoo Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Great stuff, made up for him. Really encouraging performance from him yesterday too, put a proper shift in and a magic goal
The Guvnor Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 What a player and thoroughly deserved, no big time Charlie, just a quiet unassuming lad who is truly gifted.
davieG Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Riyad Mahrez is the beautiful variable in Leicester’s march towards history Paul Doyle The PFA Player of the Year was not convinced he’d be cut out for the Premier League but he has led opponents the merriest of dances all season long Riyad Mahrez celebrates after scoring the opener in Leicester’s 4-0 win over Swansea on Sunday. Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian Contact author @@Paul_Doyle Monday 25 April 2016 08.22 BST Last modified on Monday 25 April 201608.59 BST Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Shares412 Comments44 Save for later So the PFA has confirmed what we already knew: Riyad Mahrez deserves to be ranked alongside greats such as Roy Keane and Harrison Ford. Like the Irish midfielder who famously wrote as a child to every English club to ask for a trial except Manchester United because he thought he would not be good enough for them, or the jobbing American actor who nearly turned down the role of Han Solo in Star Wars because he feared it would not enable him to make ends meet, Mahrez was initially reluctant to join Leicester City because he figured, less than three years ago, that England was the one country where he could not succeed. How gloriously wrong he was. Leicester City’s Riyad Mahrez is fast fulfilling his late father’s dreams Read more “Everybody was saying to me ‘Riyad, England is not for you, it is too physical, too strong, Spanish football would suit you better ... so I never thought I would play in England,” Mahrez told the Guardian in September, explaining why, in late 2013, his first inclination was to shy away from a proposed move from the French second division side Le Havre to Leicester, who were then top of the Championship. Leicester’s head of recruitment, Steve Walsh, met Mahrez repeatedly to help convince him he had the skill to survive and thrive in the English jungle and, following the best €450,000 that Leicester ever spent, the Algerian began building up to performances that made his PFA accolade inevitable. Yes, inevitable, especially given the timing of the voting, which prevented the electorate from factoring in any late dwindling by Leicester. One could argue that Mahrez is not a supernatural marvel in the line of past Players of the Year such as Luis Suárez or Cristiano Ronaldo and is the most likely recipient of the award to fade into ordinariness since, well, Eden Hazard, but what is not open for debate is that, from the moment he scored twice in Leicester’s opening day victory over Sunderland, the Algerian has been the chief creator in English football’s most improbable title challenge since Sol Campbell ran for mayor of London. Quique Sánchez Flores seemed close to bang on – but not quite – when he said after a 1-0 home defeat by Claudio Ranieri’s team in March: “What Claudio is doing is amazing: everyone knows how his team plays but no one can stop them.” It is true that Leicester have become more regimented as the season has progressed but Mahrez, who scored the winning goal in that match against Watford with a lovely no-backlift curler from the edge of the area, has been the one player who has remained unpredictable. In France managers like to talk of special players who apporte la folie – bring the madness – and Mahrez is the beautiful loon in Leicester’s system, the one who consistently does things no opponent can reasonably foresee. Jamie Vardy has speed that is difficult to contain and N’Golo Kanté dynamism that no one can match but Mahrez’s contribution relies much less on athletic gifts even if he, too, is very fast. Indeed, his effectiveness often seems a triumph over physical disadvantage because of the twig-like build that made friends counsel him against a career in England. Not that he is brittle – he has delivered despite being the second-most fouled player in the league this season (after Wilfried Zaha). But his real power comes from sharpness of mind and slightness of foot, the ability to make opponents seem encumbered by superfluous brawn as he shimmies, darts or twists past them – on either side, if you please – like a waifish assassin, a goalbound glimmer man. FacebookTwitterPinterest Riyad Mahrez poses with his PFA Player of the Year award. Photograph: Barrington Coombs/PAThere is nothing superfluous about Mahrez: he knows so many tricks he could go busking in shopping centres but he performs them only at the right time and place: there is a delicious glee in the way he torments rivals but, most of all, there is deadly efficiency, proving, along with the defensive work he never shuns, that he is as disciplined as the rest of this Leicester team. You want end product, he will give it to you in golden wrapping paper and a bow tied with a clove hitch knot. Leicester City’s Riyad Mahrez wins PFA Player of the Year award Read more He showcased all his skills in the victory at Manchester City in February, which brought perhaps the best individual and collective performance of the season, in a match that seemed pivotal in the title race. Mahrez rose to the occasion magnificently, demanding the ball at every opportunity and flummoxing opponents with his elusiveness from as early as the second minute, when all that the already overwhelmed Fabian Delph and Alexander Kolarov could do in the face of his wriggly provocation was whack him to the ground. Mahrez got up to deliver the free-kick from which Robert Huth scored, then carried on taunting his hosts for the remainder of the game. He crowned the display with the goal that clinched a precious victory in a style that few could emulate, collecting a pass and hurdling Nicolás Otamendi with one cute touch before selling Martín Demichelis a stepover and cracking the ball into the net after neutralising Joe Hart with an old Jedi mind trick. You can take your stats and shove them up your abacus – you know, the ones that show that Mahrez has created fewer chances this season than Robbie Brady and Moussa Sissoko – because this season Mahrez has been the force to behold.
DelBoy73 Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Riyad Mahrez is the beautiful variable in Leicester’s march towards history Paul Doyle The PFA Player of the Year was not convinced he’d be cut out for the Premier League but he has led opponents the merriest of dances all season long Riyad Mahrez celebrates after scoring the opener in Leicester’s 4-0 win over Swansea on Sunday. Photograph: Tom Jenkins for the Guardian Contact author @@Paul_Doyle Monday 25 April 2016 08.22 BST Last modified on Monday 25 April 201608.59 BST Share on Pinterest Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ Shares412 Comments 44 Save for later So the PFA has confirmed what we already knew: Riyad Mahrez deserves to be ranked alongside greats such as Roy Keane and Harrison Ford. Like the Irish midfielder who famously wrote as a child to every English club to ask for a trial except Manchester United because he thought he would not be good enough for them, or the jobbing American actor who nearly turned down the role of Han Solo in Star Wars because he feared it would not enable him to make ends meet, Mahrez was initially reluctant to join Leicester City because he figured, less than three years ago, that England was the one country where he could not succeed. How gloriously wrong he was. Leicester City’s Riyad Mahrez is fast fulfilling his late father’s dreams Read more “Everybody was saying to me ‘Riyad, England is not for you, it is too physical, too strong, Spanish football would suit you better ... so I never thought I would play in England,” Mahrez told the Guardian in September, explaining why, in late 2013, his first inclination was to shy away from a proposed move from the French second division side Le Havre to Leicester, who were then top of the Championship. Leicester’s head of recruitment, Steve Walsh, met Mahrez repeatedly to help convince him he had the skill to survive and thrive in the English jungle and, following the best €450,000 that Leicester ever spent, the Algerian began building up to performances that made his PFA accolade inevitable. Yes, inevitable, especially given the timing of the voting, which prevented the electorate from factoring in any late dwindling by Leicester. One could argue that Mahrez is not a supernatural marvel in the line of past Players of the Year such as Luis Suárez or Cristiano Ronaldo and is the most likely recipient of the award to fade into ordinariness since, well, Eden Hazard, but what is not open for debate is that, from the moment he scored twice in Leicester’s opening day victory over Sunderland, the Algerian has been the chief creator in English football’s most improbable title challenge since Sol Campbell ran for mayor of London. Quique Sánchez Flores seemed close to bang on – but not quite – when he said after a 1-0 home defeat by Claudio Ranieri’s team in March: “What Claudio is doing is amazing: everyone knows how his team plays but no one can stop them.” It is true that Leicester have become more regimented as the season has progressed but Mahrez, who scored the winning goal in that match against Watford with a lovely no-backlift curler from the edge of the area, has been the one player who has remained unpredictable. In France managers like to talk of special players who apporte la folie – bring the madness – and Mahrez is the beautiful loon in Leicester’s system, the one who consistently does things no opponent can reasonably foresee. Jamie Vardy has speed that is difficult to contain and N’Golo Kanté dynamism that no one can match but Mahrez’s contribution relies much less on athletic gifts even if he, too, is very fast. Indeed, his effectiveness often seems a triumph over physical disadvantage because of the twig-like build that made friends counsel him against a career in England. Not that he is brittle – he has delivered despite being the second-most fouled player in the league this season (after Wilfried Zaha). But his real power comes from sharpness of mind and slightness of foot, the ability to make opponents seem encumbered by superfluous brawn as he shimmies, darts or twists past them – on either side, if you please – like a waifish assassin, a goalbound glimmer man. FacebookTwitterPinterest Riyad Mahrez poses with his PFA Player of the Year award. Photograph: Barrington Coombs/PAThere is nothing superfluous about Mahrez: he knows so many tricks he could go busking in shopping centres but he performs them only at the right time and place: there is a delicious glee in the way he torments rivals but, most of all, there is deadly efficiency, proving, along with the defensive work he never shuns, that he is as disciplined as the rest of this Leicester team. You want end product, he will give it to you in golden wrapping paper and a bow tied with a clove hitch knot. Leicester City’s Riyad Mahrez wins PFA Player of the Year award Read more He showcased all his skills in the victory at Manchester City in February, which brought perhaps the best individual and collective performance of the season, in a match that seemed pivotal in the title race. Mahrez rose to the occasion magnificently, demanding the ball at every opportunity and flummoxing opponents with his elusiveness from as early as the second minute, when all that the already overwhelmed Fabian Delph and Alexander Kolarov could do in the face of his wriggly provocation was whack him to the ground. Mahrez got up to deliver the free-kick from which Robert Huth scored, then carried on taunting his hosts for the remainder of the game. He crowned the display with the goal that clinched a precious victory in a style that few could emulate, collecting a pass and hurdling Nicolás Otamendi with one cute touch before selling Martín Demichelis a stepover and cracking the ball into the net after neutralising Joe Hart with an old Jedi mind trick. You can take your stats and shove them up your abacus – you know, the ones that show that Mahrez has created fewer chances this season than Robbie Brady and Moussa Sissoko – because this season Mahrez has been the force to behold. Top post mate.
ThaiFox Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Well done Riyad! As many have said, so many from our team could have achieved it this season. Would have gone for Vardy myself because I think his consistency has been outstanding to the team, plus he achieved the P/L scoring record, which in itself was outstanding. Glad it didn't go to a spuds player though. Good job this award is picked by players as tottingham seem to be the media darlings and I suspect the FA would have preferred this, rather than little Leicester picking up the award.
The Blur Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Chuffed for the lad especially that he has turned his form around, I think Ranieri had a word in his ear after Sunderland match, he was much better against West Ham and yesterday.
Kendal Fox Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Congratulations Riyad Mahrez!!Was very moving watching Claudio present him with the award... Felt very symbolic too...
RowlattsFox Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Is it usual for the rest of the squad to go to these awards? Or is it just another indicator of the togetherness and team spirit.
Tielemans63 Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Absolutely wonderful. Great to see the whole 'cheam' there to support him. A Leicester player as PFA player of the Year, 5 points from being English champions - what a time to be alive!
Corky Posted 25 April 2016 Posted 25 April 2016 Congratulations to him, had a wonderful season full of big moments along with the fantastic individual skill.
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