Advertisement

Ranieri: Gestede's goal for Aston Villa was handball

___4566859___https:______static.pulse.com.gh___webservice___escenic___binary___4566859___2016___3___10___22___claudioranieri-cropped_751avbi0rq2g15k2ecbwgterv_1
___4566859___https:______static.pulse.com.gh___webservice___escenic___binary___4566859___2016___3___10___22___claudioranieri-cropped_751avbi0rq2g15k2ecbwgterv_1
Rudy Gestede's goal for Aston Villa in the 1-1 draw with Leicester should have been disallowed for handball says City boss Claudio Ranieri.
Advertisement

Leicester City manager Claudio Ranieri protested that Aston Villa's equaliser in the 1-1 Premier League draw at Villa Park should have been disallowed for handball.

Advertisement

Shinji Okazaki hit a 28th-minute opener for the Premier League leaders and Ranieri was left to rue a missed penalty from Riyad Mahrez five minutes later.

Bottom-of-the-table Villa were buoyed by that let-off and levelled 15 minutes from time through Rudy Gestede – the goal allowed to stand despite the ball striking the substitute striker's hand in the build-up.

Leicester sit a point ahead of Manchester City and Arsenal at the summit, although they will cede top spot if Arsene Wenger's team avoid defeat at Stoke City on Sunday.

"We lost two points," Ranieri told a post-match news conference. "We started very well, we scored a goal but after the missed penalty the Aston Villa players took a new energy

Advertisement

"We must close the match. If we score a second goal, we close the match.

"In the second half we expected the long ball for [Libor] Kozak and, for the second ball, it was a battle.

"But we were very calm and very attentive, and they scored with a handball that the referee didn't see. It was unlucky, and that's it.

"One point in a derby is okay but we are disappointed."

Mahrez has scored four penalties so far during Leicester's remarkable campaign, although Mark Bunn's save from his tame effort marked a second miss from 12 yards since the turn of the year.

Advertisement

The winger was also off target in the goalless draw at home to AFC Bournemouth two weeks ago, but Ranieri refused to definitively remove him from penalty duties.

"Now it is not important if I change the penalty man," he said. "I will speak with him and then I will choose."

Despite the close-run nature of an intriguing title race, Ranieri insists he will not be pouring over events from the Britannia Stadium on Sunday.

"Maybe I go with my family to the restaurant," he added.

"It is not important now for us. It is not April, it is only January.

Advertisement

"In April, if we stay there at the top of the league I will also watch the other teams."

Advertisement