Leicester City vs Stoke City; Sky Bet Championship
Leicester City vs Stoke City. Sky Bet Championship.
The King Power StadiumAttendance29,897.
Leicester City 2-1 Stoke City: Stephy Mavididi and Patson Daka strike in Foxes win
Report and free match highlights from the Sky Bet Championship match between Leicester City and Stoke City at the King Power Stadium on Saturday; Stephy Mavididi and Patson Daka strike in first half to steer Foxes to victory.
Saturday 22 November 2025 19:02, UK
Patson Daka scored for the first time in almost a year as Leicester frustrated Stoke's push for automatic promotion from the Championship with a 2-1 home victory.
Leicester striker Daka last found the net on December 3, 2024 in the Foxes' Premier League win over West Ham but broke the drought by scoring his side's second on the stroke of half-time.
That added to Stephy Mavididi's opener as Mark Robins' Stoke, who began the afternoon only two points off second, found themselves trailing at the break despite being superior for long periods.
Bae Jun-ho pulled one back at the beginning of the second half but Leicester held on to ease the pressure on boss Marti Cifuentes.
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Unlike the hosts, who made three changes to the starting 11 which defeated Norwich before the international break, Robins made only one with Tomas Rigo replacing Lewis Baker in midfield.
That saw his players make a more fluid start to a fixture they will have been upset not to win.
Rigo was involved in the move which ended with Million Manhoef testing the positioning of Asmir Begovic with a side-footed effort during the opening exchanges.
Stoke continued to press and should have taken the lead when Junior Tchamadeu powered down their right flank and found Jun-ho unmarked on the edge of the six yard box, but the South Korean slipped as he prepared to shoot.
That profligacy came back to haunt Stoke in the 23rd minute when Mavididi, one of those summoned into action by Cifuentes, netted a wonderful solo effort.
Collecting the ball midway into the visitors' half, he teetered forward, teased three defenders out of position and then beat Viktor Johansson with a vicious drive.
The setback stalled Stoke's momentum, although they continued to dominate possession. The only difference was, following Mavididi's intervention, that they became less adept at translating territorial dominance into chances.
Leicester, by contrast, were intent on making the most of what came their way.
And it was that mindset which saw them double their lead in the 44th minute when Daka doubled their advantage in ruthless fashion.
Oliver Skipp slipped the ball through to Abdul Fatawu, who in turn fed the previously shot-shy Zambian when Ben Wilmot failed to properly execute a tackle. It was Daka's first strike in 39 outings and led to excitable celebrations from him and his teammates.
Jun-ho handed Robins' side a lifeline two minutes after the interval, heading home after Ashley Phillips had nodded Tchamadeu's cross back across the box.
Manhoef went close as Stoke roused themselves, floating a lofted attempt just wide.
Leicester goalkeeper Asmir Begovic, who spent five years with the visitors at the beginning of his career, was relieved to see that effort fly off target after earlier doing well to deny the Dutchman.
The managers
Leicester's Marti Cifuentes:
"We want to build an identity, on and off the pitch, which can sustain the things we are looking for.
"I've spoken in the past about a change in the culture and mentality which can help the squad.
"Everyone is working very hard for each other. They care for each other and that is always the foundation of any competitive team.
"What happened before is not really my concern. But I spoke about changing things and I know you can't just do that and forget about performances.
"That is the pressure of being a manager. I am here and I enjoy that pressure. I am aware of the stature of the club and what is expected."
Stoke's Mark Robins:
"I thought we deserved something out of the game but we made two mistakes that cost us two goals.
"We are all human beings and we are allowed to make mistakes. The trouble is, if you make them against a team which has just come down from the Premier League, it makes things very difficult.
"I'm frustrated because we have had good opportunities to create a little bit more. We chose the wrong option too many times and that's part of our evolution.
"They didn't and they had that ruthlessness. But we showed a really good reaction.
"We can't lose games in this manner and expect to remain in the top six. But there needs to be a dose of realism because where we have come from, and where they have come from, is chalk and cheese.
"Now we've got two home games coming up and we need to make them count."