From the Guardian's Fiver:
Leicester City coming out on top against Liverpool is still, even to this day, reported in some quarters of the media as something of a surprise. The Fiver isn’t exactly sure why. The Foxes have been a thorn in Liverpool’s side, a maybe-it’s-time-to-start-cutting-down-on-the-steak-and-blue-cheese-sliders-for-breakfast pain in the hole, for more than half a century now. Consider: Leicester bundled Bill Shankly’s side out of the FA Cup a couple of times in the 60s; kept beating the Reds in the league during the 70s; ended their three-year, 85-match unbeaten home run in the 80s; kept beating the Reds in the league during the 90s; and have a habit of repeatedly beating them in the new millennium. They were reigning champions of England just a few months ago, and if Big Cup is the definitive modern metric, which everyone keeps insisting it is, were the joint-fifth best team in Europe just last April. Liverpool, by contrast, last had something to celebrate in … well, let’s not kick people while they’re down. You get the general gist.