Vichai Statue

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Jeff

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A statue of Khun Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha will be unveiled at King Power Stadium this April, as the Club and the city honour the legendary Leicester City Chairman.

A commitment made by Khun Vichai’s son, Khun Aiyawatt, in the days following his father’s tragic passing in 2018, the statue will be an eternal tribute to the most influential figure in Leicester City’s 138-year history.

Leicester City Chief Executive, Susan Whelan, said: “We are very pleased to be sharing this news with our supporters, with the city of Leicester and with football fans all over the world, whose kindness in the wake of Khun Vichai’s passing demonstrated what an inspiration he was to so many people.

“Khun Vichai’s contribution to this Club and this city - his vision, his generosity and his belief in people – are immortalised in the memory of every person touched by our story. The statue will be a place for people to remember, to celebrate his life and to share those stories for generations to come.”

Khun Vichai was Leicester City Chairman from 2010, overseeing the Club’s return to the top flight of English football. Under his leadership, the Foxes shocked the world in 2016 – defying pre-season odds of 5,000/1 to become Premier League champions in one of the greatest sporting achievements of all time. He helped the Club scale the heights of the game, including an unforgettable run to the quarter-finals of the UEFA Champions League in 2017, all while building a long-term vision that was to become his legacy.

That vision was underpinned by a bond forged with Leicester’s supporters and communities, who were regular beneficiaries of Khun Vichai’s celebrated generosity. While better facilities, gifts and free beer improved the matchday experience for fans, personal donations of over £4million to causes including children’s health services and local charities improved the lives of countless people in Leicester.

Work on a world-leading training facility in Seagrave, north Leicestershire, was underway and plans for the expansion of King Power Stadium were in development, when a helicopter accident tragically claimed the lives of Khun Vichai, staff members Kaveporn Punpare and Nusara Suknamai, and pilots Eric Swaffer and Izabela Lechowicz in October 2018. The memory of all five victims is preserved the Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha Memorial Garden, built on the crash site in King Power Stadium’s south-east corner.

Under the leadership of Khun Aiyawatt, the Club opened its Seagrave site in December 2020, while plans for the development of King Power Stadium were submitted in the autumn of 2021 – a few short months after the Foxes lifted the FA Cup for the first time, maintaining the Club’s progress on and off the pitch.

Khun Vichai’s statue will be positioned in the north-west corner of the site, welcoming supporters approaching the stadium from its primary pedestrian routes along Raw Dykes Road. On-site works are expected to commence imminently.

Further information on the statue and its unveiling ceremony will be released in the coming weeks.
 
Good to hear. Certainly deserved. One for that entire 15/16 team would be good to see too.
 
Wtf, how ****ing disrespectful.

I thnk that I've been very respectful up to now but the statement saying that the statue will be "an eternal tribute to the most influential figure in Leicester City’s 138-year history" made me want to vomit.

Vichai was an excellent chairman of the club for 8 years - but the club has existed for 130 years without him. The first 4 of those 8 years were mostly failed decisions backed up by constant spending - unlawfully as our subsequent fine proves. The second 4 were obviously made special by the performance in 15/16. He was a key part of that season but he was far from the most influential figure. He probably made more poor footballing decisions than good ones overall but being extraordinarily rich makes that less risky.

His work behind the scenes and supporting the City is to be rightly remembered and appluaded. His tragic death was marked beautifully by the club with the garden on the site of the crash. That was a fitting tribute and a lasting place for reflection as we've seen with the ceremonies held there each year.

The rest though is too much for me. The massive pictures of him across the stadium, the main building at the training ground named after him, and now the statue. If they'd put the statue in the garden, I'd have been supportive. But not where it's going and not how absurd the whole thing looks in the pictures.

I'm generally not in favour of adulation, and especially of shady billionaires, even if they do good things for my football team. If Leicester City are determined to have a statue at the main entrance to the stadium, I can think of at least a dozen more worthy people.

Hence my previous post in this thread. I'm fully aware that my view is a minority one but I am obstinate enough to make my point against the tide of worship.
 
I thnk that I've been very respectful up to now but the statement saying that the statue will be "an eternal tribute to the most influential figure in Leicester City’s 138-year history" made me want to vomit.

Vichai was an excellent chairman of the club for 8 years - but the club has existed for 130 years without him. The first 4 of those 8 years were mostly failed decisions backed up by constant spending - unlawfully as our subsequent fine proves. The second 4 were obviously made special by the performance in 15/16. He was a key part of that season but he was far from the most influential figure. He probably made more poor footballing decisions than good ones overall but being extraordinarily rich makes that less risky.

His work behind the scenes and supporting the City is to be rightly remembered and appluaded. His tragic death was marked beautifully by the club with the garden on the site of the crash. That was a fitting tribute and a lasting place for reflection as we've seen with the ceremonies held there each year.

The rest though is too much for me. The massive pictures of him across the stadium, the main building at the training ground named after him, and now the statue. If they'd put the statue in the garden, I'd have been supportive. But not where it's going and not how absurd the whole thing looks in the pictures.

I'm generally not in favour of adulation, and especially of shady billionaires, even if they do good things for my football team. If Leicester City are determined to have a statue at the main entrance to the stadium, I can think of at least a dozen more worthy people.

Hence my previous post in this thread. I'm fully aware that my view is a minority one but I am obstinate enough to make my point against the tide of worship.
I'd agree with most of what you say here - but it's a world away from the Saddam Hussein comparison, which surely you can see is rather gross
 
I thnk that I've been very respectful up to now but the statement saying that the statue will be "an eternal tribute to the most influential figure in Leicester City’s 138-year history" made me want to vomit.

Vichai was an excellent chairman of the club for 8 years - but the club has existed for 130 years without him. The first 4 of those 8 years were mostly failed decisions backed up by constant spending - unlawfully as our subsequent fine proves. The second 4 were obviously made special by the performance in 15/16. He was a key part of that season but he was far from the most influential figure. He probably made more poor footballing decisions than good ones overall but being extraordinarily rich makes that less risky.

His work behind the scenes and supporting the City is to be rightly remembered and appluaded. His tragic death was marked beautifully by the club with the garden on the site of the crash. That was a fitting tribute and a lasting place for reflection as we've seen with the ceremonies held there each year.

The rest though is too much for me. The massive pictures of him across the stadium, the main building at the training ground named after him, and now the statue. If they'd put the statue in the garden, I'd have been supportive. But not where it's going and not how absurd the whole thing looks in the pictures.

I'm generally not in favour of adulation, and especially of shady billionaires, even if they do good things for my football team. If Leicester City are determined to have a statue at the main entrance to the stadium, I can think of at least a dozen more worthy people.

Hence my previous post in this thread. I'm fully aware that my view is a minority one but I am obstinate enough to make my point against the tide of worship.
Yes, I can completely understand some not wanting a statue or saying that perhaps, based on our 130 years, hasn’t been earned, but to compare him to SH is gross, disrespectful and rude.

FWIW, I don’t mind either way in relation to the statue but, you know what he was at the helm during our greatest ever world-wide (celebrated) greatest sporting achievement.

For that alone I can see a reason to do this.
 
It's not just what Vicahi done for the football team but the city of Leicester in general, he gave money to the Richard the 3rd foundation he gave millions to the hospital and those are the ones I can think of.

Vicahi has done more for this football club in his short tenure than in the entire history before him, I can't remember thousands upon thousands of football fans and the Leicester public along with the players marching through the city in respect for him doing it for anyone else

I sincerely hope Top doesn't read this forum as its genuinely disgusting to compare his Father to a murderous dictator that brought misery to millions for decades.

Perhaps BN you should follow Newcastle instead at least your views are concurrent with the new owners
 
If you visited the ground after that sad day, you could feel the overwhelming sense of loss from the City, the County, the Country even worldwide.
Truly a remarkable man, whom we are very lucky to have as our owner.
If the club want to build a statue in honour of him, I have no problem with that.

Also, it ain’t my money
 
I was left cold by the level of worship outpouring of emotion for Vichai after his admittedly tragic and unfortunate death but I think the Saddam thing is a bit daft and edge-lordy.
 
Oh no, don't you see? You're supposed to drop your inherent mistrust of rich exploitative bastards if they own your football team, and talk about them as if they're your close relatives. Or something.
 
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