Pick of the stats: Leicester City v Millwallpublished at 10:34 BST
10:34 BST
Leicester City play their final home game in the Championship this season, after relegation to League One was confirmed with their 2-2 draw against Hull City on Tuesday.
Millwall visit on Friday (20:00 BST) and will need at least a point to move back into second position, above Ipswich who visit West Bromwich Albion on Saturday lunchtime.
Leicester City have won both of their past two home league games against Millwall, scoring three goals in each: a 3-0 win in November 2013, and 3-2 in December 2023.
Millwall have won both of their past two Championship matches against Leicester City (both 1-0), and are looking to complete their fourth league double over the Foxes, after 1990-91, 2011-12, and 2012-13.
Leicester City have been relegated to League One, 10 years after they were crowned Premier League champions. It is the second-shortest gap between a side being English champions and then being relegated to the third tier, after Derby County's nine years from 1975 to 1984.
Leicester have lost their final home game in five of their past eight Championship seasons (W3), including three of their past four.
Millwall have won 40 points from 22 Championship away games this season (W11 D7 L4); it is the Lions' joint-most away points (assuming 3 points for a win) in a league campaign, along with the 2000-01 campaign.
Supporters reflected on the club's famous 2016 title and the 2021 FA Cup triumph, as well as years of European football along the way, when talking about just how far the club has fallen.
We need 'a full clear-out' and to 'stick together' - fans react to relegationpublished at 13:18 BST 22 April
13:18 BST 22 April
Image source, Getty Images
BBC Sport asked Leicester City supporters what they would like to see happen at the club to stop the rot after they suffered back-to-back relegations to drop into League One.
Fans gathered outside the ground to demand change immediately after the draw with Hull City that sealed the Foxes' fate.
Below is a selection of what fans had to say.
Hardy: A full clear-out is needed, starting with the board and coaching staff. The focus now should be on building a younger, hungrier squad with a long-term vision, not short-term fixes. Rebuild properly and come back stronger.
Wes: Depressed. The club needs a complete overhaul. Too many uninformed decisions were made. The firing of a ridiculous amount of mangers solely based on the 'new manager bounce'. My advice to the King Power Group: take a deep breath, take a step back and hire competent staff members who know how to run a club, based upon a clear direction and plan. If not, just sell the club because the KPG is haemorrhaging money on its 'plan' and it is not making sense from a business perspective.
Stephen: I had been resigned to League One football for quite some time if I'm being honest. It's been a woeful season - from getting the basics right to showing any fight or passion, it's all been missing. I got to the point where I didn't even get angry any more, just accepted it, even sort of expected it - says it all really. Massive clear out, Top (no pun intended) to bottom, is definitely needed.
David: Having been a supporter since 1959, I've seen all the ups and downs. When King Power took over, these have been the greatest years we have known. We need to stick with and support the owners and the good years will return.
Chris: I was taken to my first Leicester City game by my grandfather at the age of eight. As a lifelong supporter, now a grandfather myself, I watched us lose three FA Cup finals in the 1960s and never thought I would see the club become one of only seven clubs to win the Premier League and to finally break our FA Cup hoodoo.
Of course, relegation to League One feels like a disaster but frankly I wouldn't swap the highs of the last 10 years for a mid-table Championship finish this year. The reasons for our decline are many and mostly off the field. Contrast the inspired recruitment and managerial appointments of the 'glory years' (think Vardy, Kante and Mahrez among others) with the recent lack of quality players and the embarrassing merry-go-round of poor managerial choices. I will always be a fan and cannot support any other team. Let's get back to a 'Foxes never quit' mentality and better times will return.
Pete: The next two months are vital and there's so much to do. First, we need to appoint a manager in May or by June at the latest. I'd go for Rowett simply as he's got a head start. We've got to clear out as many high-wage earners as possible, retain only those who will work hard and play with pride and passion, then recruit a mix of experienced battlers and those with hunger to prove themselves. I can't see anyone buying out King Power right now so they need to be decisive and pragmatic - abandon their fantasies of a playing style 'identity' and get back the club's authentic identity of shrewd recruitment, hard work to raise standards and pragmatic, winning football played with passion and urgency.
Luke: Every single capillary of Leicester City Football Club has been infiltrated by a culture of complacency over the last few years. It is very difficult to see this being rectified under the current leadership. King Power's position as owners is, and has been for some time now, untenable.
Tom: Anxious now to see how spending rules will be applied to us in League One and how they will impact our future. No doubt we have been run terribly but it is a very bitter pill to swallow while clubs like us watch Chelsea and Manchester City continue to escape punishment.
"I'm incredibly frustrated. In the first half, our energy and drive didn't match the importance of the game," he said.
"We still created some good moments and chances, but the fact that 18-year-old Divine Mukasa was trying to do everything himself showed that some of the others needed to step up a little bit more.
"Second half was much better and if we had that same drive and energy and passion in some of the other games, maybe things would be different.
"We should have won the game - we created lots of good chances. The game was symptomatic of a lot of games - we created a lot of chances and we don't take them and give away silly goals at the other end to give the opposition a lift.
"We are all disappointed and the fans, who have paid their hard-earned money, will be incredibly disappointed to see their football club that 10 years ago won the Premier League [get relegated].
"I know it's a rollercoaster being a fan at times, but I probably wouldn't expect that rollercoaster to be quite so extreme."