Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Myanmar fans get fleeting glimpse of Foxes

-

Myanmar football fans flocked Sunday to see newly-crowned English Premier League champions Leicester City as they made a whirlwind visit to Yangon and took in the city's stunning Shwedagon Pagoda.

The Foxes, who have spent a week soaking up the adulation of a growing Thai fanbase, were greeted with a cascade of selfies at Yangon airport before they were whisked away for a brief tour of the Shwedagon, which contains relics from the Buddha.

His hands clasped in respect, Italian manager Claudio Ranieri knelt alongside Leicester's Thai owner, billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and several players in front of the glittering pagoda which soars over Yangon's skyline.

Duty-free magnate Vichai is a devout Buddhist renowned for his deeply superstitious approach to club affairs.

During Leicester's odds-defying title-winning season Vichai repeatedly flew Thai monks to the British city to bless the team and stadium.

Myanmar fans take a selfie with Gökhan Inler (C)  a midfielder for Leicester City during the Englis...
Myanmar fans take a selfie with Gökhan Inler (C), a midfielder for Leicester City during the English Premier League champions' visit to Yangon on May 22, 2016
Ye Aung Thu, AFP

The club have attracted new fans across Asia since their 5,000-1 outsider title win, even winning over some supporters from traditional regional favourites Manchester United.

"All football fans like Leicester because they tried very hard and gave the best they had," Chan Myae Ko Ko Lwin, who is organising a fans' welcoming party, told AFP.

For 11-year-old Ye Yint Htet, among the scores waiting patiently at the pagoda, his new loyalty to the once unheralded side stemmed from their name.

"Foxes follow their prey in group. Likewise, Leicester play in group," he said.

Like much of Southeast Asia Myanmar is football-mad.

It was once a regional soccer powerhouse but football struggled for a time, like all other sports, under military rule.

The domestic league was however rebooted under General Than Shwe, who was head of state from 1992-2011. He is believed to have ordered mega-rich businessmen who made fortunes under the junta to stump up millions of dollars for new teams.

Claudio Ranieri meets fans of Leicester City on his visit to Myanmar on May 22  2016  where his club...
Claudio Ranieri meets fans of Leicester City on his visit to Myanmar on May 22, 2016, where his club has attracted new fans since their stunning win of this season's English Premier League
Ye Aung Thu, AFP

Those teams now play in an increasingly competitive Myanmar National League.

Elections last November ushered in the first civilian government for almost half a century.

But the football federation is still led by a media-friendly army "crony" called Zaw Zaw, who forged a mining, banking and hotel empire under the former junta.

In Thailand Leicester held several promotional events, capped by an open-top bus parade -- complete with the Premier League trophy -- through central Bangkok on Thursday that drew thousands of curious bystanders.

Myanmar football fans flocked Sunday to see newly-crowned English Premier League champions Leicester City as they made a whirlwind visit to Yangon and took in the city’s stunning Shwedagon Pagoda.

The Foxes, who have spent a week soaking up the adulation of a growing Thai fanbase, were greeted with a cascade of selfies at Yangon airport before they were whisked away for a brief tour of the Shwedagon, which contains relics from the Buddha.

His hands clasped in respect, Italian manager Claudio Ranieri knelt alongside Leicester’s Thai owner, billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, and several players in front of the glittering pagoda which soars over Yangon’s skyline.

Duty-free magnate Vichai is a devout Buddhist renowned for his deeply superstitious approach to club affairs.

During Leicester’s odds-defying title-winning season Vichai repeatedly flew Thai monks to the British city to bless the team and stadium.

Myanmar fans take a selfie with Gökhan Inler (C)  a midfielder for Leicester City during the Englis...

Myanmar fans take a selfie with Gökhan Inler (C), a midfielder for Leicester City during the English Premier League champions' visit to Yangon on May 22, 2016
Ye Aung Thu, AFP

The club have attracted new fans across Asia since their 5,000-1 outsider title win, even winning over some supporters from traditional regional favourites Manchester United.

“All football fans like Leicester because they tried very hard and gave the best they had,” Chan Myae Ko Ko Lwin, who is organising a fans’ welcoming party, told AFP.

For 11-year-old Ye Yint Htet, among the scores waiting patiently at the pagoda, his new loyalty to the once unheralded side stemmed from their name.

“Foxes follow their prey in group. Likewise, Leicester play in group,” he said.

Like much of Southeast Asia Myanmar is football-mad.

It was once a regional soccer powerhouse but football struggled for a time, like all other sports, under military rule.

The domestic league was however rebooted under General Than Shwe, who was head of state from 1992-2011. He is believed to have ordered mega-rich businessmen who made fortunes under the junta to stump up millions of dollars for new teams.

Claudio Ranieri meets fans of Leicester City on his visit to Myanmar on May 22  2016  where his club...

Claudio Ranieri meets fans of Leicester City on his visit to Myanmar on May 22, 2016, where his club has attracted new fans since their stunning win of this season's English Premier League
Ye Aung Thu, AFP

Those teams now play in an increasingly competitive Myanmar National League.

Elections last November ushered in the first civilian government for almost half a century.

But the football federation is still led by a media-friendly army “crony” called Zaw Zaw, who forged a mining, banking and hotel empire under the former junta.

In Thailand Leicester held several promotional events, capped by an open-top bus parade — complete with the Premier League trophy — through central Bangkok on Thursday that drew thousands of curious bystanders.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

The arrival of ChatGPT sent shockwaves through the journalism industry - Copyright AFP/File JULIEN DE ROSAAnne Pascale ReboulThe rise of artificial intelligence has forced...

World

Taiwan's eastern Hualien region was also the epicentre of a magnitude-7.4 quake in April 3, which caused landslides around the mountainous region - Copyright...

World

A Belgian man proved that he has auto-brewery syndrome (ABS), which causes carbohydrates in his stomach to be fermented, increasing ethanol levels in his...

Tech & Science

Middle-earth Enterprises & Friends will manage the intellectual property rights Embracer has for "The Lord of the Rings" and the "Tomb Raider" games -...