Leicester fanbase feeling 'apathy rather than anger'published at 18:05 14 February
Nick Mashiter
BBC Sport football news reporter

Whether a planned supporters' protest at Leicester City's game against Arsenal on Saturday gathers any traction remains to be seen.
Fans have been asked to voice their feelings over the running of the club and to wear yellow, a significant colour in Thailand relating to the royal family which will therefore resonate with Foxes' owner and chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha.
Under the banner 'Project Reset', there is a list of five points which the organisers - who remain anonymous - feel have harmed the club.
An absence of trust, fear of conflict, lack of commitment, avoidance of accountability and inattention to results are all reasons cited.
It criticises director of football Jon Rudkin for his lack of engagement, states that "a lack of communication and accountability is at the heart of the growing distrust" between the club and fans, and says there is a "feeling of inevitability about our coming relegation".
Supporters have also been asked to protest in the 14th minute - a reference to Adrien Silva's £22m move from Sporting in 2017, when the Foxes missed the registration deadline by 14 seconds.
It clearly alludes to the muddled transfer as one of the inadequate ways the group feels the Foxes are perceived to have been run.
Yet since Silva's arrival, he was ultimately registered in January 2018, the club finished fifth in the Premier League twice, won the FA Cup and reached the Conference League semi-finals.
This protest wants to criticise the club for a lack accountability and transparency, yet the organisers are yet to put their names to it - the irony seemingly lost.
Yes, Leicester City were relegated from the Premier League in 2023 and could go back down again, and there are valid points about the lack of communication and identity at the club.
But, apathetic rather than angry feels the most appropriate description of the Leicester fanbase right now.