
Chelsea
manager Jose Mourinho insists Leicester are not title contenders despite
sitting top of the Premier League after 13 games.
Mourinho, whose Chelsea side have endured their worst start to a Premier
League season and lie 15th with 14 points from 13 games, believes Leicester
and manager Claudio Ranieri have done "amazingly" and "deserve respect".
But the Portuguese manager believes Ranieri - whom he replaced for his first
stint as Chelsea boss in 2004 - and the Leicester players would not be
insulted by him ruling the Midlands club out of the title race.
"Whether they be title contenders or not, we should focus on what they are
doing and say they are doing amazingly well," Mourinho said.
"I am happy to see somebody in Ranieri that, when he signed for Leicester,
all the bets were that he'd be the first one to be sacked, but he is top of
the league.
"I don't think Ranieri and the Leicester players will insult me if I say I
don't believe they are going to be champions. I think they will accept my
comment and feel more my compliments. They deserve respect for what they are
doing."
Speaking in his pre-match press conference ahead of the Champions League
Group G clash with Maccabi Tel Aviv, Mourinho was also careful when
answering a question about Jamie Vardy's success.
The England striker equalled Ruud van Nistelrooy's record of scoring in 10
consecutive Premier League games on Saturday, and Mourinho said: "I don't
want to analyse the boy because if I do you will take my words and put them
in a different perspective, and say I want to or do not want to sign him.
"The point is a super striker like Van Nistelrooy did something historical
in the Premier League, and the reality is that Vardy has equalled that and
has the chance to make history. So what he is doing is remarkable."