Leicester's Abdul Fatawi celebrates his goal against SouthamptonImage source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Abdul Fatawu had scored just four goals for Leicester before his hat-trick against Southampton

Abdul Fatawu's hat-trick helped Leicester City take a giant step towards an immediate Premier League return as they ruthlessly ended Southampton’s realistic hopes of automatic promotion.

The Foxes need to win one of their remaining two matches against Preston or Blackburn to go up, but their place in the top flight could also be sealed as early as Friday if Leeds lose at QPR.

A cool, low finish from Fatawu gave the hosts a deserved first-half lead against a Saints side that struggled to deal with the Foxes’ press and purpose before the break.

Southampton improved vastly immediately after half-time but were overawed by the clinical Foxes, who doubled their lead through Wilfred Ndidi's powerful header.

A stunning second from Fatawu followed, then the winger set up Jamie Vardy for his 18th of the season before the former England striker provided the assist for the Ghana international to complete his treble.

The victory moves Leicester four points clear at the summit and keeps them on track to amass 100 points.

Fourth-placed Saints are mathematically capable of finishing the season equal on points with second-placed Leeds, though Daniel Farke's side have a hugely superior goal difference.

A Leeds draw against QPR on Friday or an Ipswich win at Hull on Saturday would be enough to consign the south coast club to the play-offs.

Fatawu has Foxes fans in raptures

Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Abdul Fatawu celebrated with his customary somersault

Southampton's surprise defeat by Cardiff on Saturday, in a game Saints dominated at times, came as a major blow after three successive home wins had them among the four-way battle for automatic promotion.

With Stuart Armstrong also leaving that game on a stretcher, and unlikely to play for Saints again this season, the cost of that loss was high.

The absence of the Scotland international forced one of three changes, while the Foxes made two themselves with Ricardo Pereira and James Justin coming into the backline.

After 25 minutes of relentless pressure, a threaded pass from Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall unpicked Saints’ resistance and allowed Fatawu to get in behind Kyle Walker-Peters. The 20-year-old then beat goalkeeper Alex McCarthy with a composed side-footed finish into the bottom corner.

As Fatawu wheeled away and performed a backflip in celebration, Saints reacted angrily as the flag stayed down for offside, and they also felt Wout Faes had escaped punishment for a tackle on Che Adams that won back possession and started the goalscoring move.

It was not until the second half that Saints put Leicester under any meaningful pressure, with Russell Martin’s side emerging from the break with a sense of urgency and tempo that was previously lacking.

Even then, they could not break Leicester down and finished the game without registering a shot on target.

Ndidi's header to double Leicester's advantage triggered a merciless final 30 minutes that had Foxes fans in the stands at King Power Stadium in ecstasy.

Fatawu’s curled finish from outside the box to make it three was the pick of the goals, and his pass to find Vardy soon after was the pick of the assists before the 37-year-old returned the favour at the end of a fast-flowing counter-attack to make it 5-0.

'Foxes job nearly done' - reaction

Leicester City manager Enzo Maresca told BBC Radio Leicester:

"The good thing now is that we are nearly there, we just need one more win to finish our job and hopefully that will be in the next game against Preston away.

"Most of the time people judge the results. I think the performance was good but I don't think it was our best performance of the season.

"But overall it was a fantastic performance on the ball and off the ball, the way they pressed, the way they worked until the end."

Southampton boss Russell Martin told BBC Radio Solent:

"For 60-odd minutes I thought we were good. It was a really tight match. We played some amazing build-up, but it didn't come to enough.

"Their attackers were really ruthless and we were not.

"At the start of the second half we were so good, and were so on top and they scored against the run of play. And after that I did not like one bit what I saw from my team tonight.

"After that there was no togetherness, no character, no fight."