Three years ago Leicester City gatecrashed the private members’ party of English football, etching their name into sporting history with that miraculous title win.

It was a triumph which altered the Premier League landscape, pressing the likes of Manchester United and Manchester City into spending huge amounts of cash to try to ensure it would never happen again.

Those 5,000-1 odds for Leicester winning the league would probably be a little shorter now, yet nobody really expects Leicester to repeat that achievement of 2016 that the team pulled off under Claudio Ranieri.

But this summer there is a growing sense that Leicester, now managed by Brendan Rodgers, could be ready to unsettle the established order again.

The Rodgers revolution is in full swing and, at this stage of the summer, United and Arsenal are peering anxiously into their rear-view mirrors.