Leicester City striker recalls his time in the lower leagues ahead of Non-League Day this weekend

Ahead of Non-League Day on Saturday 12 October, we spoke to Premier League players who once plied their trade in levels of the game beneath the top four divisions of the English football pyramid.

The Leicester City striker says non-league football played a crucial role in a career that has brought one Premier League title and 85 goals.

Vardy was released as a teenager by Sheffield Wednesday and rediscovered his love of the game in the lower leagues.

"One of the lads who'd been released at the same time as me played for a Sunday league team and asked me to go, so I just went and started playing again, to try and get the enjoyment back," he says.

And he feels his time at Stocksbridge Park Steels, Halifax Town and Fleetwood Town was crucial to his development.

"I wasn't the biggest lad," he says. "Centre-halves in non-league are big, stocky and just look at you, being small, and think, 'Right, we're just going to kick him.' But I kind of enjoyed that side of it.

"It never made me stop. It would just make me want to get them back by scoring the goals."

Unsung heroes

Vardy acknowledges the huge input of the game's unsung heroes at grassroots level.

"When you're at non-league clubs, there are people who've been there 40, 50 years," he says.

"It's literally their life, making sure that the clubs survive and making sure that grassroots football is still going. They are the people that deserve real credit."

Show your support on Non-League Day

You can show support for the hundreds of semi-professional and amateur clubs around England by going to a non-league match on 12 October.

To find your nearest non-league match, visit nonleagueday.co.uk/map.

Also in this series

Part 2: Murray: Non-league has a pool of talent

Part 3: Burn: Playing non-league gave me the belief to reach the top

Part 4: Pickford: Non-league matches made me a man

Part 5: Foster: Tiverton gave me the chance I needed

Part 6: Wilder: My non-league days still guide me now