Home

Vardy goes from the garage to Cup finalist

Nick MashiterAAP
Leicester City's star striker Jamie Vardy has gone from garage boy to FA Cup finalist.
Camera IconLeicester City's star striker Jamie Vardy has gone from garage boy to FA Cup finalist. Credit: AP

Leicester star Jamie Vardy admits going from the garage to glory would be the ultimate FA Cup fairytale.

The striker will make history when he steps out for Saturday's showdown with Chelsea at Wembley.

It is the Foxes' first FA Cup final for 52 years and they have never won the trophy, having lost the final four times.

Playing on Saturday also means Vardy will have appeared in all 13 rounds of the competition after making his FA Cup debut for Stocksbridge in the preliminary round in 2007.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

It will be another chapter in the striker's remarkable rise which has seen him come from non league to win the Premier League and play for England.

The Game AFL 2024

"We used to have a derelict garage and used to say the garage was the net," said Vardy. "The amount of noise it used to make was definitely upsetting the neighbours.

"That is the enjoyment side of it and having a laugh with your mates - playing Wembley crosses or singles. I think that is where it all starts for kids.

"There was one time while I was at Sheffield Wednesday and I bumped into the then academy director outside Hillsborough.

"He said 'so now I know why we have had to paint the exit doors on the stadium'.

"We used to go in the car park and play football against them as well.

"I said 'I do apologise, it is the only place we have a net'. Doing stuff like that and watching your local team is what makes you fall in love with it.

"It just shows, obviously, when you're a kid dreaming and seeing the FA Cup, to playing in the finals.

"To have gone all the way from the bottom and played every round just makes it even more interesting and me even more determined to try and get the win."

Vardy's 24 goals helped inspire the Foxes to their astonishing 5,000-1 Premier League triumph five years ago.

"There are still a few (of us) left to be able to get the stories across to the younger lads about exactly what happened back then," he said.

"Before it was 'we're not supposed to be here so go out and enjoy yourself, oh, we've won - decent. We've got to 40 points and we're safe.'

"Now because we are progressing there is more of a target on ourselves because we want to keep pushing and pushing."

Meanwhile, Leicester boss Brendan Rodgers has urged his team to win the Cup for late owner Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha and his family.

Khun Vichai and four others died in October 2018 when his helicopter crashed outside the King Power Stadium following a 1-1 draw with West Ham.

"For Khun Vichai and his family, they were obviously a massive motivator because, even though he's not here, our fight every day is to continue with his legacy and the dreams he had for Leicester and the supporters," Rodgers said.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails