Sheffield United executed a high-impact first half and survived a late onslaught to secure a 3-2 victory over Leicester City at the King Power Stadium, consolidating their growing form.
Playing in moderate weather conditions before a 32,261-strong crowd, the Blades stunned the home side with an explosive start.
Thomas Cannon opened the scoring inside two minutes, finishing from a Callum O’Hare assist. Just two minutes later, O’Hare turned provider again, slipping in Jairo Riedewald to double the advantage.
The pressure didn’t stop there. With Leicester reeling, Sydie Peck delivered the pick of the goals on 32 minutes, unleashing a superb volley to put Sheffield United 3-0 up at half-time.
The visitors controlled the game in the first-half, dictated possession, and exposed Leicester’s defensive weakness.


Leicester rally after the break
Marti Cifuentes responded with a triple substitution at the restart, introducing Jordan Ayew, Oliver Skipp and Boubakary Soumaré. The changes sparked life into Leicester’s play.
Eight minutes into the second half, Abdul Fatawu whipped in a delivery that Stephy Mavididi headed home to make it 3-1. The home crowd, subdued for most of the afternoon, suddenly found their voice.
Leicester continued to press, and their efforts were rewarded in the 83rd minute when Soumaré slid a clever pass to Jordan James, who lashed in a powerful effort to cut the deficit to one.
With Sheffield United increasingly on the back foot, the hosts pushed for an equaliser as tensions rose, yellow cards were shown to Soumaré, James and Sam McCallum as the intensity ramped up.
Blades dig deep to close out victory
Despite Leicester’s late dominance and the five minutes of added time, Sheffield United held their ground.
Key defensive changes, including Mark McGuinness and Djibril Soumaré coming on, helped stabilise the back line.
After a frenetic finale, referee Anthony Backhouse blew the full-time whistle, sealing a third straight victory for the Blades.
For Leicester, however, the alarm bells continue to ring. A spirited second half cannot mask the structural problems exposed during a woeful opening 45 minutes.