Leicester City suffered a 1-0 defeat to Portsmouth on Saturday, which saw the Foxes move a step closer to relegation from the Championship
Former Tottenham Hotspur star midfielder Harry Winks was involved in a heated exchange with supporters following Leicester City's latest setback, which moved them closer to relegation from the Championship.
Saturday's early kick-off saw Leicester travel to Fratton Park to face Portsmouth, as the Foxes sought to improve their prospects of avoiding a drop into League One.
Nevertheless, Leicester fell to a 1-0 reverse against Pompey, with substitute Ibane Bowat netting the decisive strike in the 63rd minute to inflict the Foxes' 18th Championship loss this term.
Following the final whistle, a video clip surfaced on social media showing Winks as he approached the Leicester team coach for the journey home.
The footage showed Winks in a heated exchange with fans as he stepped onto the vehicle, before ultimately climbing the steps of the coach.
Winks left Tottenham in summer 2023 to sign for Leicester, in a move reported to be valued at approximately £10million.
The 30-year-old has subsequently featured in 106 matches for the Foxes throughout his spell at the King Power Stadium, including 31 Championship outings this season after the club's top-flight relegation last campaign.
Leicester now face three remaining fixtures in their battle to prevent back-to-back relegations, though they confront a daunting challenge to avoid dropping into League One.
The Foxes are in 23rd position in the Championship standings and face Hull City on Tuesday evening in their next match, where they would be mathematically relegated to League One should they fail to secure all three points at the King Power.
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Leicester boss Gary Rowett, who was brought in by the club on an interim basis until the end of the campaign back in February:
“I can say we’ve got belief,” Rowett told reporters after the defeat to Portsmouth when asked if there is still belief the club can avoid relegation.
“We need to show that in our performances and our results. I said to the players we’ve got to start hoping we get a little fortune from somewhere else. But I don’t like saying that as a manager. I’m not interested in what other teams do, I’m interested in what we do.
“We have to be professional. As a player, if I had three games to go and I was already relegated, I’d still want to win all three of those games. I don’t care. It’s about pride and your own personal standards.
“For me, we turn up Tuesday [vs Hull] and we have to do everything we can to win the game. It’s easy saying it. We’ve had two or three opportunities to show that extra bit of drive and we haven’t quite find it. We have to see if we can find it Tuesday.”