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The game kicks off at 1500 GMT at the King Power Stadium.
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Leicester City v Stoke City: Manager quotes
Craig Shakespeare (Leicester City)
On his future: "I am quite open to whenever they want to. It is stated that the manager's contract is to the end of the season. I don't see any reason to speak before that unless the club want to.
"I am quite comfortable about that. There is no clauses, nothing, only that it is until the end of the season.
"We have a head of recruitment and a recruitment department. I speak to them regularly because I'm interested in it. It's a big issue at any club and I think it would be remiss of me not to take an interest in it. How much of an influence I can have you'll have to ask the club but I have a real interest."
On Danny Drinkwater: "We let both medical departments (England and Leicester) discusses it. Whenever there is a call-up there will be a call before that in terms of how his well-being is. The outcome was that Danny will be rested (from the England squad). From a personal point of view I am grateful for that."
On captain Wes Morgan: "He's still not fully recovered unfortunately, we're trying to give him every opportunity, it is a nerve problem in his back and with those you can't rush.
"We're trying to let nature run its course but unfortunately he won't be ready for Saturday and - if I'm honest - it'll be touch and go for Tuesday. We're seeing how he is in 24 or 48 hours.
"He can get the treatment. But with a hamstring or something like that, you know how long it will be, whether it's four to six weeks. With a back you are not quite so sure. We're trying to give Wes enough time himself to see how he feels, then push him when its right."
On keeping cool ahead of the Premier League run-in: "We know that it wasn't so long ago that our form was being questioned.
"We know that at the moment we are playing with a lot of confidence, but that word 'humility' has to be important from my point of view towards the players to keep them level-headed. We also (like) to make sure there is no complacency."
Mark Hughes (Stoke City)
On Joe Allen and Glenn Whelan clashing during the international break: "I looked at it myself and I think Glenn was thinking he was going to crash into Joe and he made an involuntary action in my view.
"I don't think he actually threw an elbow, I think maybe he went to protect himself from the clash and he caught Joe on the chin, so that can happen.
"But you saw almost immediately Glenn saying he didn't do it on purpose and he made that point quite forcefully on the pitch I think! It's something of nothing.
"It happens more often in training games during the week, which people never hear about it, when the cameras aren't on. It is part and parcel of the game. People react to at times being clumped. That's how it is but there is no problem whatsoever.
"Way back I seem to recall Remi Moses whacking Jesper Olsen That got out, which was unheard of in those days. Mind you he did have a good cut, and it was a good punch! It does happen.
"Goodness me, when I played I'd kick my granny if she was the opposition; that's how it is.
"They (Allen and Whelan) are team-mates, they enjoy each other's company, they were playing for their countries and wanted to win. They were just displaying national fervour."
On Saido Berahino's claim his drink was spiked to lead to a drugs ban: "That's always been Saido's stance and take on how the drug was in his system. There's no reason to disbelieve him.
"We knew from the beginning when we first began that was always his stance, he's never wavered from that. Maybe people will understand that happens in this day and age and a lot have been victims.
"There's no reason to disbelieve him, it can happen.
"We keep on trying to move on. It's just a little bit more meat on the bone from my point of view from the actual situation and how it came about to be honest.
"It happened in the past, we're all moving on. He's playing again, doing well."
Leicester City v Stoke City: Team news
Leicester will be without skipper Wes Morgan again as the defender prepares to sit out against Stoke.
The captain is nursing a back problem which sidelined him for the Foxes' 3-2 win over West Ham before the international break - the first Premier League game he has missed since December 2014.
On-loan Molla Wague is out for the season with a dislocated shoulder, having made just one appearance since joining in January, while Nampalys Mendy is a doubt with a knee injury.
Stoke winger Xherdan Shaqiri's calf problem will likely keep him out for an eighth straight game when the Potters visit Leicester.
The Swiss has not featured for his club since a 1-1 draw with Manchester United on January 21, despite going away with Switzerland during the international break.
Jack Butland (ankle) is still not ready to play yet even though he has returned to training and Glen Johnson (shoulder) remains sidelined too.
Leicester (from): Schmeichel, Hamer, Zieler, Simpson, Huth, Wasilewski, Benalouane, Chilwell, Fuchs, Gray, Albrighton, Ndidi, King, Drinkwater, Mendy, Amartey, Kapustka, Mahrez, Ulloa, Vardy, Slimani, Musa, Okazaki.
Stoke (from): Grant, Given, Shawcross, Pieters, Bardsley, Martins Indi, Muniesa, Cameron, Whelan, Adam, Imbula, Allen, Afellay, Arnautovic, Sobhi, Shaqiri, Walters, Crouch, Berahino, Diouf, Bony.
Leicester City v Stoke City: Our prediction
Our David John writes... This should be an interesting game for the champions in so much as we will now find out how much pizzazz interim boss Craig Shakespeare still has in his magic wand following the international break.
He could join a select band of managers to win their first four Premier League fixtures in charge but the momentum for him and his team has been rather disrupted and picking up from where they left off might not come quite as easily as anticipated.
The quality of the form in that recent upswing can be questioned too as Liverpool were well off the pace, Hull and West Ham have the second and fourth-worst defences at the moment and Sevilla appeared guilty of underestimating their opponent in the Champions League.
The latter is something a Mark Hughes-coached side won’t ever be accused of and it would have stung a fair amount they could not hang on and take a point against Chelsea last time despite matching the leaders for large periods of the game.
Any realistic hopes of cracking the top six are gone but they are in pole position among the gaggle of teams chasing a top-half finish – something they could achieve for a fourth successive occasion and enough of a motivational tool certainly for the next few weeks at least.
Knocking their rivals off from down the A50 is another reason to expect a bold effort from the Potters while there is an element of having a score to settle too following their last meeting in December when they threw away a 2-0 lead in an ill-tempered affair that ended in parity.
If you are after a short one this week, then the visitors in the Double Chance betting makes some appeal at 5/6 and are well capable of giving the Foxes something to think about.
Prediction: Leicester 1-1 Stoke
Leicester City v Stoke City: Opta facts
Leicester City have lost just one of their five previous Premier League games against Stoke City (W2 D2).
The Potters have been the victors just once in their last eight trips to Leicester in all competitions (D4 L3).
Leonardo Ulloa has scored in three of his previous five Premier League games against Stoke, but hasn’t featured in a Premier League game for the Foxes since January.
Craig Shakespeare could be the first British manager to win his first four Premier League games. The only other managers to win their opening four Premier League matches are Pep Guardiola, Jose Mourinho, Guus Hiddink and Carlo Ancelotti.
Jamie Vardy has scored three goals and assisted two more in his three Premier League appearances under Craig Shakespeare for Leicester City – the same number that he’d managed in his previous 18 games in the competition.
Riyad Mahrez has scored in his both of his last two Premier League games for Leicester. He hasn’t scored in three in a row since December 2015.
Shinji Okazaki has appeared in 59 Premier League games since the start of last season but has completed 90 minutes in just four of these. In 2016-17, he’s completed 90 minutes just once in 23 apps in the competition.
Stoke have failed to score in their last three Premier League away games – they haven’t gone four without scoring on the road in the competition since March 2011 (five in a row).
The Potters have picked up just four points in seven away games in the Premier League since the start of December (W1 D1 L5).
Leicester will be looking to win three successive home games in the Premier League for the first time in over a year (February 2016) – a run that included a victory against Stoke.
Leicester City v Stoke City: Sky Bet odds
Reigning champions Leicester will be looking to continue on an upward curve under Craig Shakespeare and are even money at Sky Bet to win their fifth game on the trot. They have managed to score three times in three of those triumphs and are 11/2 to register exactly a treble once more against a Potters side that has won two of their last five fixtures. Mark Hughes’ men are 14/5 with a draw 12/5 while back-to-form Jamie Vardy is the 9/2 market leader to open the scoring and a 6/4 chance in the anytime market.
Click for Leicester City v Stoke City odds!

