Kelechi Iheanacho scored twice as Leicester City moved clear at the top of their Europa League group with a 4-0 win over Braga.

Starting in place of Jamie Vardy up top, the Nigerian produced a fine individual performance, netting in either half and setting up substitute Dennis Praet for the third.

Another impressive performer, James Maddison, then rounded off a comfortable victory with a goal late in the second half.

Leicester now hold a three-point cushion at the summit of Group G and look well placed to make the knockout stages with just half of their fixtures completed.

In dipping temperatures at the King Power Stadium, both sides took time to warm up, leading to a scrappy opening quarter of an hour.

And the biting cold will only have enhanced the pain of the knee to the thigh Maddison received early on during a challenge with Ali Musrati.

The Englishman was seen limping as he attempted to run off that blow but looked to be moving well enough by the time he played a beautifully weighted one-two to release Iheanacho in behind.

The Foxes striker still had work to do from a tight angle, but bundled past Matheus with a degree of good fortune before tapping into an empty net.

Braga responded well, with Bruno Viana heading on target before a well-timed Hamza Choudhury slide stopped Abel Ruiz latching onto a delicious Ricardo Esgaio cross at the back post.

But the visitors' failure to capitalise on those chances was punished moments after the restart, Iheanacho grabbing his second with a deflected effort from range.

Leicester's lone striker turned provider with just over 20 minutes remaining, picking out an inch-perfect cross to give Praet a tap-in at the back post.

His reward for that contribution was an early withdrawal, with Brendan Rodgers making the most of generous substitution rules in Europe to give his tiring players a rest.

The hosts did not take their foot off the gas, however, Maddison grabbing a deserved goal 12 minutes from time, jinking through the Braga defence to poke home.

 

What does it mean? Foxes prove their pedigree

Top of their Europa League group, second in the Premier League, Leicester are making a mockery of suggestions that their poor finish to last season would lead to a hangover.

On this evidence, the Foxes are more than capable of a deep European run and another push for a top-four finish in the league.

Iheanacho shines in Vardy absence

Two goals and an assist are testament enough to the quality of Iheanacho's performance, but there was plenty more to admire.

The 24-year-old completed 100% of his passes, made three key passes, and took four shots in a perfect centre-forward's showing.

Game to forget for Ruiz

It was a different story at the other end of the pitch, where Braga forward Abel Ruiz struggled to influence matters. The Spaniard took just 24 touches, won none of his five duels, and only managed a single shot.

Key Opta Facts

- Leicester have won three consecutive matches in European competition for a second time, also doing so in October 2016 in the Champions League.
- Braga suffered their first Europa League group stage defeat in nine matches (won six, drawn two), with this their first since losing 2-1 to Istanbul Basaksehir in December 2017.
- Leicester scored four goals in a European match for the first time since their first ever match in Europe, when they won 4-1 against Glenavon in the Cup Winners' Cup in 1961.
- Iheanacho has scored in all three of his starts in the Europa League and Champions League, one with Manchester City in the Champions League in December 2016 and in both starts for Leicester this season.
- Maddison registered his first assist in 31 matches in all competitions, last doing so back in December 2019 against Aston Villa.

What's next?

Leicester return to Premier League action on Sunday when they host Wolves at the King Power. Braga, meanwhile, face a trip to second-placed Benfica in the Portuguese top-flight.