Once word spread the squad was celebrating at an Italian restaurant, hundreds of fans crowded into the central shopping district to provide a hero's welcome for English soccer's most improbable champions.
Leaving the San Carlo restaurant was even harder as the entrance was besieged by supporters desperate to catch a glimpse of the team that defied soccer logic by accomplishing one of the greatest turnarounds in sports history.
"It is safe to say I never thought I would be in this position now," captain Wes Morgan said. "The journey we've been on is fantastic. It's an achievement that might not be achieved again."
No wonder the 32-year-old Morgan and his teammates are savoring every minute of it. Few players would be happy trudging into training after delivering a title for a manager who expected to be in a relegation battle, but the groggy-eyed squad reported for duty as expected yesterday morning.
The training session ended only after the club's Thai owners landed by helicopter at the facility, which is surrounded by tightly packed rows of houses, to greet the players. They will all surely never get tired of having to pose with "Champions" banners and sing "Champione."
En route to lunch there was a brief stop by their King Power stadium, where one supporter -- a dead-ringer for Vardy -- was briefly allowed onto the team coach to greet the striker.
"The boys were standing on furniture - I hope Vards' house is all right," Morgan said.
"After the initial euphoria, a lot of people couldn't believe what had happened. There were a few tears."
Vardy's 22 goals, including a Premier League record
scoring run of 11 consecutive games, have fueled the title charge.
Relegation was forecast for this team, not embarrassing the gilded elite. Even more astonishingly, the title was won with two games to spare, leaving the mighty Arsenal, Chelsea, Manchester United and Manchester City trailing in their wake.
The Foxes had only just climbed out of the third tier back then, and took until 2014 to end their 10-year exile from the Premier League, where they now tower over every other team in England.
Before Leicester, the last first-time champion of England was another modest east Midlands team, Nottingham Forest, back in 1978. Forest followed that pre-Premier League era triumph by winning the European Cup not once, but twice.
"We made a lot of dreams come true," Leicester midfielder Danny Drinkwater said. "We're not going to drop off. We're going to push on."
However, Leicester will have to keep stars like Vardy and winger Riyad Mahrez from the grasps of wealthier clubs.
"We are not a team who produces players to be developed later by other teams," said the owner's son, Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha. "All players want to stay and keep on fighting together to see how far they can go. So selling players is not on our agenda."
"I think no," Ranieri said when asked about defending the trophy. "But we want to continue to build."
Ranieri's task when he was hired as manager last year was just keeping Leicester in the top flight. Now the 64-year-old Italian has his first-ever major title.
"The emotion was at the maximum level," Ranieri, who was fired from his last job with Greece in 2014, said before training. "It means the job is good. I am very, very happy now because maybe if I won this title at the beginning of my career maybe I would forget. Now I am an old man I can feel it much better."
"It doesn't matter if we do nothing like this again," Singh said at Leicester Market, which was festooned with Leicester banners.
The celebration will continue for weeks. Before the victory parade, Leicester has to receive the trophy on Saturday after the penultimate match of its season against Everton.
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