The Foxes vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha has revealed how the 29-year-old struggled to adapt following his £1 million arrival from Fleetwood Town in 2012
Leicester City’s vice-chairman Aiyawatt Srivaddhanaprabha has revealed that Jamie Vardy used to turn up to training drunk after struggling to cope with his move from Fleetwood Town.

Vardy joined Leicester in a non-league record £1 million deal in 2012 but found it difficult to find form during his debut season in the Championship.

But the 29-year-old has transformed into one of the Premier League’s standout strikers, as his 22 goals helped fire Leicester to the title, but Srivaddhanaprabha claims the England international needed speaking to over his professionalism during his early stages at the club.

"I was against signing Jamie Vardy in the first place. I asked Nigel Pearson and Steve Walsh about him, checked the scout reports, and I started to believe he would be a good signing, but I had to answer the supporters who were asking ‘how is a non-league player worth £1 million?’,” Srivaddhanaprabha told Thailand’s Day Magazine.

"It turned out I was the dumbest club owner in the world to them.

"I asked Pearson and Walsh, if I have only £1m transfer budget for the next season, who would you buy? And they replied ‘Vardy’. Then I said ‘go’.

"There was outrage from the fans. Some even called me to say 'are you nuts? Why have you spent this much on a non-league player?'.

"Back then, I think he didn’t even have what it took to play in the Premier League. The day we bought him, he came to me and thanked me for changing his life. He had never had this much money so he was over the moon already. He went straight from the bottom to the Championship, which eventually led him to start drinking booze every single day. We had no idea what to do.

"I didn’t know about this until someone told me that he came to train while he was still drunk. So I went talk to him myself, I asked ‘do you wish to end your career like this? Do you want to stay here like this? We’ll let your contract run out, then release you. Don’t expect a better career path’.

"He said he didn’t know what to do with his life. He’d never earned such a large amount of money. So I asked him ‘what’s your dream? How do you think your life should be? Just think carefully about what would you do for the club. I invested in you, do you have to do something in return?’

"After that he simply quit drinking and started working hard in training. His physicality wasn’t as good as it is now. We know he had explosive acceleration, but we simply had no idea he could be this good.

"He’s adapting, working on fitness training, he’s turned into a new person. And that’s better."