Leicester City’s night unravelled in ruthless fashion as Charlton Athletic walked into the King Power Stadium and walked out with a deserved 2-0 victory in the English Championship, leaving the Foxes to reflect on a cascade of costly moments that defined the contest.
For Jordan Ayew, it was a personal milestone he would rather forget. The Ghana captain, who has built a reputation for calm from the spot throughout his club career, saw his perfect penalty record shattered on the hour mark.
With Leicester chasing a way back into the game, Ayew stepped up in the 56th minute and sent the goalkeeper the wrong way, only for his effort to cannon off the post and bounce away to safety.
A loss at King Power Stadium.#LEICHA | @BCGame pic.twitter.com/m6cj1LIxGB
— Leicester City (@LCFC) January 31, 2026
The opportunity itself was crafted by a moment of magic from Abdul Fatawu Issahaku. The Ghanaian winger twisted past his marker with a dazzling dribble before being clipped inside the area, winning Leicester a lifeline that ultimately slipped through their fingers.
But by the time the penalty came around, Leicester were already fighting uphill. The hosts had been plunged into trouble just 15 minutes into the contest when Caleb Okoli saw red, reducing the Foxes to ten men and forcing a reshuffle that Charlton were quick to exploit.
The visitors steadily turned the numerical advantage into control, and their pressure told in the 36th minute. Sonny Carey ghosted into space and finished from close range after Leicester failed to deal with danger in their own box, handing Charlton a deserved lead.
The blow was compounded moments before the interval. Leicester’s defensive frailties surfaced again, allowing Lyndon Dykes to pounce and double Charlton Athletic’s advantage, effectively putting daylight between the sides before half-time.
The match report from today’s early kick-off against Charlton Athletic 📝
— Leicester City (@LCFC) January 31, 2026
Any hope of a comeback hinged on Ayew’s spot-kick after the restart. When the post intervened, the mood around the stadium sank further, and Leicester never truly recovered their momentum.
Ayew was withdrawn late on as the home side searched for fresh legs, with Zambian forward Patson Daka introduced in a final roll of the dice. It changed little. Charlton saw out the remainder of the contest with composure, leaving Leicester to rue a night where indiscipline, missed chances, and defensive lapses combined to punish them severely.





