London: England and Leicester striker Jamie Vardy says his alleged role in getting Claudio Ranieri sacked after a terrible slump in form placed the champions in danger of relegation has earned him and his family death threats.
The 30-year-old -- whose goals last season helped Leicester to the title and the one time non-league player a place in the England team -- added it was barely credible the only punishment the perpetrators of the threats on Twitter received was a slap on the wrist.
"I read one story that said it (the meeting between several senior players and the club owner over Ranieri) was straight after the Sevilla game (a 2-1 first leg last 16 Champions League defeat in Spain which saw the Italian sacked soon after).
"It said I was personally involved in a meeting when I was actually sat in anti-doping for three hours," said Vardy, who was speaking at the England training camp ahead of a friendly on Wednesday with Germany.
Vardy, whose vigour and form have returned since Craig Shakespeare replaced Ranieri, said getting at hiom he could just about handle but attakcing his family was another.
"It is terrifying. All that can happen is they get banned on Twitter. People get cut up but if there's no cameras you're screwed."