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Leicester City got their first win of the Premier League season, defeating AFC Bournemouth 1-0 at the King Power Stadium.

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Facundo Buonanotte scored the winning goal for Steve Cooper’s side in the 16th minute with a stunning curling effort.

Bournemouth put on a much better display in the second half though, with Lewis Cook having a direct free-kick ruled out for offside 66 minutes in.

Illia Zabarnyi and Dango Ouattara also hit the woodwork as the Cherries continued to dominate, but they fell short of finding an equaliser.

The Foxes move up to 15th place, with six points from seven matches, while Bournemouth sit 13th – two points better off their opponents.

How the match unfolded

The hosts wasted no time taking the lead as Buonanotte played a one-two with James Justin, racing into the box before dancing past Marcos Senesi and curling a left-foot strike past Kepa Arrizabalaga to draw first blood.

Stephy Mavididi’s penalty shout for a handball against Zabarnyi was turned down shortly before Jamie Vardy fired a gilt-edged chance wide after getting in behind the Bournemouth backline.

Zabarnyi hit the woodwork from a Cook free-kick four minutes after the restart and Ryan Christie tested Leicester goalkeeper Mads Hermansen from the edge of the box as Bournemouth pushed.

Cook curled a delightful free-kick into the net from the left, but the assistant referee’s flag went up as Evanilson was judged to have affected play from an offside position, with the VAR confirming the onfield decision.

Substitute Ouattara then rattled the woodwork again moments later, leaping high in the box only to thump his header against the crossbar.

In the dying seconds, Enes Unal had the chance to snatch a draw, but he ballooned a shot from close range as Leicester held on for a precious three points.

Buonanotte proves his worth

It has been a tough return to the top-flight for Leicester, and the writing on the wall was starting to look ominous. The last time they had waited this long for a win in the competition, they were relegated.

But Buonanotte put an end to that run. The Argentina international, on loan from Brighton, proved he could be Leicester’s biggest weapon as they look to avoid an immediate return to the Championship.

The 19-year-old’s second goal of the season gave the Foxes a crucial win, causing chaos with his surging runs down the right, and was influential in the number 10 role throughout.

His defence-splitting pass sent Vardy through later in the first half, only for the veteran striker to squander it, and he continued to provide the Foxes with an outlet even as Bournemouth upped their pressure in the latter stages.

This win could go a long way to getting more of the Leicester fans on Cooper’s side, and he will be hoping to build on this with crucial games against fellow promoted side Southampton and Ipswich Town coming up after the international break.

Bournemouth fail to mount another comeback

The Cherries made a bright start – Senesi went close with a header in the sixth minute – but their weaknesses were laid bare shortly after as Leicester looked dangerous every time they broke forward.

Despite going behind, Bournemouth offered little going forward with an Antoine Semenyo strike blocked at close range by Wout Faes the closest they came to an equaliser in the first half.

Andoni Iraola looked to the bench at the break introducing Ouattara in place of Justin Kluivert and the Cherries responded positively, only for the substitute and Zabarnyi to be denied by the goal frame.

But a comeback was not against the odds, as Bournemouth had come from two goals down to beat Everton in the dying minutes earlier this season, so they kept on probing. A recovery of the same sort failed to materialise in Leicester though.

Iraola would have seen this as a good chance for the team to come away with three points, and with games against Arsenal, Aston Villa and champions Manchester City coming up, this defeat could prove costly.

Club reports

Leicester report | AFC Bournemouth report

Match officials

Referee: Darren Bond. Assistants: Constantine Hatzidakis, Matthew Wilkes. Fourth official: Robert Jones. VAR: Stuart Attwell. Assistant VAR: Dan Cook.

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