[10] Juninho–who was in the Middlesbrough team beaten by City in the League Cup final–scored in both legs, while Ian Marshall was the sole Leicester goalscorer.
[9] O'Neill's Leicester side won the League Cup again in 1999–2000, this time beating Tranmere Rovers in the Final, the last to be held at the old Wembley Stadium.
[17] Alarm bells in England rang almost immediately, owing to a general election in FR Yugoslavia scheduled the same week as Leicester's planned visit to Belgrade, with the Foreign Office fearing "civil unrest".
[18] Amid media reports of their withdrawal from the tournament, the Foxes made the decision to request a venue change, following a similar move the season before when Leeds United faced Red Star's eternal rivals Partizan in Heerenveen, the Netherlands.
[19] Despite an appeal from Red Star,[20] UEFA elected to stage the game at a neutral ground, a week later than originally planned.
[21] The first leg was a 1–1 draw with Gerry Taggart cancelling out Milenko Ačimovič's early opener[22]–clocked at 47 seconds by Reuters, who called it "one of the fastest goals in UEFA Cup history".
[23] To attempt to counter the away goal the opposition had scored and seal the tie in the second leg, Taylor had planned to start Stan Collymore, however a poor performance in the televised match against Everton the previous Sunday saw him dropped.
[24] The second leg, held at the Gerhard Hanappi Stadium in Austria–home to Vienna club Rapid–finished 3–1 to the 'home' side, with Muzzy Izzet scoring Leicester's goal.
Marc Albrighton scored City's first-ever goal in the competition with Riyad Mahrez adding 2 more for the 3–0 victory away to Belgian champions Club Brugge.
[29] In their first home game at the European Cup, on 27 September 2016, Leicester beat Porto 1–0 with Islam Slimani scoring the only goal with a header.
[31] The reverse fixture against Copenhagen was played on 2 November 2016 and remained goalless with Kasper Schmeichel making a vital save in the last minute.
André Silva scored twice, once from the penalty spot, with Jesús Corona, Yacine Brahimi and Diogo Jota adding one goal each.
The first leg was played in Spain and was scheduled for 22 February 2017, Leicester lost 1–2, the scorers for Sevilla were Pablo Sarabia and Joaquín Correa, while Jamie Vardy netted for the Foxes in the 73rd minute for a vital away goal.
[36] The draw for the Champions League quarter-finals was held on 17 March 2017, and Leicester were drawn against the last season's runners-up – Atlético Madrid.
[44][45] In the 2021-22 season, Leicester City were drawn into Europa League Group C with SSC Napoli, Legia Warszawa, and Spartak Moskva.
Following a loss, they finished 3rd in Group C and were drawn into the knockout stages of the UEFA Europa Conference League against Randers FC.
Leicester appeared three times in the Anglo-Italian Cup, which was held between teams from Italy and England which had not qualified for European competitions.
After both legs finished 2–0 to the respective home teams after extra time, Norwich progressed by winning the penalty shoot-out 4–3.