Brendan Rodgers mentioned his “young team will comprehend” after they gave away a two-goal lead over Napoli in their Europa League opener at King Power Stadium.

Napoli’s Victor Osimhen earned twice in the second half after Ayoze Perez and Harvey Barnes had given Leicester a 2-0 lead.

Osimhen’s exquisite touch past Kasper Schmeichel subsidized the deficit before he concluded the comeback with a header in the 87th minute.

“The crime isn’t giving away the two goals, the crime is if you don’t learn from it. I’m sure that is something this young team will do,” expressed Rodgers.

Perez had opened the scoring with a volley from Barnes’ cross before the winger fired in Leicester’s second shortly after summer signing Patson Daka had a goal ruled out for offside.

The hosts looked set to take pole position in Group C, but Osimhen dealt a late blow before Leicester’s Wilfred Ndidi was sent off for a second booking.

It leaves the group-wide open with Leicester still to travel to Italy, as well as facing Spartak Moscow and Legia Warsaw.

“I’m hurt with the final result but there were some exciting and good moments,” added Rodgers. “The two goals are great and the one that was not permitted was tight.

“Maybe we tired a bit. There are things for us to improve on – like keeping the ball better for longer periods. If we did that, we wouldn’t tire so quickly.

“The effort and mentality was good. It is a shame we couldn’t close it out.”

Leicester win back in a fascinating battle

                   There was a carnival atmosphere at the King Power to welcome European football back to Leicester and the match – widely tipped as a battle between two sides considered among the favorites to win the competition – did not disappoint.

Napoli set the tone with their first shot on target after only three minutes and Leicester responded when Barnes was not accepted from close range, prior to setting up Perez’s volley with a perfectly weighted cross.

Timothy Castagne, along with the help of goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel, somehow kept out Napoli’s Piotr Zielinski, while Lorenzo Insigne and Hirving Lozano came close.

The Italians had been wasteful and when Barnes coolly thumped in Leicester’s second, they looked set to come out on top.

But a sublime one-touch passing move saw Osimhen dance into the box before he flicked the ball past Jannik Vestergaard and over Schmeichel.

And the Napoli forward then hung well in the air to nod in an ill-treating second.

Tensions flared following the last whistle as police and stewards stepped in after missiles were thrown by both sets of supporters.

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