Leicester climbed out of the Premier League relegation zone as the post-Craig Shakespeare era began with a 2-1 win at Swansea.

Michael Appleton was in caretaker command after Shakespeare's midweek sacking and Leicester fully merited the three points handed to them by Federico Fernandez's first-half own goal and Shinji Okazaki's fifth of the season just after the interval.

Alfie Mawson reduced the deficit from a 56th-minute corner but Swansea were poor for most of the contest and were indebted to their goalkeeper Lukasz Fabianski for keeping them in the contest.

Shakespeare had paid the price for a winless run of six games and just one league victory all season.

But just as they had done following the departure of title-winning manager Claudio Ranieri in February, Leicester responded with a display out of keeping with recent performances.

Shinji Okazaki of Leicester City (
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Leicester's players celebrate (
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Leicester showed their intent inside the first minute when Okazaki's glancing header forced a fine reaction stop from Fabianski.

Fabianski soon tipped over Marc Albrighton's rising drive and the Poland goalkeeper was alert to deny Jamie Vardy and Wilfred Ndidi as the Foxes dominated both possession and territory.

But Fabianski had no answer after 25 minutes when Leicester profited from Riyad Mahrez switching over to the left flank.

Swansea felt the ball had gone out of play but Mahrez was allowed to continue and whip in a cross which Fernandez headed past the helpless Fabianski.

The hosts had come into the game on the back of a morale-boosting 2-0 victory over Huddersfield but there was little intensity and creativity about their play.

Leicester's players celebrate (
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Michael Appleton (
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Tammy Abraham cut an isolated figure up front after his Huddersfield double, although he did prompt Kasper Schmeichel into a straightforward save from Martin Olsson's cross.

Schmeichel was called upon again when Jordan Ayew's cross deflected off Danny Simpson, but Leicester continued to dominate and Fabianski was needed to hold onto Ndidi's 25-yard effort.

Leicester doubled their lead four minutes into the second period when Swansea again reacted sluggishly to a Foxes' counter-attack.

Albrighton was allowed to run unchallenged down the left and he found the unmarked Mahrez, who stayed onside to set up Okazaki from close range.

Alfie Mawson finds the net (
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Swansea had looked disjointed but they were given a 56th-minute lifeline when Ayew caused confusion at the near post from Renato Sanches' corner.

The ball ran to Mawson and he spun and shot in one movement to find the bottom corner of Schmeichel's net from eight yards.

Swansea finally began to apply some pressure and tested Leicester's resolve with a succession of crosses into the visitors' penalty area.

Fabianski came to Swansea's rescue again to deny Vardy and Mahrez but Leicester leapfrog them in the table with the win.

Game on at the Liberty.

Swansea are back in it and will fancy their chances of getting something now.

Can Leicester hold on?

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Leicester lead and they’re looking good.

Who would have thought a change in manager would improve things on the pitch.

It worked last year too...

Swansea City's Federico Fernandez looks dejected (
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REUTERS)

Riyad Mahrez believes Craig Shakespeare has been a victim of the fixture-schedulers.

Leicester ’s prized asset thinks now ex-boss Shakespeare, fired this week after just eight games, got the short end of the stick.

The Foxes had to face four out of last season’s top five — Arsenal, Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool — in their opening eight top-flight matches, and lost the lot.

Although the east Midlands outfit are undefeated in their other four outings, that return was deemed insufficient by the Srivaddhanaprabha family who own the club and they decided the 53-year-old had to go.

Algeria international winger Mahrez said: “We’ve had a bad start with the schedule — we have had a lot of big teams.

“We’re getting better. Of course, this is a big game for us at Swansea [on Saturday ] and we will try to bring something from there.”

Mahrez admits his own form isn’t what it was when he landed the Footballer of the Year award 17 months ago.

Ironically, it was at Swansea two years ago that the playmaker scored a hat-trick during Leicester’s improbable title triumph.