You may have caught Jose Mourinho’s X-rated team-talk that went viral over the weekend.
There was no need for any such profanity here at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, instead it was Brendan Rodgers who’d have been dropping the C-bomb - if not at his own players then in the direction of Harry Kane.
England captain Kane was untouchable, his first-half brace and audacious assist clinching the most routine of victories for Tottenham to keep their Europa League hopes intact.
In contrast, Leicester’s Champions League dream is going up in flames. Manchester United will overtake Leicester into fourth with a win against West Ham on Wednesday.
Nailed on to re-join Europe’s elite before the Covid delay, their destiny is now out of their hands with just now game to play.
Brendan Rodgers’ team are in freefall; a season that promised so much appears to be reaching an almighty anti-climax following a run of just two wins in eight since the restart.
Not that Kane gives two hoots about Leicester’s collapse. He was utterly ruthless here. Likewise, Harry Winks controlled midfield, while Toby Alderweireld hardly gave Leicester a sniff.
But - not for the first time - this was Kane’s day. Tottenham are so lucky to have him.
There was nothing lucky about the manner of this victory, though.
It took six minute for Tottenham to edge ahead. Leicester may point to a spot of good fortune for the host’s as Heung-min Son’s effort took a wicked deflection off a James Justin to completely wrong foot Kasper Schmeichel.
But there was nothing fortuitous about Kane’s exquisite outside of the boot pass to release Son down the left.
Son will try to claim it, but the size of the deflection off James certainly altered the trajectory of the ball.
Not that Mourinho was fussed, his team were on the way to victory. The remainder of the first-half followed a similar pattern.
Leicester weren’t without their opportunities; Wes Morgan was denied a 20th minute equaliser by Ben Davies’ goalline clearance before a combination of the Tottenham defender and his goalkeeper Hugo Lloris denied Jamie Vardy’s audacious back-heeled follow up.
Five minutes later, Lloris was needed again - this time producing an excellent one-handed stop to deny Ayoze Perez’s brilliant touch and volley from youngster Luke Thomas’ cross.
Leicester’s response would have encouraged Rodgers. But any hope of clawing their way back into this encounter were shattered within the space of three sensational minutes from Kane.
His first, in the 37th minute, a clinical finish past Schmeichel from Lucas Moura pass to cap a rapid Tottenham counter led by Giovani Lo Celso.
Three minutes later Kane was slamming home his 23rd goal of an injury disrupted season with a beautiful curling effort that had the power and finesse to elude the despairing Schmeichel after cutting inside Ryan Bennett.
Bennett’s defending was questionable at best, the finish, however, was quite exquisite.
That’s four goals in two games - and six from eight since the restart for Kane - who will not want this season to end.
Bennett didn’t see the start of the second half, on the basis of what had gone before he probably wasn’t too unhappy about that.
Demarai Gray replaced him as Leicester sought a route back into this game. Had his thumping free-kick not been tipped over the bar by Lloris then perhaps a degree of anxiety may have crept in for Spurs.
But the damage was already done. Leicester probed without really laying a glove on Tottenham, who were evidently content with their three goal advantage.
Lloris turned Kelechi Iheanacho’s thunderous effort behind in the 88th minute before George Hirst - son of former Sheffield Wednesday striker David - headed over from the resultant corner just moments after being introduced off the bench for his senior debut.
But this game was over at half-time; Kane saw to that.