After winning 13 of their opening 14 Championship games, there was talk of Leicester racking up a record-breaking second-tier points tally. But in November, they experienced their first major bumps in the road in the form of successive defeats to Leeds and Middlesbrough.
These results seemed to mark a turning point, with the atmosphere at the King Power Stadium starting to turn. Soured would be too strong of a word, and apathy is probably a better term. Teams were increasingly turning up, setting up in a low block and waiting for Leicester to make mistakes in their build-up - which happened with concerning regularity. And while they continued to dominate the ball, there was a perception they were enjoying possession for possession's sake and lacking penetration.
Maresca was not for turning, though, remaining fervently committed to his controlling brand of football. And the Foxes continued to muddle through, continuing to get the results they needed to remain top of the pile, though in a less convincing manner.
Eventually, they appeared to have been properly worked out by the rest of the division. Between February 17 and April 12, the Foxes won just three of their 10 Championship games, inviting both Ipswich and Leeds back into the automatic promotion hunt. During this run Maresca directly addressed those fans who were urging him to change things up, saying: "As you know - we said it many times - we have our way to try to win the game since the start. I can understand sometimes that they want us to attack more direct. But it’s not going to happen, never, while I’m here."
It wasn't the first time he'd taken a pop at the disgruntled supporters either. A few months earlier, he told the Telegraph: "I understand that the fans go to the stadium and they want to see the team play a certain way. They want ‘attack, attack, attack’ but it is impossible. The problem is that some people think that as we keep the ball we sometimes don’t go forward, but you can’t do it for 95 minutes.
"Sometimes we use the ball to defend, or we are recovering our energy to go again. This is what some people struggle to see or understand. I was at Manchester City a few weeks ago and the fans were saying the same to Pep. It is normal."