TL;DR
Leicester City players Marc Albrighton and Ben Chilwell ended up in a police custody suite after their Premier League title win. They were escorted for their safety as fans gathered for Jamie Vardy's house party.
Figure caption,
Wes Morgan and Marc Albrighton reflect on Leicester's stunning title success
Leicester City had just been crowned Premier League champions when two Foxes players bizarrely found themselves together in a police custody suite.
Marc Albrighton was the second to be ushered in and surprised to see title-winning team-mate Ben Chilwell smiling back at him.
These were two players on lockdown for their own good, as efforts to get to team-mate Jamie Vardy's place for the impromptu – and now famous - house party became too much of a risk as Foxes fans in their thousands crowded around the striker's property.
"It seems a bit surreal," Albrighton told BBC East Midlands Today as he recalled the hours that immediately followed confirmation of Leicester's title win on 2 May 2016.
"I got my parents to try drop me at Jamie Vardy's house and they had to drop me at the police station instead because there were too many fans outside his gate so I had to get a police escort in.
"I remember getting to the station and Ben Chilwell was sat in the custody room, because he obviously had been told to do the same thing.
"Then we were both sat in the back of this police car driving through to Vards' house and you see all the fans banging on the the police car window and throwing scarves on the car.
"When stuff like that was happening, it's how I imagine celebrities feel."
Relegation doesn't 'taint' memory of title win - Morgan
The jubilant and chaotic scenes in Leicester that night - sparked when the Foxes' nearest rivals Tottenham failed to beat Chelsea in a title-deciding result - was an outpouring of delighted disbelief as the Foxes pulled off what remains one of the most famous underdog stories.
The reason it is known as the 5,000-1 title win is that the likelihood of the team that narrowly escaped relegation a year earlier - having only earned promotion back to the top flight after a decade-long absence just 12 months before that - was so far fetched that bookmakers wrote it off as just about impossible.
"Ten years on and I don't think a day has gone by where it's not been mentioned," Albrighton said.
"That shows the size of the achievement."
And yet, there is a sense of unease about the milestone anniversary because the club's struggles of recent years has culminated in back-to-back relegations. It means Leicester will play in the third tier of English football for just the second time in their history next season.
Wes Morgan, who was captain of the Premier League title-winning side, has previously said he is but also insists the club's greatest achievement "definitely needs to be celebrated, talked about and enjoyed".