Sheffield United midfielder Lee Hendrie admits he would like to sign a long-term deal with Leicester.
The 30-year-old is on loan at the Walkers Stadium until the end of the season and has appeared in every match since his arrival in February.
"I have enjoyed myself so much, it would be great for it to be a permanent fixture," he told the club's
website, lcfc.co.uk.
WOLVES manager Mick McCarthy believes midfielder Seyi Olofinjana could be the key to them making the Championship play-offs.
The Nigeria international suffered a dip in confidence after his return from the African Nations Cup but McCarthy believes now the player has now rediscovered his form.
"Seyi is a Premiership player. He's arguably the best player we've got in terms of effectiveness at doing his job," McCarthy said.
"He went away for six weeks and came back on a downer having been knocked out.
"For lads that go away to play in the World Cup or the European Championships, when it's over they go and lie on a beach for two weeks. The African lads don't have that - it's straight back into to it going to Blackpool and Cardiff. It's not the same.
"He needed a break and now he's back to his best we've had back-to-back wins."
COLCHESTER manager Geraint Williams admits the dismantling of last season's successful side will cost them their Championship status this term.
The Us, who finished 10th in their first season in the second tier, lost key players Jamie Cureton, Chris Iwelumo, Richard Garcia and Wayne Brown over the summer and are now staring at a return to League One.
With his side 11 points adrift of safety at the foot of the table, Williams is already planning for a promotion push next season and insists the core of the squad stay together this time.
"It's vital that we do everything we can to keep the nucleus of this team together," he told the Colchester Gazette.
"It showed last year that you can't lose the nucleus of your first team and expect to just bring in replacements who knit together straight away."
QPR boss Luigi De Canio wants a lean squad of 22 players for next season's Championship promotion push.
De Canio has already overseen a major overhaul of the playing staff and will make further cuts in the summer.
"Recently in mid-season a lot of faces changed and so the most important thing is to gel a team and get everyone thinking with the same mentality," De Canio told the Kilburn Times.
"I think in this Championship, 22 players with a very well-spread ability in every position is the ideal if you want to succeed. That is what I want next season.
"Most, if not all, of the players who are here now have a few more years on their contracts, but for anyone in their last year we'll decide what happens towards the end of the season."
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