Leicester City has always had a proud history of developing young talent.
Ben Chilwell, Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall, and Harvey Barnes are just some of the names who have graduated from the academy on gone on to be successful with the Foxes and now elsewhere.
Hamza Choudhury, Luke Thomas, and Kasey McAteer are all still at the club and now feature for the first team regularly.
Youth is a priority at the King Power Stadium and up until recently, the Foxes had gone 288 games without naming a player who came through the ranks in a matchday squad.
Now they are looking for the next big thing and Louis Page may well be that player.
So, with that, let’s get to know the man named as one of the 20 best young talents at a Premier League club.
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Louis Page age, height, nationality
Born on 10 July 2008 in Lutterworth, on the edge of Leicester, Louis Page is as local as they come.
Page is English and is the son of former Rotherham United and Wigan Athletic forward, Dom Page.
He has been at Leicester since the age of nine and is currently 16 at the time of writing.
Louis Page’s wages, salary, contract
Page is currently a first-year scholar at the King Power Stadium and is yet to sign a professional deal having only recently turned 16.
There is no information on his wages and salary.
READ MORE: Leicester City player wages for the 2024/25 season, Ranked
Louis Page’s Leicester City debut
The 16-year-old is yet to make his senior debut for Leicester but has been a regular feature for the Under 18s squad.
Page became one of the youngest players to make their Under 23s debut when the Foxes took on Hull City in September 2024 and impressed, leading to hope that he may feature more regularly.
Louis Page style of play
As is common with most footballers these days, Page is extremely confident on the ball and is more than comfortable when it comes to travelling with the ball at his feet.
Playing in a box-to-box midfield role, the 16-year-old is one of the fittest in the squad but given his young age, still physically requires a lot of work.
Page wouldn’t be ready to play for Steve Cooper’s first-team just yet, but should he continue to impress at the younger levels, there’s no reason why he can’t force his way into contention in a couple of years.
