Ryan beaten inside a minute in Brighton defeat
Australia goalkeeper Mat Ryan was undone in the first minute at Leicester City and Brighton and Hove Albion to recover in another Premier League defeat.
Shinji Okazaki scored past Australia's Mat Ryan inside 52 seconds as Leicester City got its Premier League campaign up and running at the second attempt with a 2-0 home success against Brighton and Hove Albion on Sunday (AEST).
Two late strikes at Arsenal on the opening day had the 2015-2016 champion on the wrong end of a seven-goal thriller, but this time the result never looked in doubt after a goal in the game's first attack, and Harry Maguire later headed a second.
Brighton barely laid a glove on Manchester City in its Premier League debut — another 2-0 defeat — and again lacked the firepower to respond after Okazaki's opener at King Power Stadium.
The Japan international's tap-in owed much to Ryan's generous goalkeeping and the lead suited a well-versed Leicester game plan as it encouraged the visitors to attack and found it incapable of troubling a sturdy defence.
Ryan was beaten again when Maguire stooped a header into the net from close range and, despite the introduction of Foxes old boy Anthony Knockaert, Brighton's continued wait for a Premier League goal ensured a comfortable Leicester win.
Okazaki had netted early at Emirates Stadium and needed less than a minute to add his second of the campaign here, tucking home a simple finish inside the area after Ryan's feeble parry from a Riyad Mahrez shot.
Leicester continued to prey on a nervy Brighton backline, with Jamie Vardy miscuing twice in quick succession when Okazaki's enterprise forged a clear opening for the England man.
A blatantly offside Glenn Murray was denied an equaliser at the other end and the visitors then appealed in vain for a penalty as Wes Morgan blocked bravely with a combination of arm and chest from Jamie Murphy's drive.
But that attacking flurry was all too brief for Chris Hughton's side and Okazaki almost doubled Leicester's lead shortly before half-time with a lunging effort from Vardy's right-wing centre just missing the near post.
A second goal did arrive nine minutes after the break, as Maguire met Mahrez's corner and saw his header clip marker Shane Duffy on its way past Ryan.
Brighton again offered little by way of a riposte, although Kasper Schmeichel was finally tested by Tomer Hemed, and Mahrez and Marc Albrighton both could have scored another had they not finished tamely in promising positions.
Victory was secured without the need for a third goal, but a day of positivity for Craig Shakespeare's men ended on a slight sour note as Vardy hobbled off after appearing to injure his ankle in a stoppage-time collision with Ryan.