London: Newcastle manager Rafael Benitez has told old rival Sam Allardyce to drop the mindgames after the Sunderland boss claimed Crystal Palace could roll over at St James’ Park on Saturday.

Benitez and Allardyce are embroiled in a tense battle to avoid relegation from the Premier League heading into the final three games of the season.

The struggle for survival was already heated enough given the animosity between local rivals Newcastle and Sunderland and now the personal history between Benitez and Allardyce threatens to boil over as well.

On Thursday, Allardyce, whose fourth bottom team travel to Stoke this weekend, said that if he were a betting man, he would put his money on Newcastle to beat the Eagles as the Palace players would have been “on the pop” (partying) since reaching the FA Cup final last weekend.

However, Benitez, whose side are in 19th place and one point adrift of Sunderland, was quick to swat away his rival’s comments.

“I don’t bet. Obviously I agree we have to win. In my experience, it’s the players who make the difference, not the managers,” Benitez said.

“I can prepare for the game, but to talk about mind games, I don’t take too much notice.”

Meanwhile, Leicester defender Danny Simpson insists the prolonged absence of star striker Jamie Vardy won’t stop the Premier League leaders clinching the most incredible title triumph in English football history at Manchester United on Sunday.

Claudio Ranieri’s side have the eyes of the world on them as they head to Old Trafford knowing a victory against United would see the 5,000-1 outsiders crowned champions for the first time in their 132-year history.

In an era where the “greed is good” mantra of the Premier League’s big spenders has proved a turn-off for many, Ranieri’s collection of unsung heroes have captured the imagination of fans across the globe by making the seemingly impossible into a reality.

Completing their astonishing charge to the title at the home of the 20-time English champions would be a fitting final chapter in the Leicester fairytale.

But the Foxes’ first shot at sporting immortality comes with leading scorer Vardy banished to the stands after the England international was this week handed an additional one-game ban for angrily confronting referee Jonathan Moss following his dismissal for diving against West Ham United earlier this month.

Although Vardy’s presence wasn’t missed as Leicester crushed lowly Swansea City 4-0 in the first match of his ban last weekend, the trip to United could be a trickier proposition.

Leicester last won at Old Trafford in 1998, each of their last six visits have ended in defeat and they take on a United outfit who are chasing a top-four berth with their spirits lifted by reaching the FA Cup final.