Leicester City has the chance of making anything between 150 million pounds ($220 million) and 250 million pounds ($365 million) from its sensational Premier League triumph, according to sports marketing experts. The city of Leicester in England's Midlands should also expect to enjoy a huge commercial boost after its hometown team wrote the unlikeliest of sporting success stories, one that has captured headlines around the world. Yet though the club known as the Foxes will gain this substantial windfall, it still has a long way to go to join the true big-money elite of world football. The club that had never won the top-flight crown in its history will cash in through the 90 million pounds in prize money from the Premier League, and money from competing in Europe's Champions League next season, as well as increased TV and match day revenue. With Leicester's increasing attraction to sponsors as the champion of the Premier League, which possesses remarkable global appeal, it could all be worth as much as 150 million pounds to the club, said the sports and entertainment intelligence firm, Repucom, Tuesday. Other experts have put the estimates much higher with some British media reports suggesting that the figure could be much nearer 250 million pounds, particularly if Leicester's success proves to be more than a one-season wonder. Leicester's TV audiences have soared by over 23% globally this season and because of the excitement inspired by its run to the title, audiences in the UK have grown from 785,000 to over one million per game. In Italy, the numbers watching Leicester's games have doubled, largely thanks to the interest generated by the club being managed by Italian coach Claudio Ranieri. "Leicester's media values have jumped by 30 percent globally whilst in the US they have grown by over 70 percent, showing first-hand the increase in value to current and potential sponsors," Repucom said. Leicester's first appearance in the lucrative Champions League will also make a vast difference to its coffers in the region of 36 million pounds. As well as increased TV exposure, it will generate increased revenues from group stage fees, a proportion of the competition's market pool and a participation bonus, totaling 33 million pounds, as well as 3 million pounds performance bonus. A story which had echoes of Leicester's triumph was Atletico Madrid's breaking of the Barcelona-Real Madrid duopoly to win La Liga in 2014. Based on the increased match day and commercial revenues that unlikely champion Atletico gleaned, Leicester can expect to see between 10 to 15 million pounds boost in that area. So, much will depend, in the mid to long-term on how successful the club, owned by Thailand billionaire Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, is in developing its fan base. Though its victory was greeted enthusiastically in Thailand, where Srivaddhanaprabha's family runs the duty-free empire King Power, its fan base is still not in the same league as the historic elite of the English game like Manchester United, Arsenal and Liverpool. Meanwhile, Leicester itself hopes for an economic boon, with the local newspaper, Leicester Mercury, reporting that financial experts believe the overall economy in the city could benefit to the tune of 49 million pounds. The numbers of visitors to the city have grown rapidly since the discovery of the remains of King Richard III in 2012 and now tourism chiefs hope that being the home of England's football champions will prove a draw card for Leicester too.