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Now reading: Chapter 546: Chapter-545 The Pre-Match Events from Emperor of Football: Julien De Rocca, a Action novel by LorianFiction.

The city was already humming with electricity the day before the match.

Across rseyside, conversations in corner shops, pubs, and schoolyards had narrowed to a single topic.

The newspapers stacked outside newsagents were splashed with headlines in red and blue. By the ti both managers stepped in front of the caras, the pressure in the room was palpable.

At Liverpool's training ground, Jürgen Klopp settled into his chair at the press conference podium and leaned forward slightly, as if he wanted the room to feel his closeness. He was a man who rarely spoke at people, he spoke with them, drawing journalists into his fra of reference with a conspirative warmth.

He began by reaching back into his own history.

"A derby is always the most singular event in football. It has nothing to do with league tables or tactical analysis—it's about honor and belief. I learned this long ago, through the Ruhr Derby between Dortmund and Schalke 04, and through the national showdown against Bayern.

The atmosphere of the Ruhr Derby is cut from the sa cloth as the red-and-blue battle of rseyside. A crowd's roar can pierce every corner of a stadium, and every run, every tackle a player makes carries the weight of an entire city's hopes.

I'll bring that derby experience to the players: in a match like this, courage and willpower matter just as much as technique."

Several journalists glanced at one another, there was sothing in the way Klopp spoke about derbies that felt less like a testimony.

He had indeed lived these occasions. He had stood on the white chalk line of those defining evenings in the Ruhr Valley, watching players beco legends or crumble under expectation. He knew the difference.

When a reporter pressed him on Liverpool sitting just a single point behind the summit of the Premier League table, and how much a derby victory could an to their title ambitions—Klopp's expression changed.

"Pressure is fuel—but the heart of a derby is to enjoy the ga, to enjoy fighting for sothing you believe in. When I was chasing the Bundesliga title with Dortmund, we played through crucial derbies too.

I told my players: forget the table, forget what the world expects of you, and focus only on the ball at your feet and the connection with your teammates. I'll tell Liverpool's lads the sa thing today—winning the rseyside Derby is its own kind of glory.

If we play our ga and show the right spirit, victory will co. Of course, three points is our objective, but that can only be built on teamwork and tactical discipline."

He paused, and for a mont the room was completely still.

"I understand what a derby ans to this city, and I understand what the fans expect. Just like my days at Dortmund, we'll step onto that pitch with respect and with courage, fighting for what this club believes in. Goodison Park will be a cauldron, but Liverpool's players are ready. We'll give every fan who supports us the performance they deserve."

He pushed back from the podium and was gone—leaving behind a silence that took a mont to dissolve.

Across the city, Roberto Martínez sat in front of his own gathering of caras and microphones. He was a man of precision, of composure, almost professorial in the way he organized his thoughts, drawing lines between ideas the way an architect draws load-bearing walls.

He had arrived at Everton in July with a reputation for attractive football and an intensity that his players had co to trust.

This was his first rseyside Derby as a head coach. He knew that well. The room knew it too.

"I have to stress that the historical weight and emotional significance of the rseyside Derby is unlike anything else I've encountered in my managerial career. Since arriving at Everton in July, I have felt—through the fans, the players, the staff—exactly what this match ans to this city. It is not rely a league fixture. It is a collision of tradition and faith.

We have prepared thoroughly: studying Liverpool's recent tactical patterns, understanding the high-pressing system Klopp has brought in, and reminding our players of the proud history Everton has built in this fixture.

For , tomorrow's lunchti kick-off will demand everything we have. For the players, it is a battle for the blue shirt and for the honor of every fan who wears it."

The next afternoon.

rseyside woke to a grey sky—not the thundercloud kind that heralds storms, but the low, blanketing grey of a November morning that settles over a city like a held breath.

The clouds moved slowly.

Nothing fell. Nothing needed to.

The city was already charged.

By mid-morning, the streets around Goodison Park had begun to fill with a strange kind of human tide—one that arrived not in a single surge but in dozens of gathering currents, flowing through residential side-streets and main roads.

Families in matching scarves. Groups of young n moving in clusters, their voices resounding on the cold air. Old n walking alone, leisurely, as if they had done this so many tis the journey itself had beco ritual.

Goodison Park stands just 0.97 kiloters from Anfield—a distance so remarkable that it defines the very nature of this rivalry.

No two top-flight grounds in the Premier League era sit closer together than these two.

To put it in so perspective, Fulham's Craven Cottage and Chelsea's Stamford Bridge considered a local London rivalry are separated by 2.25 kiloters.

Arsenal and Tottenham, north London's peevish neighbors, are 6.14 kiloters apart. Manchester's great divide, United and City stretches to 6.43 kiloters. Only in Scotland, where Dundee United and Dundee FC's grounds stand a re 150 ters from one another, does football topography compress to sothing more extre.

Here, less than a kiloter apart, two football clubs have built almost a century and a half of mutual devotion and mutual disdain.

The proximity is not incidental—it is the very engine of the rivalry.

Red and blue families have shared the sa streets, the sa schools, the sa pubs, the sa buses. So have shared the sa dinner tables.

The derby is not a disruption to ordinary life on rseyside. It is ordinary life on rseyside, concentrated into ninety minutes.

By noon, the roads around Goodison had divided into two vast armies.

Blue dominated, scarves, hats, replica shirts worn over winter coats, painted faces in the smaller groups of the truest devotees.

Pockets of red held their ground in the crowd like scattered embers. Where the two groups t, there was mostly noise , rival chants thrown back and forth like artillery, mocking and defiant and sotis, unexpectedly, accompanied by laughter.

Years of proximity had a way of humanizing even the fiercest contempt.

There were no serious confrontations, just the relentless, bone-deep need to win.

On rseyside, the outco of this one o'clock kick-off would decide who held the bragging rights in the pubs and backstreets for a long ti to co.

12:40 p.m. Martin Tyler was already Live from Goodison.

The broadcast was already running. Martin Tyler's voice had long since beco as much a part of the Premier League's texture as the stadiums themselves.

"Just twenty minutes until kick-off! Half a mile, that's all that separates Goodison from Anfield, yet it divides nearly a century of red and blue faith on rseyside. Look at the stadium: a blue tide is flooding the stands, with pockets of red supporters holding out like stubborn islands. Songs, chants, banners waving, this is the unmistakable atmosphere that only a derby can produce. There are no neutrals here only devotion.

What makes today's fixture particularly special is the first derby encounter between two new managers. Klopp took charge of Liverpool last month, replacing Rodgers—his high-pressing system has transford the Reds, and sitting just one point off the top, they're desperate for a derby win to fuel their title push.

Martínez, anwhile, has spent four months since the sumr shaping Everton into a defensively solid, deadly on the counter currently sixth in the table, just three points behind leaders Arsenal, and only two behind Liverpool. Goodison Park is his first great fortress to defend.

The player matchups are equally fascinating. Nineteen-year-old French sensation Julien De Rocca Liverpool's star leads the Premier League scoring charts with nineteen goals in eleven appearances. Just three days after completing a hat-trick for the national team, he is about to play in his very first rseyside Derby..."

Tyler allowed the sentence to trail off naturally and let the noise of the stadium finish it for him.

Inside the player tunnel, the sound was roaring and felt physical. It pressed against the chest and reverberated in the ribs. The concrete walls of Goodison Park amplified the roar from above until it was less a noise and more a presence.

The Everton supporters had been hostile throughout the warm-up, directing a constant barrage of jeers toward the Liverpool players whenever they moved into range. Now, with the two squads gathering in the narrow corridor beneath the stands, that hostility had contracted further and beco tighter, sharper, more concentrated.

Steven Gerrard stood near the front of the Liverpool column. As captain, he had always positioned himself where the weight was greatest. His armband sat snug above the elbow. He reached up, adjusted it with a single movent and fell into step beside Julien.

The boy moved with a tranquility that Gerrard had noticed from their very first training session. Not the tranquility of soone suppressing nerves, but of soone who had already, at so level, resolved the situation inside himself before it had even arrived.

Gerrard kept his voice low, just loud enough to reach Julien's ear beneath the noise.

"First derby—those boos earlier didn't get to you, did they? Goodison's fans have always been direct. Don't take it to heart."

Julien turned his head slightly, just enough to catch Gerrard's eye.

"Don't worry, Captain. What happens outside is outside. I won't let it affect my thinking on the pitch. Honestly, I've been in enough situations like this. I'm used to it."

There was no performance behind his words.

"Good," Gerrard said.

He turned back to face the tunnel opening, and caught himself almost smiling.

The concern, it turned out, had been unnecessary. Of course it had. Julien had already played in European Championships. Europa League knockout ties. He had stood in front of international crowds in Paris and Lyon and more countries and perford like soone born to inhabit that kind of pressure.

Gerrard always let the boy's age fool him, always forgetting, sohow, that this young man on the verge of his nineteenth birthday had already seen the world.

After this match, Liverpool had no fixtures for the rest of the month. Gerrard wanted a win today, not just for the table, but to give Julien a proper birthday celebration before the month was out.

Both sets of players stood in the tunnel now, shoulder to shoulder in two parallel lines, waiting. The sound filtering through the tunnel entrance was not a crowd roar but a constant, living wall of noise that rose and fell in waves, as though the stadium itself were breathing.

Julien stood perfectly still and looked straight ahead. His face gave nothing away. Whatever he was thinking, he kept it completely to himself.

At the far end of the tunnel, referee Michael Oliver checked his watch and raised one hand.

"Go."

________________________________________________________

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