TWEET!
The referee's whistle cut through the stadium noise. His arm shot out, finger pointing decisively toward the penalty spot.
Liverpool—penalty kick awarded.
"PENALTY! THE REFEREE'S GIVEN A PENALTY! Ninetieth minute—Liverpool have a chance to win it!" Martin Tyler's voice shattered with excitent. "Are Liverpool really going to complete this coback?!"
City players exploded with rage.
Hart charged forward first, screaming at the referee's face: "THAT'S NOT A PENALTY! HE DIVED! HE WENT DOWN ON HIS OWN!"
Kompany gestured wildly, pointing at his own foot, demonstrating that he hadn't made contact with Julien. His expression showed his outrage.
Other City players sward the official, surrounding him completely, their voices were overlapping each other's in chaotic protest. The scene fell into chaos.
Liverpool players sprinted over to protect the decision.
Gerrard and Suárez placed themselves in front of the referee, creating a barrier between him and the City players, gesturing for him to maintain his call.
Julien remained on the turf, still holding his ankle. The dical staff jogged on to assess.
In the stands, the reactions were polar extres.
Liverpool supporters erupted: "PENALTY! PENALTY! PENALTY!"
So waved fists toward City's protesting players.
City fans responded with apocalyptic fury—boos, screams, objects being hurled onto the pitch. Scarves and debris rained down as they vented their rage and disbelief.
On the touchline, Pellegrini completely lost composure. He charged to the boundary line, screaming at the referee with wild fury, his face was twisted with anger and incredulity.
"HOW IS THAT A PENALTY?! THIS IS ABSURD!"
The fourth official rushed to restrain him, but Pellegrini wouldn't be cald. He continued pointing toward the penalty area, insisting Julien had dived.
The referee, surrounded by protesting City players, continued shaking his head firmly. His decision was final, non-negotiable.
He pushed through the surrounding players, pointing once more at the penalty spot, making it crystal clear: the call stood.
anwhile, television replays showed the truth.
Slow-motion footage confird that Kompany's outstretched foot had indeed made contact with Julien's ankle. Light contact, perhaps—but contact nonetheless. The mont he extended his leg; he'd sealed his fate.
Julien's fall wasn't fake. The referee's decision was correct.
The penalty was legitimate and indisputable.
Liverpool had been handed the perfect opportunity for a dramatic winner.
Julien rose from the turf, his ankle was already feeling fine—the contact had been real but minor, enough to warrant the penalty but not enough to cause genuine injury.
Gerrard was already there, match ball tucked under his arm, striding toward him.
No words. He pressed the ball firmly and steadily into Julien's hands then reached out and rested a palm on his shoulder. The look in his eyes said everything that needed saying.
Julien clutched the ball against his chest and nodded firmly at his captain with conviction.
Their eyes t for only a mont. No conversation was necessary. Everything was already understood.
"My word! Gerrard has given the ball to Julien—clearly, Julien will take this penalty!" Tyler's voice was hushed with sothing akin to awe. "Gerrard scored the equalizer, and now he's personally handing the chance to win it to Julien!
This is what leadership looks like. This is the passing of the torch! Perhaps when Gerrard eventually leaves Liverpool, Julien truly will inherit his armband and beco this team's new leader!"
Tyler paused for a while, then his voice rose with excitent.
"And if this goes in—it's Julien's HAT-TRICK! Think about it: just eighteen matches played, exactly halfway through the season, and he'll have equaled the Premier League single-season scoring record! The significance of this mont..."
He trailed off.
"What a mont. What a scene! Gerrard gave his team life with a goal, and now he's giving his successor the stage to finish the job. This IS Liverpool's spirit continuing through ti!"
Julien walked toward the penalty spot.
Each step seed to synchronize with every heartbeat in the stadium—forty-seven thousand pulses were beating as one, all focused on this particular mont.
The weight of expectation was almost physical, pressing down on his shoulders. But his expression remained completely blank, giving nothing away.
City's supporters went absolutely mad with their attempts to disrupt his concentration.
The booing was earsplitting becoming a wall of hostile sound designed to crack his composure. Thousands of fans waved blue scarves frantically, creating visual chaos, trying to distract his peripheral vision.
So scread the most vicious abuse they could conceive, hurling insults and threats, trying to shatter his ntal state with psychological warfare.
anwhile, Liverpool's away section had fallen into complete, eerie silence.
Four thousand supporters collectively held their breath, as if exhaling might sohow jinx the mont. Every eye locked on that lone red figure placing the ball on the spot, adjusting it.
Many gripped their shirts or scarves so tightly their knuckles turned bone-white, fingernails digging into palms hard enough to leave marks. So closed their eyes, unable to watch, only listening. Others stared with unblinking intensity, refusing to miss a single movent.
In the executive box, Dein leaned so far forward he was practically out of his seat, his body was rigid with tension, eyes were drilling into Julien with focus.
Abdullah had abandoned all traces of his earlier excitent. He sat frozen like a statue, barely breathing, terrified that any movent might sohow influence the outco.
In the Boot Room pub, the earlier explosion of celebration had fallen into suspended animation.
Every single person stood motionless, as if ti itself had stopped. Beer glasses were held suspended mid-air, arms locked in position. Eyes remained unblinking on the screens, afraid that even the briefest closure of eyelids would cause them to miss the crucial mont.
The entire pub was silent except for two sounds: the distant roar of the Etihad crowd bleeding through the television speakers, and the thunderous heartbeat of supporters whose pulses had synchronized into a single rhythm.
On the touchline, Klopp stood with arms folded tightly across his chest, body leaning forward at an uncomfortable angle, every muscle tensed.
His eyes never left Julien. His lips moved silently, as if offering a prayer or words of encouragent that only he could hear.
Pellegrini faced away from the pitch, unable to watch, hands clasped rigidly behind his back. His face had turned ashen, completely drained of blood. His fingernails dug into his palms, desperately hoping for god's intervention—for Hart to guess correctly, for Julien to miss, for anything to prevent the inevitable.
Julien placed the ball on the penalty spot with care, patting the grass around it twice, making adjustnts to ensure it sat perfectly.
Satisfied, he stepped back.
One step. Two. Three. Four. Five.
He settled his stance, planting his feet, finding his balance. Then he raised his head slowly, making direct eye contact with Joe Hart.
The psychological battle was on.
Hart's entire body was tense like a spring ready to explode. His fists clenched repeatedly, opening and closing, working off energy. His legs bent into a crouch, weight forward on the balls of his feet, ready to launch in either direction.
His eyes darted between Julien's face and the ball, searching desperately for any tell—a glance toward one corner, a plant foot angled revealing direction, any tiny hint that would give him the advantage.
The entire Etihad Stadium—every single person present, from the cheapest seats to the most expensive boxes focused completely on this tiny rectangle of grass.
The silence was suffocating, oppressive. Even City's booing fans had fallen quiet, as if their breath was being held.
TWEET!
The referee's whistle pierced the silence like a gunshot, shattering the suspended state.
Julien moved.
He approached the ball with quick, confident steps—there was no hesitation visible in his body language. His right foot drew back as his montum carried him forward, every aspect of his approach was signifying he'd blast it with maximum power—
Hart committed. His brain processed the body language and made the decision in a fraction of a second: left side, low and hard.
He exploded in that direction, body extending horizontally through space, arm reaching toward where he expected the ball to be.
But at the last possible instant—the final second before contact, Julien's technique changed completely.
Instead of driving through the ball with his laces, his boot barely grazed it.
It was the gentlest of touches.
The panenka.
Audacious. Arrogant, even.
The ultimate expression of confidence under maximum pressure.
The ball traced a lazy, almost mocking arc through the air, floating gently toward the center of the goal, exactly where Hart had been standing before committing to his dive.
He was already fully extended, diving toward his left, body flat in mid-air and completely powerless to change direction.
He could only watch suspended helplessly in the air as the ball sailed over his horizontal body in a perfect parabola, seeming to hang in the air for an eternity before dropping.
The ball fell gently, almost politely, into the center of the goal.
It struck the back netting with a soft sound that sohow carried across the entire stadium.
The net bulged, then shook violently, as if celebrating Liverpool's winner itself.
Manchester City 3-4 Liverpool
92nd minute, 17 seconds.
Liverpool had won.
For a fraction of a second, the Etihad was suspended in stunned silence—forty-seven thousand people were processing the impossible.
Then the away section detonated like a nuclear explosion.
The roar was a wall of sound that made ears ring. Red scarves twirled into a boiling sea of celebration. So fans tore their shirts off and hurled them toward sky. The celebration drowned everything else in pure, ecstatic chaos.
City's blue ocean fell completely silent.
Ho supporters either sat with hands covering faces in despair or collapsed into seats, defeated. The entire ho sections beca a graveyard of shattered hopes.
Only red remained—red scarves, red shirts, red voices echoing through the stadium.
Julien didn't pause for even a second.
He spun and sprinted toward the touchline, arms spread wide like wings, drinking in every sensation.
He crashed directly into Klopp's embrace.
Klopp wrapped him in a crushing hug, pounded his back repeatedly while screaming hoarsely, "MAGNIFICIENT! JULIEN! YOU DID IT! YOU ACTUALLY DID IT!"
Substitutes couldn't contain themselves ANY LONGER. They charged from the bench en masse, surrounding Julien and Klopp in a jumping, screaming mass of celebration. Hands slapped Julien's back. Voices roared incoherently. The technical area transford into pandemonium.
On the pitch, Liverpool's starting eleven had lost all composure.
Gerrard, Suárez, Coutinho, even goalkeeper Mignolet abandoned his goal and sprinted the length of the pitch to join the celebration. Every player ford a massive pile of red shirts, screaming, jumping, releasing everything.
"IT'S IN! IT'S IN! WINNER! HAT-TRICK! OH MY GOD!" Martin Tyler's voice was unrecognizable, completely shredded by emotion. "Julien with a PERFECT panenka to complete the coback AND seal his hat-trick!"
He was shouting now.
"FOUR-THREE! From 3-1 down to a 4-3 victory! Liverpool have created a MIRACLE at the Etihad!"
Tyler paused for breath, then continued at maximum volu.
"EIGHTEEN MATCHES! Exactly halfway through the season, and Julien has EQUALED the single-season scoring record! The efficiency is TERRIFYING!
More importantly—they've ended City's winning streak while extending their own! They've cented their position at the top of the table! This is Klopp's Liverpool! This is the spirit that never surrenders!"
He was nearly screaming now.
"Tonight, at the Etihad—RED dominates EVERYTHING!
This is incredible!
I don't have words for it. I have just witnessed a great, great ga of football. Julien hasn't just matched the record—he's delivered a winner that will be rembered FOREVER!
Gerrard passed down the fla. Julien carried it ho—this mont will be CARVED into Liverpool's history forever!"
The Boot Room pub absolutely exploded.
One fan hurled his beer glass to the floor shattering it, foam was spraying everywhere then leaped onto a table, screaming: "WINNER! WE'VE WON! JULIEN YOU BLOODY GENIUS! LIVERPOOL, CO ON! WE'RE LIVERPOOL!"
Surrounding fans completely lost control, embracing anyone nearby, singing at maximum volu.
The entire pub was consud by celebration—songs, screams, pure joy that refused to subside.
Nobody could calm down. Nobody wanted to.
In the executive box, Abdullah was on his feet, high-fiving Dein repeatedly, both n were grinning like children.
"BEAUTIFUL! ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL!" Abdullah's voice cracked with emotion. "I guarantee you—that's the most spectacular match I've EVER witnessed! We beat City!"
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