"Girlfriend?" Gerrard asked, eyebrows raised in exaggerated curiosity giving him a nudge. "Co on, spill it."
Julien froze mid-stride. His mouth opened then closed. He nodded reflexively—wait, no—then imdiately shook his head, flustered. "I—we're not—she's just—we've known each other since—"
He wasn't sure how to explain what he and Pauline were. The accurate words wouldn't co.
Gerrard laughed, pushing off the wall and falling into step beside him. He was a man who'd been through it himself—of course he knew exactly what he was looking at.
"Relax, kid. I'm winding you up."
They chatted while walking toward the lifts together.
"But seriously—you're so decisive on the pitch." He said, still grinning, "and completely hopeless off it. That girl was looking at you a certain way, son—I saw it with my own eyes. You don't need so grand romantic gesture straight out of a film. Just... talk to her. Be honest. Tell her how you feel. Trust , you'd be batting a hundred percent."
He clapped Julien on the shoulder. "Rember this: your football career won't last forever. But family and what you build outside this ga—you have to hold onto both. That's what makes a life complete."
Julien listened, scratching the back of his head with a sheepish grin.
The two of them walked slowly down the corridor toward their rooms.
After a while, Gerrard brought up the match.
"Listen," Gerrard said softly. "Tomorrow's match. Don't kill yourself out there."
Julien frowned. "Captain—"
"I know you want to win. We all do. That's not what I'm saying." Gerrard's voice was firm. "Look around—everyone's running on empty. Bodies are breaking down due to accumulating fatigue. Sotis losing a match isn't the worst outco if it ans keeping players healthy for the full campaign. We need you for twenty more league matches, cup fixtures, the run-in. Not just tomorrow."
"I'm not saying don't try," Gerrard added and stopped walking. "Just... be smart. Push hard, but know where the line is. Don't cross it and end up sidelined for six weeks with a torn hamstring. Clear?"
Julien t his eyes and saw the genuine concern there, and nodded slowly. "I understand, Captain."
"Good lad."
By mid-afternoon, West London was absolutely packed with humanity.
Post-Christmas football—a sacred British tradition that Aricans found baffling and continental Europeans viewed with mixture of admiration and concern.
Families poured toward Stamford Bridge from every direction: Fulham Broadway station was spewing waves of blue-attired fans, buses were pulling up every few minutes to unleash more, groups of mates already half-drunk from pre-match pints staggering cheerfully toward the entrances, tourists clutching scarves purchased an hour earlier from street vendors.
The surrounding streets transford into a sea of Chelsea blue. Every pub within half a mile was ramd to capacity, songs were spilling out open doors into the December cold.
Vendors sold programs, scarves, foam fingers, at pies from carts that smoked in the chill air. The atmosphere buzzed with that peculiar energy that only happens before matches that matter.
Inside Stamford Bridge, the noise was building.
5:30 PM. Thirty minutes to kickoff.
Not a single empty seat remained in the 41000-capacity ground. Every stand was packed to the rafters—the Matthew Harding Stand was bouncing with singing supporters, the Shed End was organizing coordinated chants, the West Stand's season ticket holders were settling into their usual spots.
Blue flags rippled across every section like waves on an ocean.
Giant banners unfurled:
"PRIDE OF LONDON"
"CAREFREE"
"BLUE IS THE COLOUR"
The constant chanting rged into a humming roar that seed to press down on the pitch: "Chelsea! Chelsea! Chelsea!"
The atmosphere was suffocating—a fortress built from 41,000 voices all focused on the sa goal: destroy Liverpool.
High above the pitch, Martin Tyler settled into his familiar seat in the Sky Sports comntary box, adjusting his headset. Beside him, Alan Shearer shuffled notes prepared by the production team.
Below them, both teams were visible on the pitch, going through final warm-up routines.
Tyler leaned into his microphone, his voice was instantly recognizable to millions.
"Good evening, and welco to Stamford Bridge on what promises to be an absolutely fascinating encounter. Matchweek 19 in the Premier League, and we've got a genuine heavyweight clash for you. Chelsea hosting Liverpool—both teams fighting for crucial points in the race for Champions League qualification, both desperate to maintain montum."
Shearer picked up smoothly. "Liverpool have been sensational lately, Martin. Five consecutive league victories, and the attacking numbers are frankly absurd. They've scored four or five goals in nearly every recent match. Clinical, ruthless, devastating on the counter-attack. And at the absolute center of it all—Julien De Rocca."
Tyler nodded, pulling up stats on his monitor.
"Julien equaled the Premier League single-season scoring record with that dramatic winner against Manchester City last ti out. Twenty-three goals already, Alan—twenty-three!—and we're not even at the halfway point of the season. Tonight, against Chelsea's backline, he has a chance to break the record outright and claim it as his own. That's got to be one of the major storylines."
"Absolutely," Shearer agreed, leaning back in his chair. "And as soone who chased scoring records, I can tell you—when you're that close, when you can taste it, it affects everything. Your positioning, your decision-making, your willingness to shoot from tight angles. Julien will be hunting that goal."
"But Chelsea's defense has been solid all season," Tyler countered. "John Terry and Gary Cahill at center-back, both experienced internationals. They won't give him easy chances."
Shearer nodded grimly. "True, but Chelsea's real problem has been at the other end. Their attack has struggled recently. Eto'o, Demba Ba—neither are finding consistent form. That's where Mourinho's concerns lie. They can't score, which ans they can't win matches even when they defend well."
Tyler glanced at his notes, highlighting a section. "Now, Liverpool's team sheet is fascinating for what it doesn't include. No Steven Gerrard in the starting XI. No Daniel Agger. Both players who'd normally be guaranteed starters—especially Steven Gerrard, the captain."
"Fixture congestion is catching up with them," Shearer said grimly. "That Manchester City match three days ago—both sides were absolutely spent by the final whistle. The physical intensity, the emotional investnt, everything. There's simply no way Liverpool's players have fully recovered. You can't replicate that kind of output twice in seventy-two hours without breaking bodies."
"José Mourinho made exactly that point in yesterday's press conference," Tyler added. "He said Liverpool's lack of European football gives them an unfair advantage in fixture managent. But looking at today's lineup, it's clear they're feeling the strain regardless."
On the pitch below, players began moving back toward the tunnel. Warm-ups were concluded. There was five minutes to kickoff.
Shearer crossed his arms. "This is going to be absolutely fascinating, Martin. Liverpool running on fus, makeshift lineup, bodies held together with athletic tape and sheer will. Chelsea desperate to close the gap at the top, playing at ho with a hostile crowd behind them. Mourinho's tactical nous against Klopp's intensity. Sothing's got to give."
Tyler smiled. "Indeed. Should be quite a match."
Many Liverpool supporters knew it too. They knew the odds. And yet they ca, holding on to hope, willing another miracle into existence.
As the clock ticked down toward kick-off, the noise swelled.
Stamford Bridge had beco a sea of blue.
Chelsea fans flooded the stands in their royal blue scarves and flags, their chants were thunderous, the ho atmosphere cranked to its absolute limit.
If only the stadium held more.
In the tunnel mouth, Chelsea fans lined both sides, signs raised high, their eyes burning with hunger for victory—trying to seize the psychological edge before a ball had even been kicked.
Both sets of players lined up in the narrow tunnel beneath Stamford Bridge amplifying every sound. Studs clicked against concrete. Quiet murmurs passed between teammates. The distant roar of 41,000 fans bled through from above creating a constant pressure.
Above them, in the stands, one particular figure watched.
Roman Abramovich sat in his usual position in the West Stand's exclusive box—the owner's seat from which he'd watched hundreds of matches over a decade of Chelsea ownership. His expression was incomprehensible, fingers tapping a slow, unconscious rhythm against the leather armrest.
Beside him sat several board mbers, business associates, but Abramovich's attention was entirely on the pitch. As the club's owner, he wanted this. A ho win.
His gaze drifted across Liverpool's lineup. When it passed through Julien, it lingered for a long mont.
The complicated feelings he'd once carried about this boy had largely faded by now.
What remained was sothing simpler: a sense of having missed out.
What was gone was gone.
If there were any way to bring Julien back to the Bridge, Abramovich would have wanted it. But it had beca a luxury he couldn't afford.
Liverpool's new ownership had transford the club's financial position—suddenly Liverpool could match or exceed Chelsea's spending, could offer wages that competed with anyone in Europe. There was no realistic scenario where Liverpool would sell their best player, especially not to a direct rival.
And beyond finances, Julien himself seed genuinely happy at Anfield. Loved by the Kop. Why would he leave?
The Russian oligarch sighed softly and looked away from Julien, focusing instead on the broader tactical setup.
What's done is done. What's missed is missed.
All that mattered now was the next ninety minutes.
As the clock crept toward six, the roar inside the stadium reached a crescendo.
Both sets of players erged from the tunnel at last—Liverpool's red shirts and Chelsea's blue were forming a vivid contrast as they walked side by side out onto the pitch.
The two teams took their places at the center circle.
The referee checked his watch one final ti.
He positioned himself in the center circle with ball at his feet and whistle raised to his lips.
TWEET!
The sharp blast triggered eruption.
Stamford Bridge exploded with sound.
Liverpool versus Chelsea.
The main event had begun.
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