Chapter 101: The weight of history
At this stage of the season, what usually follows after league games?
The UEFA Champions League.
And this time, the elite tournament had a truly mouthwatering fixture to entertain football fans across the world.
[UEFA Champions League- League Phase Matchday 8/8:]
>PSG vs Barcelona.
Yes, Paris Saint Germain vs FC Barcelona!
BOOM!
It was like a missile just detonated in Europe, or was about to detonate?
Well, Paris did not sleep.
On the banks of the Seine, banners of blue and red rippled in the icy winter wind as shopfronts lit up with the faces of PSG’s new heroes... Kvaratskhelia’s burning eyes, Ousmane Dembélé’s smirk, João Neves’s clenched fist.
The face of all the PSG stars were plastered across the city of Paris, and yet, one face that was not Parisian seemed to linger even when absent... Samuel Moses.
Billboards and murals across the city bore his likeness in defiance, a reminder of the man who had broken their hearts.
Tonight, the Parc des Princes would become an inferno.
This wasn’t just a Champions League league-phase match. No, for PSG fans, this was catharsis... revenge.
To them, tonight was the night to exorcise ghosts that haunted them since 2017, when La Remontada carved itself into football folklore.
And above all, the night to erase the scar of 2026, when PSG were on the cusp of eternal glory, only for Samuel Moses and Barcelona to wrench the Champions League trophy from their grasp.
But the crazy thing was that they were not the only ones who felt that way.
Destroying them at the Champions League final last season was not enough for some FC Barcelona fans. To them, tonight was also a night of revenge; a night to avenge Ronald Araújo’s red card at Camp Nou, which turned the tide of a tie they felt was theirs and a night to avenge Dembele’s betrayal.
Paris had been preparing for this night since the draw was made.
"Four nil is enough".
That was the sentiment in Paris after the first leg in 2017. But on March 8th, 2017, the Camp Nou trembled, the world stood still, and Neymar, Messi, and Suárez wrote themselves into legend.
La Remontada, 6–1... the kind of trauma that doesn’t heal.
Years later, PSG thought they had their redemption arc. 2023, Araújo’s dismissal in Barcelona left them wide open. PSG advanced, Barça crumbled.
But even that felt hollow. There was this sense that the footballing gods had tilted the scales rather than Paris truly conquering.
And then, 2026... Sam’s Barcelona against Dembele’s PSG.
It was a final that was meant to crown the Parisians, but instead it became the coronation of the Nigerian genius. His goals, his assists, his presence, together they shattered Paris, who once again found themselves as nearly men.
Tonight was the culmination of all those scars, and Paris would not forgive.
The media was a firestorm as French newspapers ran with headlines like:
["Revenge or Nothing: PSG vs the Curse of Barça."]
["The Return of the Executioner: Moses walks into Paris again."]
Spanish dailies countered with bravado:
["Here to Reign: Barça defend their crown."]
["Moses Returns to Paris, Not to Repent, But to Rule."]
Every pundit, every panel, and every podcast had its say.
Thierry Henry warned. "Barcelona’s press can suffocate anyone, but PSG are a different beast at the Parc".
Meanwhile, Xavi watching from the stands, told Marca. "I’ve seen Sam, the boy is built for games like this. Big stage, hostile crowd, it only fuels him. Paris may not realize, but they’re lighting a fire they can’t put out."
While the tension shimmered, the neutrals salivated.
The Guardian called it ["The match of the league phase!"]
ESPN dubbed it ["A final in disguise."]
The world was ready.
...
Inside Paris...
At Camp des Loges, Luis Enrique prowled the pitch during the final training session. He’d been here before, he’d been on both sides of the divide, but tonight he was PSG’s general.
"Discipline, compactness, no fear!" He barked at his players as they jogged laps under the floodlights. "Barcelona will come to press, let them. We strike when they’re weakest!"
Dembele, once jeered at Camp Nou, now embraced by the Parc, exchanged glances with Kvaratskhelia. Both knew their role; they were the daggers, cutting into the space Barça’s high line left behind.
In the locker room, João Neves tied his boots with quiet intensity. Marquinhos rallied the defense, reminding them that this wasn’t just another match, that it was war.
...
Inside Barcelona...
At Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper, during the final training session at home before traveling to Paris, Hansi Flick gathered his men in a tight huddle. His German precision cut through the noise.
"Paris will come at us with fury".
"Their crowd will try to drown you, but remember who you are. You are Barcelona, Champions of Europe, and Champions don’t bend... you impose!"
Sam sat beside Pedri, silent, his eyes locked on the whiteboard as Flick sketched PSG’s press traps. Yamal, still just 19, chewed a gum like all the pressure was air before him as Sam clapped him on the shoulder.
"Breathe," Sam grinned. "These nights make legends, trust me".
"Of course I know," Yamal grinned. "Have you seen me in the Euros?"
Sam laughed. "My nigga".
Raphinha grinned. "He’s right. Tonight, they’ll hate us, but tomorrow they’ll learn to fear us again".
The laughter calmed the nerves.
Barça were ready.
...
The morning of matchday, Sam stood by his hotel window in Paris, looking down at the city that despised him. The Eiffel Tower glimmered in the distance, framed by a sea of PSG jerseys in the streets.
He could almost feel their hate.
His phone buzzed, and when he looked, it was a message from Kayla. She was beginning to develop even more interest in football.
The message read...
["No matter the noise, no matter the hate, remember you are Samuel Moses, the world’s best. And when our baby grows up, they’ll know their father walked into Paris and never bowed."]
Sam smiled, his chest tightening with love and determination. He typed back a single line.
["Then I’ll give them a story worth telling."]
He slipped the phone away, drew a deep breath, and closed his eyes. Paris was where legends either broke or were born.
Tonight, he would choose which.
By evening, the Parc des Princes shook like a living creature as smoke, flares, and drums filled the air.
The ultras unveiled a giant tifo. ["PARIS WILL NEVER KNEEL AGAIN."]
As the team buses rolled in, fans hammered the sides, chanting insults, and roaring PSG’s anthem into the night.
Inside the Barça bus, Sam leaned against the glass, his face impassive. Lamine Yamal smirked at the chaos, while Gavi gritted his teeth, already fired up.
Stepping into the tunnel, the noise intensified, a wall of sound pressing down on every player. The cameras zoomed in on Marquinhos leading PSG, and on Sam at the heart of Barcelona’s line.
The players shook hands briskly, but the tension was palpable.
On the other side of the world...
Vinicius, watching from Madrid, posted a story. ["Good luck, Paris. Break the curse, vamos!"] He was supporting PSG.
Messi, from Miami, tweeted. ["These are the nights that shape football history."]
The world was locked in.
And then, the referee motioned.
The captains lined up and in response the stadium was drowned in chants, banners swaying like a storm in the stands.
For tonight, Araujo wore the captain’s armband.
Araujo adjusted his armband, his face unreadable, but inside him burned a furnace of purpose.
FWEEEEE!
The whistle for warm-up drills pierced the noise as the players began their sprints, stretching under the unforgiving glare of 50,000 Parisians baying for blood.
The lineups were moments away from being read.
The world held its breath.