REACTING TO
Dembélé Scored Twice Before the Liverpool Clash and I'm Already Writing His Three Different Possible Legacies
by Terry Tap-In

Right. Terry Tap-In wrote that Dembélé has "remembered how to play football at the exact moment PSG need him most" and then spent about eight hundred words working out whether this bloke is a genius, a ghost, or some sort of quantum physics experiment with shin pads. Very clever, Terry. Very modern. Very pointless.

Because while Terry's busy constructing three different legacies for a man who scored twice against Toulouse, and I stress the word TOULOUSE, the rest of us with half a brain cell and a working telephone are looking at the bigger picture. And the bigger picture has AC Milan's crest all over it.

Now I am not saying I have sources. I am saying I have mates. And one of those mates knows a fella who works in Italian football. And that fella told my mate, who told me over a pint last Thursday, that Milan have been sniffing around Dembélé since January. Properly sniffing. Like a Labrador at a barbecue.

Think about it. PSG are building around younger profiles now. They let Mbappé walk. They are not sentimental. Dembélé turns 29 in May. His contract runs to 2028, yes, but that means this summer is the sweet spot. Maximum resale value. Maximum leverage. Maximum chance of some Italian club with more ambition than sense writing a cheque with too many zeroes on it.

And what does Dembélé do right before the biggest Champions League week of the season? He turns up. Two goals. First half. Job done by the interval. You know what that looks like to me? That looks like a shop window performance. That looks like a man who knows his agent is on the phone to someone in the San Siro offices right now.

Back in my day we used to call it "playing for a move." You would see it every March. Some lad at a mid table club would suddenly find three extra gears and by August he was at Arsenal looking confused. It happened like clockwork. Nobody wrote legacy pieces about it. We just said "he wants out" and moved on with our lives.

Terry wants to know if Dembélé will destroy Liverpool or run into Robertson's shinpad seventeen times. Fair question. But I want to know something more important. If Dembélé does destroy Liverpool, if he has the game of his life on Tuesday night, does that add twenty million to his price tag? Because I guarantee you someone in Paris is doing that maths right now on the back of a napkin.

The Toulouse performance was not about legacy. It was not about Schrödinger or whatever cat related nonsense Terry was banging on about. It was about a player in form at exactly the right time for exactly the right reasons. And those reasons might have absolutely nothing to do with PSG's Champions League campaign and everything to do with a flat in Milan by September.

Could I be wrong? Course I could. I have been wrong before. I thought VAR would last two seasons and they would bin it off. I thought Moyes would crack it at United. I thought my knee would hold up past fifty. Wrong on all three counts.

But mark my words. When Dembélé is standing in a Milan shirt holding a scarf above his head in August, remember who told you first. Not Terry and his three legacies. Me. Andy Keys. With a phone and a mate and a pint.