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2nd March 2016
02:13pm GMT

It was his rakish accomplice Robert Pires who fed Bergkamp his ammunition. A dart of a pass found the Dutchman with his back to goal and his Greek journeyman victim in close attendance at his rear.
Then it happened. Instead of gathering the ball in like any decent human-being, the evil mastermind defied all known laws of physics, morality and common decency. He did something that still elicits gasps from hardened spectators.
With a flick of his left boot (we know this because slow motion footage is available), Bergkamp sent the ball on a trajectory of its own. He turned the other way - possibly to claim a handy alibi - and murdered Dabizas in the process.
Such was the transcendent beauty of Bergkamp's magic trick - so beguiling his pirouette - that no one noticed the inverted remains of the Newcastle man in his wake. It was only afterwards that the hot mess was apparent.
Arsenal's Number 10, with not a trace of guilt or conscience, simply reacquainted himself with the ball a moment later, and stroked it gently past of ashen-faced Shay Given. It was obscene and miraculous all at once.
The day is remembered for a Dutch master elevating football beyond its known parameters for one heavenly second. But no one recalls the Greek tragedy he authored in the process.