Looking up towards the endless galleries of Stade Vélodrome, a line of former Olympique Marseille players take in the applause.
This is one of the world's great football venues: bold, sweeping, wild, volatile. All of these 11 men graced it at one point or another, some at its emotional peak. At the right of the group stands Basile Boli, waistcoated and absorbing the scene through shades. It was Boli who entrenched Marseille in the global consciousness 31 years ago, heading past Sebastiano Rossi in Munich to beat a decorated Milan side and win the 1992-93 Champions League. He knows better than anyone that, when the stars align, there is nowhere else like this.
The group of legends have been invited to a reunion of African, or African-heritage, players who once wore the all-white kit. They watch the present-day team play Nice and, with the game deep into added time, the score is 2-2.
Marseille have been down to 10 men since Faris Moumbagna's harsh red card before half-time but only a win will keep them in serious contention for this year's European spots. In the game's last attack Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang somehow musters the searing speed of old to skin two defenders and run through one-on-one. Aubameyang chips Marcin Bulka but the weight is a fraction too heavy and the ball pings off the crossbar. It is the story of their season.
Getting to grips with Marseille is, as one senior member of their administration puts it, like sitting "on a volcano". Tonight they host Atalanta in the first leg of the Europa League semi-finals and the hope is for a controlled eruption. A second European title would feel like an awakening. For too long it has been dormant: a byword for chaos, short-termism, unpredictability, struggling to shake the shadow of Bernard Tapieera corruption that hung over those heady nights in the early 1990s.
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