English clubs have dominated unprecedented European club football tournaments, as the Premier League has succeeded in transforming its economic strength into results on the ground, and the 2019 season will remain in memory thanks to the sudden uprisings.

For the first time ever, four clubs from one country reach the final of the European Championships, as Liverpool beat Tottenham in the Champions League and Chelsea over Arsenal in the European League.

Man United presented one of the most prominent uprisings when he entered with his new coach, Olli Gunnar Solskjaer, a second leg of the tournament's final price match against Paris Saint-Germain, which was two goals behind without going in Old Trafford.

But a penalty in injury-time from Marcus Rashford gave him a 3-1 win at "Princes Park", and then surpassed the goal base off the field.

Never before in 106 previous attempts in the tournament did any team succeed in compensating for its defeat by two clean goals at home and to qualify for the next round, and the return match will remain one of the most wonderful nights in United history, despite coming out against Barcelona in the quarter-finals.

Late stir
The excitement was even greater in the last eight with the presence of Video Assistant Referee (Var) technique after Manchester City bid farewell to the championship against Tottenham at the base of the goal outside the field after a 4-4 tie in the overall result.

Rahim Sterling's late goal seemed to settle City's qualification amid loud celebrations from his coach Pep Guardiola. The fans of Man City celebrated as they thought that the Quartet's dream was still valid.

Turkish referee Cunit Chaker pointed to the cancellation of the goal due to offside after reviewing the auxiliary video rule, so Guardiola fell on his knees in grief.

But the excitement of this night was outpaced by that of the semi-finals. Liverpool's hopes seemed to have ended when they lost 3-0 to Barcelona in the first leg, but in their stronghold Anfield, and among their enthusiastic fans, their Spanish guests were thrashed 4-0 thanks to a combination of Divoc Origi and Jorginho Vinaldam.

And after 24 hours another spectacular uprising took place. In Amsterdam, Matthias de Licht struck the net with a header in the fifth minute, and Hakim Ziyash added the second goal in the 35th minute to beat Ajax by three clean goals in the overall result against Tottenham, and it seemed that he would reach the final for the first time in 23 years.

But Brazilian Lucas Mora scored three goals in the second half, including one winning in the sixth minute of stoppage time to take away Tottenham to qualify with the goal difference base outside the field.

The somewhat disappointing final came after Liverpool's 2-0 victory in Madrid, but fans could not complain about a tournament that saw spectacular excitement.