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We have a look down memory lane at one of the most famous comebacks in Premier League history, as Crystal Palace fought back from three goals down to draw level with Liverpool and end their title hopes.

Tom Mastes walks you back down memory lane and reminds you about Crystanbul

There have been plenty of excellent moments to remember from Crystal Palace in recent weeks and months and now we have the opportunity to look back at an incredible day from yesteryear.

That is of course, the now infamously coined ‘Crystanbul’ when Palace were able to have a major say in the Premier League title race.

They themselves were not competing for the title, finishing the season in 11th place, but Palace were the protagonists in what was, without a doubt, the game of the season.

For those of you who were living under a rock, or are too young perhaps, Crystanbul was a famous day in Premier League history, between Palace and Liverpool.

But what exactly happened?

Liverpool were locked into a battle for the Premier League title race with Manchester City, who had already beaten Everton 3-2 earlier in the weekend.

The two sides were level on points as we entered gameweek 37, meaning City had a three-point cushion and a significant goal-difference buffer, too.

So, Liverpool had to win to have any hope of finally winning their first Premier League title.

Facing a Palace side with essentially nothing to play for, Liverpool were the clear favourites to take the title race until the very last day.

And they made a fast start, with Joe Allen scoring after 18 minutes from a Steven Gerrard assist, which was enough to see Liverpool lead 1-0 at half-time.

Eight minutes into the second half and Damien Delaney stuck the ball into the back of his own net, and just two minutes later, Luis Suarez scored to put Liverpool 3-0 up.

That felt like a lead that was only going to go up and not be chipped away at and with the clock heading into the final 15 minutes, Liverpool still led 3-0.

That was before the match took on a course that nobody could ever have predicted.

Delaney scored in the right net this time after 79 minutes, as Palace reduced the deficit to 3-1.

The Selhurst Park crowd did not have to wait long until they scored again, and the entire vibe around the stadium had gone from one of despair to excitement two minutes later when Dwight Gayle scored.

The match suddenly became very tense, Liverpool slipped to a 2-0 defeat to Chelsea last time out and their fans suddenly feared they were about to throw the title away.

They were right as Gayle scored Palace’s third two minutes from time and the comeback was complete in just nine minutes.

Hence, the term Crystanbul, coined after Liverpool’s comeback from 3-0 down at half-time in the Champions League final against AC Milan.

Suarez was in tears and Brendan Rodgers admitted the title was up and City went on to win the league by two points on the final day.