Eberechi Eze’s North London Derby hat-trick was the kind of performance that turns living rooms into stadiums.
And if you watched it on a small screen, you already know the truth. Big moments need big canvases. Big emotions need space to breathe. You deserve a better seat at home.
Because some nights are too good to watch like every other night.
The night football reminded everyone why we watch

There is something about a hat-trick in a rivalry game. It carries a different temperature. It lingers.
On Sunday, Arsenal’s Eberechi Eze became only the fourth player in North London Derby history to score a hat-trick, lifting Arsenal to a 4–1 win and sending the home crowd into pure disbelief. It was not just the goals. It was confidence. The dance before the finish. The nonchalant post-match line that has already gone viral: “That’s a good one, man.”
Football loves an attitude backed by execution. Eze delivered both.
The ESPN match coverage captures it well. There is the moment he unlocks the defence for his first. There is the second, scored only 36 seconds into the second half. And then the finish in the 76th minute that turned the Emirates into a festival.
These are moments made for the biggest screen in your home.
Why big matches look different on a bigger screen
Sport is choreography. You feel more when you see more.
A large screen lets you catch the running lane before the pass. The defender’s hesitation. The curl of a shot that television compression usually washes out. When Eze roulette-turned past a challenge late in the game, even the ESPN live blog writer had a hard time hiding admiration.
That is exactly the kind of detail you miss on a smaller TV.
A screen around 254cm(100) does something simple but powerful. It restores scale. The stadium looks like a stadium. The players move like full-sized athletes, not compressed avatars. And when an entire stand rises at once after a goal, you feel the rise instead of merely seeing it.
This is not luxury. It is immersion.
A TV that turns your sofa into Row 1

Here is the thing about modern Indian homes. We love sports. We love cinema. We love those end-of-day escapes that help us breathe again.
But most homes still watch the biggest moments on screens that were bought for the living room of 2016. Today’s content deserves better.
A QD-Mini LED panel like Haier’s 254cm(100) M96 brings detail back to life. The AI Ultra Sense Processor sharpens motion so fast-paced plays do not blur into streaks. It recognises scenes and adjusts colour, depth, and brightness in real time, which means every replay, pass, and tackle lands with clarity.
Dolby Vision IQ reads your room’s light and optimises the picture so shadows stay shadows and highlights stay intact. Whether it is a night match or a sunny afternoon game, the TV adapts. The wide viewing angle keeps the picture consistent even when everyone in the house is fighting for the best seat.
If you watched Eze’s third goal on this screen, you would notice the texture of the grass, the ripple of the net, and the micro-second of calm before he strikes.
Small screens show you the action. Large screens let you feel it.
Sound that brings the stadium home
A big picture without big sound is just half the experience.
The M96 series uses Sound by KEF-tuned speakers and Dolby Atmos to create layered audio. Not louder. Deeper. The chants feel like they are swelling behind you. The commentary is crisp. Ball contact has weight. The subtle roar rising before a counter-attack actually rises.
It is the difference between hearing football and being inside football.
Why moments like these matter in Indian homes
Think about the people who watched this match.
A young couple winding down after work. A group of friends who turned the match into a mini watch-party. A father and son who have argued over Arsenal and Spurs for years. A solo young professional in a rented apartment enjoying a rare moment of pure escape.
Every Indian home contains these stories.
Every big match becomes bigger when the home makes space for it.
And this is where Haier always tries to show up. Not in the centre of the scene. In the background. Quietly lifting the moment. Whether it is a fridge that keeps match-day snacks ready, a microwave that revives leftovers at halftime, or a Mini LED TV that turns a night like Eze’s into something you talk about all week.
Big screens change how families watch football
Here is the hidden system at play. Bigger screens do not just enhance content. They change behaviour.
1. People sit together instead of scattering across rooms
2. The match becomes the event, not the filler
3. You watch longer because the experience is easier on the eyes
4. Even non-fans get pulled in because the visuals are irresistible
A small TV keeps football in the background. A large TV brings it into the centre of the home.
And in a world full of noise, shared moments at home are becoming a real luxury.
The insight this night teaches us
Some performances are too big for small screens.
Eberechi Eze reminded everyone of that. His hat-trick was not just a footballing event. It was a reminder of why we invest in the places we live. Why do we upgrade? Why do we try to make our homes feel more like the lives we want?
When the content elevates, the experience should too.
Big plays deserve big screens.
And you deserve front-row feels.