At match point, Layla tears her calf muscle. The referee offers a medical timeout. Joon-hyuk kneels beside her.
Based on that, I’ve developed an original story inspired by the title (which sounds like a sports romance drama) and the Arabic phrase "أحب كل القلب" (I love with all my heart) .
The closing scene: Lying on the court, breathing hard, holding hands. Coach Sun-mi throws towels at them. “Get up, lovebirds. Tomorrow, Asian Games.” At match point, Layla tears her calf muscle
She serves. He smashes. The shuttlecock lands perfectly on the line.
Flashback: Five years ago, Aleppo. Layla, a refugee who found badminton in a relief camp, catches Joon-hyuk's eye at an international youth tournament. He gives her a hand towel. She smiles. He says, “You have raw talent.” Then he wins. She loses. He never calls. Based on that, I’ve developed an original story
Layla looks at Joon-hyuk. “Do you love me? Or just winning?”
Layla Han, a 22-year Syrian-Korean athlete, grips her racket. Sweat drips down her temple. Across the net stands her opponent—and secret first love—Yoo Joon-hyuk, the national champion who once told her she didn’t belong in competitive sports. “Get up, lovebirds
Here is the story: Episode 1 – The Rival's Heart Opening scene: The camera pans across a crowded badminton arena in Seoul. The scoreboard reads 19–20. Match point for the underdog.