Manchester City will unveil a statue of Sergio Aguero on the 10th anniversary of his title-clinching goal against QPR next month.
The Argentine, City's record goalscorer, famously struck in the fourth minute of added time in the final game of the 2011-12 season at Etihad Stadium to snatch the Premier League crown from rivals Manchester United.
The unveiling of the statute alongside the sculptures of teammates Vincent Kompany and David Silva already at the stadium will be the centre-piece of a day of celebrations marking a decade since that 3-2 win on May 13.
The club will also hold a balloted event for 2000 fans at which various members of the title-winning squad, including Aguero, will be in attendance with interviews held on stage.
"Manchester City is delighted to announce it will be holding a series of events and activities in Manchester and across the globe to celebrate the 10th anniversary of '93:20', its historic match against Queens Park Rangers, which saw the team score twice in injury time in what was arguably one of the greatest comebacks in sporting history, to be crowned champions for the first time in 44 years," a City statement read.
"Sergio Aguero's legacy will be honoured through the unveiling of a statue designed and created by renowned sculptor, Andy Scott."
Aguero left City last summer after scoring a club-record 260 goals and winning five Premier League titles over 10 years.
He joined Spanish giants Barcelona but retired on health grounds in December.