I didn’t sleep on Saturday night. Not because I was anxious for the first ti in weeks, there was nothing to be anxious about. I didn’t sleep because the internet wouldn’t let .
I was lying in bed at midnight, Emma asleep beside , her body warm against mine, her breathing the slow, steady rhythm of a woman who had scread herself hoarse during the match and had earned her rest.
She had watched the ga at a pub in Crystal Palace with her friends, not at ho, not on a screen in the penthouse, but in a proper South London boozer with sawdust on the floor and Palace scarves on the walls and a hundred people cramd into a space designed for fifty.
She had texted a photo at half-ti: her face flushed, a pint in her hand, the pub behind her a blur of red and blue, her green eyes bright with the particular joy of a journalist who had temporarily abandoned all pretence of objectivity. She had captioned it: "Professional neutrality has left the building."
Now she was sleeping, and I was scrolling.
My phone was a warzone. Every notification was the Wembley match. Every social dia platform, every news site, every football forum and fan account, and page, all of them, simultaneously, were losing their collective minds about what had happened at Wembley that afternoon.
The clips were everywhere. Zaha’s chip had crossed twenty million views across platforms. It was being reposted by fan accounts from Brazil to Japan, overlaid with music, slowed down, zood in, analysed fra by fra.
The mont Walker committed, the mont the ball left Zaha’s boot, the parabola of the chip, Lloris’s desperate, futile dive each microsecond had beco its own viral artefact. BT Sport’s official account had posted it with the caption: "This is not football. This is art." Four million likes.
My celebration the fists, the turn toward the Spurs end, the cupped ear was even bigger. Nine million views and climbing. Soone had spliced it with the Vince McMahon strutting .
Soone else had set it to "Glad All Over" with the bass boosted until it rattled phone speakers. A Palace fan account had turned the three seconds into a GIF with the caption "RENT FREE" and it had been shared so many tis that the phrase was trending. Twitter’s UK trending list, as of midnight, read:
1. Crystal Palace
2. Danny Walsh
3. RENT FREE
4. Eberechi Eze
5. What do we think of Tottenham
The fifth one made laugh out loud. Emma stirred beside . "Stop scrolling," she murmured, without opening her eyes. "The internet will still be there in the morning."
"The internet is singing our na, Em."
"The internet sings everyone’s na. Go to sleep."
But I couldn’t. Because the sixth trending item the one that was climbing faster than all the others was Eze’s celebration.
The still image had been captured by every photographer in the stadium and was now on the front page of every Sunday newspaper website in the country. Eze, standing five feet from the Spurs fans, arms at his sides, staring at them in silence.
The composition was perfect his lean figure in the Palace shirt, the blurred wall of fury behind him, the floodlights catching the sweat on his face, his expression not triumphant but sothing colder, sothing that looked like a settling of accounts.
The caption that had been attached to the image by a thousand different fan accounts was the sa everywhere: "You rejected ."
What nobody outside the Palace dressing room knew what the pundits were about to discover, and the internet was about to explode over, was the full story. And I knew it was going to break because Jessica Finch had called on the bus ride ho with a specific piece of intelligence.
"The Athletic are running a feature tomorrow morning," she said. "One of their reporters has done the digging. They’ve found out about Eze’s Spurs rejection at fourteen. But there’s more and I need you to know before it hits."
"What more?"
"Eze isn’t a Palace fan, Danny. He never was. He grew up an Arsenal supporter."
I went quiet for a mont. I knew this, of course. I had known it since the day I first t Eberechi Eze in the Palace academy a quiet, devastatingly talented teenager from Greenwich who wore red to training when the kit didn’t require blue, who had a small, faded Arsenal sticker on the inside of his water bottle, who had never made a secret of the fact that he had grown up watching Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp and dreaming of Highbury.
Greenwich was Arsenal country as much as it was Spurs country, the South-East London fault line where North London loyalties bled south, and Eze had fallen on the Arsenal side.
Which made his hatred of Tottenham not just personal but tribal. He hadn’t just been rejected by Spurs at fourteen he had been rejected by the team he despised most in the world. The team that his Arsenal-supporting family had taught him to hate before he could even kick a ball.
Being rejected by Tottenham hadn’t just damaged his career; it had been a humiliation the enemy telling him he wasn’t good enough, the club his family loathed stamping "not wanted" on his file. Palace had taken him in, had given him the pathway, had developed him into the player he was becoming.
He wore the Palace shirt with genuine pride and affection. But underneath the blue, the red bled through not as disloyalty, but as identity. You could be a Palace player and still be, in the deepest chambers of your footballing heart, a boy from Greenwich who had grown up screaming at the television when Arsenal scored.
The feature dropped at seven a.m. on Sunday morning.
Emma read it first. She was sitting up in bed, her laptop open, her reading glasses on, a cup of coffee cooling on the bedside table. I was lying beside her, half-awake, the Sunday morning light filtering through the curtains, when she said: "Danny. You need to read this."
The Athletic headline: "THE BOY THEY THREW AWAY: Eberechi Eze, the Arsenal fan who was rejected by Tottenham and got his revenge at Wembley."
The feature was beautifully written, a long-form piece built around interviews with Eze’s family, his forr coaches at the Tottenham academy, and two anonymous sources at Crystal Palace who had confird the details.
It traced Eze’s journey from a council estate in Greenwich to the Spurs academy at eleven, through the three years of developnt that had ended abruptly when a Tottenham scout unnad had written in his assessnt report that Eze "lacked the physical attributes to compete at the highest level."
He had been released at fourteen. His mother had cried. His father, an Arsenal season-ticket holder, had driven him to the Crystal Palace academy trial the following week and said: "Show them what Tottenham couldn’t see."
He had. He was showing them still.
The internet absorbed the story and did what the internet does it amplified it, distorted it, mythologised it, and turned it into a narrative so powerful that it transcended football and beca sothing approaching folklore.
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