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They turned back toward the dressing room, footsteps echoing softly as they walked. The night wasn't finished yet, but its shape was clear now and Arsenal were still standing.
The corridor swallowed them again as they walked.
Concrete underfoot. White lights humming softly overhead. The distant echo of laughter still leaking from the dressing room like warmth escaping through a cracked door. Wenger's words lingered in the air on go enjoy it with your teammates that not as an instruction, but as permission.
Francesco felt the night finally begin to loosen its grip.
By the ti they reached the dressing room again, the atmosphere had shifted. The music was still playing, but lower now, less frantic. Players were sprawled across benches, so half-dressed, so scrolling through their phones, others staring into space with the hollowed, satisfied look that only cos after surviving sothing imnse.
Alexis looked up as they entered. "Ah," he said, smirking. "The celebrities return."
Özil dropped onto the bench with an exaggerated sigh. "Never again."
Francesco laughed, shaking his head as he moved back toward his locker. The Man of the Match trophy was still there, exactly where he'd left it. He picked it up briefly, turning it in his hands, feeling its unexpected weight, then set it back down again.
Around him, conversations bubbled and overlapped.
Calls were being made from families, partners, friends. Laughter spiked as soone replayed a clip on their phone. Soone else argued loudly about who should get the last protein bar.
Francesco sat, leaned back against the locker, and let himself simply be there.
No caras.
No questions.
Just the hum of a team that knew it had earned sothing.
Eventually, the room began to empty. Staff ca and went. Kit n collected shirts. The music faded. Fatigue settled in properly now, deep and unavoidable.
By the ti the bus finally rolled out of the Bernabéu hours later, the city lights blurring past the windows, most of the team slept.
Francesco didn't.
He sat near the middle, headphones resting around his neck, staring out into the Madrid night. The reflection in the glass showed a tired face, eyes heavy, jaw relaxed. He replayed monts that not goals, not applause but small things. A look from Koscielny after a clearance. The feel of the ball on his foot before the second goal. Wenger's quiet nod.
So nights stayed with you.
This would be one of them.
Ti moved on, the way it always does.
Training sessions blurred together. Recovery days passed. Headlines ca and went. The Madrid night receded into mory, preserved and polished by replays and retellings, but no longer imdiate.
April arrived properly.
Spring edged into London, tentative but present. Trees around Colney budded. The air felt lighter. Wembley lood on the horizon, massive and unavoidable.
April 23rd, 2017.
FA Cup semi-final.
Manchester City.
The morning was quiet.
Too quiet.
By the ti the team bus pulled away from London Colney, the usual pre-match chatter was subdued. Players sat with headphones on, eyes closed, minds already drifting ahead. So stared out of the windows. Others leaned back, arms folded, breathing slow and controlled.
Francesco sat near the front this ti.
He preferred it that way on days like this.
The roads grew busier as they approached Wembley. Police escorts joined them, lights flashing intermittently. The stadium's arch appeared in the distance, pale against the sky, growing larger with every passing minute.
There it was.
Neutral ground.
Nothing neutral about it.
The bus slowed, then turned into the arrival area beneath the stands. As it ca to a stop, the engine idled for a mont longer than necessary, like it too needed ti to prepare.
The doors hissed open.
One by one, they stood.
Boots hit concrete. Bags were slung over shoulders. Jackets zipped. The air outside was cool, carrying that unmistakable Wembley sll from fresh turf, tal, anticipation.
Caras clicked from behind barriers. Fans shouted nas. Stewards guided them forward.
Francesco stepped down from the bus and looked up.
The arch curved overhead, impossibly vast.
This was where things were decided.
They moved as a group through the tunnels, boots echoing, until the dressing room doors swung open and swallowed them again.
Inside, everything was immaculate.
Benches neatly arranged. Shirts already hung, numbers facing out. Boots lined up precisely beneath each locker. The faint scent of fresh grass mixed with disinfectant.
Francesco found his place.
LEE — 9.
He set his bag down, unzipped it slowly.
No rush.
They changed into training kits first, the rhythm familiar and grounding. Tape wrapped. Laces tightened. Shin pads adjusted. Quiet jokes exchanged.
Then they moved.
The walk out to the pitch for warm-up always felt different at Wembley. Longer. More exposed. The stadium opened around them like a bowl of sound and colour.
Even half-full, it was imposing.
The grass glead under the lights. Perfect. Untouched.
As they stepped onto it, the noise rose with cheers, whistles, applause. Red scarves dotted the stands, clumped together like islands in a sea of blue and neutral colours.
Francesco jogged lightly, letting his legs wake up. The ball moved easily across the surface, slick and responsive. Passes zipped. Shots rang out. Laughter broke through the tension as soone skied one into the upper tier.
He stretched, turned, sprinted, slowed.
Breathing steady.
Body ready.
Manchester City ward up on the other half, their movents sharp, efficient. Vincent Kompany stood out imdiately that tall, composed, commanding. Francesco caught his eye once from across the pitch.
Just a look.
Nothing more.
Warm-up finished, they headed back inside.
The dressing room door closed, sealing them away from the noise again.
This was it now.
They changed into match kits in near silence, the weight of the occasion pressing down gently but insistently. Red shirts replaced training tops. White shorts. Red socks pulled high.
Wenger stood near the tactics board, waiting until everyone was seated.
Then he spoke.
"Tonight," he began, voice calm, steady, "we play our football."
He turned to the board.
"We will use a 4–3–3."
No murmurs. No surprises.
"Petr," he said, nodding toward Čech. "You are our goalkeeper."
Čech inclined his head, expression unreadable.
"Back four," Wenger continued. "From left to right: Andrew Robertson. Shkodran Mustafi. Laurent Koscielny. Kyle Walker."
Each na landed with quiet certainty. Robertson sat upright, jaw set. Koscielny nodded once, eyes already distant, focused.
"In midfield," Wenger said, tapping the center of the board, "N'Golo as the holding player. Santi and Aaron ahead of him."
Kanté smiled faintly. Cazorla rolled his shoulders. Ramsey exhaled, then leaned forward, elbows on knees.
"Up front," Wenger finished, "Alexis on the left. Serge on the right. Francesco through the middle and our captain today."
Francesco felt it settle in his chest.
Striker and captain.
Responsibility central.
He nodded.
"The bench," Wenger added, glancing around, "Emiliano. Nacho. Rob. Granit. Alex. Theo. Olivier."
He paused.
"This is a semifinal. It will not be perfect. There will be monts where you suffer. Rember who you are. Rember how you play."
He looked directly at Francesco then.
"And rember, you do this together."
No shouting.
No theatrics.
Just truth.
They stood.
Final adjustnts. Final looks. Hands slapped shoulders. A few quiet words exchanged.
Then the call ca.
They moved toward the tunnel.
The walk felt longer than it should have.
The tunnel was narrow, lined with concrete and bright lights. Referees stood ahead, checking watches, adjusting earpieces. Arsenal lined up behind them.
Manchester City filed in beside them.
Francesco took his place at the front.
And there, directly beside him, was Vincent Kompany.
The City captain stood tall, arms relaxed at his sides, gaze fixed straight ahead. His presence was calm, imposing, radiating authority earned over years.
Francesco glanced at him briefly.
Kompany returned the look.
A nod.
Respect.
The referee raised his hand.
A signal.
And then they were moving.
The tunnel opened, spilling them out into the night.
Wembley greeted them in full voice.
Lights blazed overhead, turning the pitch into a glowing stage. The roar of the crowd crashed down from all sides, thick and physical. Red and blue scarves waved. Flags rippled. Chants collided and overlapped.
Francesco stepped onto the grass and felt the night wrap around him.
This was it.
They lined up beside the referees.
Handshakes followed with officials first, then Manchester City players. Palms t. Eyes t. Polite words exchanged and forgotten instantly.
They posed for the team photo, eleven Arsenal players standing shoulder to shoulder, faces set, backs straight.
Then the captains were called forward.
Francesco and Kompany walked to the center circle together.
The referee spoke briefly, holding the coin between his fingers.
"Call it," he said.
Francesco didn't hesitate.
"Right."
The coin spun, flashed under the lights, then landed.
The referee smiled.
"Arsenal kickoff."
Francesco nodded, turned back toward his half, and jogged into position.
The whistle was coming.
The whistle ca.
Sharp. Clean. Final.
And just like that, the air changed.
For a split second, everything seed to pause from the noise, the lights, the weight of the mont before it all surged forward at once. Francesco took his first steps backward from the center circle, eyes already scanning, body already adjusting, instincts slipping into that familiar place where thought thinned out and movent took over.
Manchester City kicked into motion imdiately.
No feeling-out period. No cautious exchange.
They ca fast.
Agüero peeled off the shoulder of Mustafi within seconds, dragging him just wide enough to open a channel. De Bruyne ghosted into the half-space on the right, receiving the ball on the turn with that effortless glide that made him so dangerous. Sané exploded down the left, his pace stretching Kyle Walker instantly, forcing Arsenal's back line to retreat in unison.
The first wave hit hard.
A diagonal ball from De Bruyne sliced toward the edge of the box, skidding off the turf. Koscielny stepped across decisively, intercepting just before Agüero could pounce, his clearance punched high and wide.
The crowd roared.
Half relief. Half warning.
City pressed again.
Fernandinho snapped into a challenge on Ramsey, knocking the ball loose. Silva collected it, head up, eyes flicking between runners like he was choosing notes in a lody. He slipped a pass into Agüero's feet just inside the box.
Agüero turned.
Shot.
Čech reacted instantly, diving low to his right, gloves parrying the ball away with a sharp thud that echoed louder than it should have.
Francesco felt it in his chest even from halfway up the pitch.
That was the tone.
Manchester City weren't here to wait.
They wanted to drown Arsenal early.
For the first ten minutes, it felt like Arsenal were absorbing more than playing. City's front three rotated constantly with Agüero dropping, Sané darting inside, De Bruyne arriving late. The movent pulled and stretched, testing communication, testing nerve.
"Hold!" Koscielny shouted, arms wide.
"Step!" Walker barked back.
Kanté was everywhere.
He snapped into tackles, intercepted passes that looked impossible to reach, and sohow always seed to land on his feet, already moving again before anyone else had finished reacting. When Silva tried to slip away from him, Kanté tracked him relentlessly, body low, balance perfect, like gravity itself favored him.
Cazorla dropped deep, offering angles, trying to slow the rhythm. Ramsey moved the ball quickly when he got it, one touch, two at most, refusing to let City's press settle.
Francesco worked constantly.
He checked toward the ball, then spun away. He dragged Kompany with him one mont, then darted into the space Otandi left the next. He could feel the defenders learning him in real ti when to step, when to hold, when to pass him on.
It was physical.
Kompany clipped him once, shoulder into ribs, just enough to remind him he was there.
Francesco absorbed it, didn't complain.
He liked that kind of defender.
At around the tenth minute, Arsenal finally found so breathing room.
A loose clearance fell to Cazorla near the center circle. He didn't hesitate that just turned away from pressure with that smooth, almost casual swivel, then slid the ball out wide to Gnabry.
Gnabry drove forward, pace sharp, forcing Clichy back. Sanchez mirrored the run on the opposite side, arms pumping, eyes locked on the back line.
The move fizzled out eventually, but sothing shifted.
Arsenal had felt the ball.
They rembered themselves.
Three minutes later, it happened.
It started quietly.
Kanté intercepted a pass ant for Yaya Touré near the center circle, his foot sneaking in like a pickpocket. He nudged the ball to Ramsey, who imdiately played it sideways to Cazorla.
Cazorla looked up.
Francesco was already moving.
He drifted off Kompany's shoulder, not sprinting, just easing into the space between center-back and full-back, trusting the timing. Cazorla saw it instantly.
The pass was perfect.
Threaded. Weighted. Rolled with just enough pace to beat Otandi's outstretched leg.
Francesco took it in stride.
One touch to set.
Bravo rushed off his line.
Francesco didn't rush.
He opened his body and guided the ball past the keeper with the inside of his right foot, calm as a training finish, sending it sliding into the far corner.
For half a second, there was silence.
Then Wembley erupted.
Red exploded upward from the stands. Arms flew into the air. Noise crashed down in a wave so loud it felt physical, like a shove between the shoulder blades.
Francesco didn't celebrate wildly.
He turned, fists clenched, jaw tight, and let out a single shout that raw, sharp, released. His teammates were on him instantly.
Cazorla wrapped him up first. Sanchez followed, yelling sothing unintelligible directly into his ear. Ramsey slapped the back of his head.
1–0 Arsenal.
City didn't panic.
They couldn't afford to.
They restarted quickly, pushing the tempo again, trying to respond before the goal could settle in Arsenal's bones. De Bruyne took more responsibility now, drifting wider to escape Kanté's shadow. Sané switched flanks briefly, testing Robertson instead.
The pressure ca in waves.
But Arsenal held.
Čech commanded his box, punching away a dangerous cross, shouting instructions with authority that cut through the noise. Mustafi and Koscielny stayed tight, compact, refusing to be dragged too far apart.
Francesco dropped deeper at tis, helping link play, drawing fouls when needed. He could feel Kompany's frustration growing with small shoves, tighter marking, a hand left on the shoulder a beat longer than necessary.
Then, just before the half-hour mark, Arsenal struck again.
This one was faster.
More violent.
It began with Ramsey bursting forward from midfield, carrying the ball through the center like he was cutting a path through undergrowth. Fernandinho tried to step in, mistid it. Ramsey skipped past, eyes up.
Alexis was already peeling away on the left.
Ramsey slipped the pass through the channel, splitting Clichy and Otandi.
Sanchez took it first ti.
He didn't hesitate.
One touch to set, second to strike.
The shot flew low and hard across Bravo, kissing the inside of the post before slamming into the net.
2–0.
Alexis slid on his knees, fists pounding the turf, screaming toward the Arsenal end. Ramsey followed him, arms wide, face split by a grin that was half joy, half disbelief.
Francesco jogged over, pulling Sanchez up, gripping his shoulder.
"We're not done," he said.
Alexis nodded fiercely.
City were rattled now.
You could feel it in the stands, in the slight delay in their movents, in the way Silva looked around for calm and didn't imdiately find it. Pep Guardiola barked instructions from the touchline, arms slicing through the air.
And then, inevitably, City responded.
At the thirty-seventh minute, they found their way back in.
It started with Yaya Touré muscling past Ramsey near the center circle, using his body like a shield. He drove forward, head up, ignoring Kanté snapping at his heels.
Agüero drifted right, pulling Mustafi with him. De Bruyne hovered, ready to pounce.
Touré spotted the gap.
The pass was simple.
Devastating.
Slid straight into Agüero's path at the edge of the box.
Agüero took one touch to set himself and smashed it low into the corner, beyond Čech's reach.
2–1.
The City end erupted.
Blue flares of noise shot upward, chants rising, belief returning in an instant.
Francesco stood near the center circle, hands on hips, breathing hard.
He caught Kanté's eye.
"We're fine," Francesco said.
Kanté nodded.
The rest of the half was tense.
City pushed, energized by the goal, probing for another before the break. Arsenal dropped just a yard deeper, more compact, more pragmatic. Cazorla slowed the tempo whenever he could, drawing fouls, recycling possession.
Francesco continued to battle, holding the ball up under pressure, winning free kicks, buying seconds. Once, he spun away from Kompany and surged forward, only to be hauled down cynically.
The referee warned Kompany.
Francesco just smiled faintly.
When the whistle finally ca for halfti, it felt like an exhale everyone had been holding for too long.
Players trudged toward the tunnel, sweat-soaked, chests heaving.
Inside the dressing room, the noise faded again.
Boots clattered to the floor. Shirts were tugged over heads. Water bottles emptied quickly.
Wenger waited until everyone was seated.
Then he spoke.
"Good," he said simply.
Not praise.
Acknowledgnt.
"But not finished."
He paced slowly, eyes moving from face to face.
"They will co again," he continued. "With more urgency. More risk. We must be intelligent."
He pointed toward Kanté, Cazorla, Ramsey.
"Control the center. Do not chase shadows. Make them run."
Then to the back line.
"Stay compact. Trust each other."
Finally, his gaze settled on Francesco.
"When the mont cos," Wenger said quietly, "be decisive."
Francesco nodded.
He could feel it.
The second half was waiting.
And it wouldn't be kind.
The second half began the way the first had ended, without rcy.
The whistle cut through the noise again, and Manchester City surged forward as if they had been waiting in a crouch for fifteen minutes, coiled and ready. There was no patience now. No probing. No gentle buildup. Guardiola had clearly lit sothing under them in the dressing room, and they ca out with the singular intent of overwhelming Arsenal before they could find their footing again.
Francesco felt it imdiately.
The tempo jumped two gears in the opening seconds. City pressed higher, tighter, their lines compressed to suffocate space. Fernandinho stepped almost alongside Agüero at tis, snapping into challenges with reckless urgency. De Bruyne road freely, no longer staying disciplined on the right but drifting wherever danger could be manufactured. Sané stayed wide, stretching Walker to the breaking point, while Clichy and Navas pushed up aggressively, effectively turning City's shape into sothing closer to a constant wave than a formation.
Arsenal wobbled.
Just slightly.
But at this level, slight was enough.
The first few minutes were chaotic. Clearances ca quicker, less composed. Ramsey tried to carry the ball forward but was forced back by a swarm of blue shirts. Xhaka attempted to slow things down with longer passes, but City were reading them now, stepping in front, turning possession over almost instantly.
"Calm!" Čech shouted from his box, arms wide, voice cracking through the din.
Easier said than done.
Francesco dropped deeper again, trying to give them an outlet, trying to help knit sothing together. He took a ball on the half-turn and spun away from Kompany, but Otandi stepped up sharply, crunching into him with enough force to send him skidding across the turf.
The referee waved play on.
City kept coming.
At the fifty-second minute, the pressure finally cracked sothing.
It happened quickly.
Too quickly.
Agüero picked the ball up near the halfway line and drove forward, cutting diagonally across Mustafi's path. Mustafi backed off at first, trying to shepherd him away from danger, but Agüero dropped his shoulder and accelerated, that low center of gravity making him almost impossible to knock off balance cleanly.
Mustafi lunged.
A split second late.
Agüero went down.
The whistle shrilled.
Francesco felt his stomach drop even before the referee's arm went up.
Free kick.
Thirty yards out.
Central.
Dangerous.
Mustafi stood frozen for a mont, hands on hips, staring at the turf. Koscielny moved toward him imdiately, hand on his back, murmuring sothing low and urgent. Kanté jogged back, eyes already on the ball, mind racing through scenarios.
De Bruyne placed it carefully.
Too carefully.
That was always the tell.
Instead of shooting, he clipped it that delicately, wickedly into the box, arcing it toward the far post where Yaya Touré had peeled away from his marker.
Touré rose.
No one matched his jump.
His forehead t the ball with a dull, brutal thump, redirecting it back across goal. Čech reacted late, stretching, fingertips grazing nothing but air.
The net rippled.
2–2.
For a heartbeat, Wembley went quiet.
Then the City end detonated.
Blue erupted, noise pouring downward like a flood breaking through a dam. Guardiola punched the air on the touchline, shouting sothing toward the pitch, face alight with vindication.
Francesco stood near the center circle, hands on his head now, breathing hard.
Just like that.
Gone.
The lead they had built so carefully had dissolved under pressure.
Arsenal looked shaken.
Not broken, but rattled.
City sensed it.
They pressed harder still, emboldened, their confidence surging. Sterling began warming up on the touchline, his pace a looming threat. Silva continued to drift, trying to pull Kanté out of position. Agüero prowled, sniffing for another mistake.
For ten minutes after the equalizer, Arsenal suffered.
There was no other word for it.
They chased shadows. They defended their box in numbers. Crosses flew in. Shots were blocked. Čech made a sharp save from De Bruyne, then another from Sané, each t with roars from both sets of fans.
Francesco found himself tracking back more than he liked, helping Walker double up on Sané, sprinting forty yards to close angles, lungs burning.
This was the part Wenger had warned them about.
The suffering.
At the sixty-third minute, Wenger made his move.
The fourth official's board went up.
Alexis Sánchez's number lit first.
Then Santi Cazorla's.
A murmur rippled through the Arsenal support with surprise, confusion, apprehension.
Giroud stood, rolling his shoulders, adjusting his shirt. sut Özil followed, calm as ever, expression unreadable.
As they stepped onto the pitch, Francesco's eyes t Wenger's briefly.
The ssage was clear.
Adapt.
Giroud took his place centrally, imdiately offering a physical presence, backing into Kompany, arms wide, chest out. Francesco drifted left instinctively, feeling the unfamiliarity of it, the subtle shift in angles and responsibilities.
Left winger.
Not his natural ho, but not foreign either.
Özil slipped into midfield, offering control, intelligence, calm. Guardiola responded instantly, pulling Silva and sending on Sterling, injecting raw pace into City's attack.
The shape of the ga changed again.
With Giroud up top, Arsenal finally had soone who could hold the ball under pressure, who could bring others into play with his back to goal. Francesco adjusted his runs, starting wider, timing diagonal darts inside rather than occupying the central defenders constantly.
It felt strange at first.
Different reference points.
Different rhythm.
But also… freeing.
From the left, he could see the ga unfold differently. He could attack space instead of fighting for it. He could isolate Navas one-on-one, test him with pace and movent rather than brute strength.
The ga settled, if only slightly.
Özil's presence slowed things just enough. He demanded the ball, recycled it calmly, forced City to think rather than simply react. Kanté continued his endless work, snapping into tackles, covering ground that seed to stretch impossibly under his feet.
At seventy minutes, Arsenal carved out a chance.
It ca from a Giroud knockdown, chesting the ball into Francesco's path as he cut inside from the left. Francesco took a touch and unleashed a curling shot toward the far corner.
Bravo tipped it wide with a strong hand.
Francesco slapped the turf in frustration.
That had been close.
City answered almost imdiately, Sterling tearing past Robertson and whipping a low cross across the six-yard box. Agüero slid in, inches from connecting, Čech sprawling to smother the danger.
The match teetered.
Back and forth.
Every challenge felt heavier. Every sprint burned deeper. The noise never dipped, never relented, Wembley alive and breathing with the rhythm of the ga.
Francesco could feel the fatigue creeping in now, not just in his legs but in his decision-making, in the way monts seed to blur together slightly. He shook his head, refocused, reminded himself where he was.
This was Wembley.
This was a semifinal.
There was no room for drifting.
He glanced at Giroud, who gave him a thumbs-up after winning another aerial duel. They were beginning to understand each other, adjusting movents instinctively, finding pockets of space between City's lines.
Francesco glanced at Giroud, who gave him a thumbs-up after winning another aerial duel. They were beginning to understand each other now, not with words, not even with eye contact, but with those small, instinctive movents that only co when two players stop thinking and start trusting. Giroud knew when Francesco would dart inside. Francesco knew when Giroud would pin a defender just long enough to create a pocket.
The clock ticked on.
Seventy-one minutes.
Seventy-two.
The ga hovered on a knife's edge, stretched thin by fatigue and tension. You could feel it in the stands, that collective tightening of shoulders, the way chants rose and fell uncertainly, as if even the supporters were afraid to push too hard and break sothing fragile.
City were still dangerous, still aggressive, but the frantic edge of their earlier dominance had dulled just a touch. Özil's calm had begun to seep into Arsenal's play, slowing the tempo in key monts, forcing City to retreat five yards here, reset there. Kanté remained tireless, a constant blur of interceptions and recoveries, but now he had help. The midfield was no longer drowning.
Francesco wiped sweat from his brow as he tracked back into position, chest heaving, lungs burning with that deep ache that ca only late in big matches. He could taste salt on his lips. His legs felt heavy, but alive, like coiled springs straining under load.
This was the mont.
He didn't know why, exactly. There was no sign, no sudden clarity. Just a feeling. A tightening in his gut. A quiet certainty settling sowhere behind his ribs.
The seventy-third minute arrived almost unnoticed.
The move began deep.
Özil dropped toward the halfway line, ghosting away from Sterling, receiving the ball with that effortless touch that seed to cushion everything. He turned in one smooth motion, head already up, scanning, calculating. City's midfield stepped forward, trying to close him down, but they were a fraction too late.
Francesco started wide on the left, hugging the touchline, forcing Navas to respect the width. Giroud positioned himself between Kompany and Otandi, arms out, back straight, ready for the collision. Gnabry hovered on the right, prepared to sprint.
Özil saw it all.
He always did.
With the outside of his boot, he slipped a pass forward that soft, almost lazy in appearance, but perfectly weighted that threading it into the channel between Navas and Kompany.
That was Francesco's cue.
He exploded inward.
Not wide.
Inside.
He cut across Kompany's blind side, accelerating just as the defender turned his head. For half a second, there was space. That was all he needed.
The ball arrived at his feet as if drawn there.
One touch.
He pushed it ahead of himself, angling toward the edge of the box. Otandi lunged across, trying to close the angle, but Francesco shifted his body, rolling the defender just enough to keep the ball on his stronger foot.
Bravo rushed out.
Ti slowed.
Francesco could hear the crowd now, the sudden intake of breath, the sound of tens of thousands of people rising to their feet at once. He didn't rush. He never rushed in these monts. He rembered Wenger's voice from the dressing room.
When the mont cos, be decisive.
He opened his body and struck the ball low, guiding it across the keeper with precision rather than power. Bravo stretched, fingertips brushing air, montum carrying him the wrong way.
The ball slid into the far corner.
Net.
For a split second, the world stopped.
Then Wembley exploded.
Red erupted everywhere. Noise crashed down from the stands like thunder breaking overhead. Arms flew up. Bodies surged forward. The sound was so loud it felt like it rattled Francesco's bones.
He turned and scread.
Not in anger.
Not in defiance.
In release.
His teammates were on him in an instant. Giroud wrapped him up from behind, nearly lifting him off the ground. Özil arrived next, smiling now, hand gripping Francesco's shoulder. Kanté jumped into the pile, laughing, breathless.
2–3.
Arsenal were ahead again.
Francesco pulled away slowly, chest heaving, eyes flicking instinctively toward the scoreboard as if he needed proof. There it was, glowing back at him.
3–2.
He raised a fist toward the Arsenal end.
The Manchester City side of Wembley went silent.
Not imdiately.
At first, there were scattered groans, shouts of frustration. Then, as the realization settled, a heavy quiet fell over that half of the stadium. They knew what this ant. They needed another goal now just to survive, to force extra ti. And they also knew what Arsenal would do next.
They would defend.
With everything.
Guardiola paced furiously on the touchline, hands slicing through the air, barking instructions. City restarted quickly, urgency spilling over into haste. Passes were forced. Runs were made a fraction too early.
Arsenal dropped deeper.
Not recklessly.
Intelligently.
The back line compressed. Kanté and Özil sat closer together. Giroud stayed high, offering an outlet, a pressure valve. Francesco tracked back again, slotting into shape, lungs burning but mind sharp.
The seventy-eighth minute ca and went.
City pushed.
Sterling drove at Robertson again and again, trying to force sothing, anything. De Bruyne attempted a speculative shot from distance that sailed over the bar. Agüero wriggled free once, firing low, but Čech smothered it cleanly, chest behind the ball, arms strong.
Each clearance was t with cheers now, every block, every interception greeted like a goal. The Arsenal fans understood exactly what they were watching.
Survival.
At the eightieth minute, Wenger made another change.
Ramsey's number ca up.
Xhaka rose from the bench, jaw set, eyes focused. As Ramsey jogged off, exhaustion etched into his face, Wenger clasped his arm briefly, murmuring sothing close to his ear.
Fresh legs.
Fresh steel.
Guardiola responded in kind, replacing Fernandinho with Fernando, adding more bite to City's midfield. It was all-out now. Calculations gone. Risk accepted.
The next few minutes blurred into a series of desperate monts.
City threw bodies forward. Crosses rained in. Arsenal cleared, reset, cleared again. Kompany went up for a header in Arsenal's box, desperate enough now to abandon his defensive duties entirely.
Francesco could barely feel his legs anymore. They moved on instinct, on muscle mory, driven by sothing deeper than thought. His lungs burned with every sprint, every recovery run, but he didn't slow.
Not now.
Not here.
At the eighty-fifth minute, Arsenal struck again.
It ca from the right this ti.
A rare mont of space.
Gnabry collected the ball near the touchline after a hurried City clearance. Instead of recycling it, instead of slowing things down, he drove forward with intent, legs pumping, eyes locked on the box.
Giroud sensed it instantly.
He peeled off Kompany, drifting toward the near post, arms out, using his body to create just enough separation. Otandi tried to track him, but he was half a step behind.
Gnabry whipped the cross in.
Low.
Fast.
Perfect.
Giroud t it first ti, stabbing his foot through the ball with controlled aggression. The shot flew past Bravo before he could react, slamming into the net at the near post.
4–2.
Wembley erupted again.
This ti, there was no hesitation. No doubt. No tension held back.
This was it.
Giroud slid on his knees toward the corner, fists clenched, head thrown back. Gnabry sprinted after him, screaming, arms wide. The rest of the team followed, piling on, a mass of red and white and exhausted joy.
Francesco arrived last, bending forward, hands on his knees, breathing hard, eyes stinging with sweat.
He looked up at the scoreboard again.
4–2.
Finality.
The City end was silent now.
Not stunned.
Resigned.
They knew.
Everyone knew.
The remaining minutes passed in a strange, suspended state. City still tried, still pushed, but the belief was gone. Arsenal kept their shape, closed spaces, took the sting out of the ga. Xhaka snapped into a late tackle, roaring encouragent afterward. Kanté intercepted one final pass and drew a foul, staying down just long enough to let the seconds tick away.
When the fourth official raised the board for stoppage ti, the groan from City fans was almost perfunctory.
It didn't matter.
Arsenal managed the final monts with maturity, knocking the ball into corners, drawing fouls, forcing City to chase shadows that were no longer there.
And then the whistle ca.
Sharp.
Clean.
Final.
For a split second, everything froze.
Then it broke.
Arsenal players threw their arms into the air. So dropped to their knees. Others ran toward the stands, fists pumping, faces split with joy and disbelief.
Francesco stood still for a mont, hands on his hips, chest heaving, eyes scanning the pitch as if he needed to see it whole.
Wembley.
Floodlights blazing.
Red everywhere.
They had done it.
4–2.
FA Cup final.
Kanté reached him first, wrapping him in a hug so tight it nearly knocked the air from his lungs. "You again," Kanté laughed breathlessly. "Always you."
Francesco laughed back, exhausted, elated.
Giroud clapped him on the shoulder. "Left winger now, eh?" he teased.
Francesco shook his head, smiling. "Only when needed."
Wenger stood on the touchline, arms folded, watching it all with that familiar, composed smile. When Francesco caught his eye, Wenger nodded.
Just once.
That was enough.
As the celebrations continued around him, Francesco felt the weight of the night finally settle that not as exhaustion, but as sothing heavier, richer as they were going to the final.
______________________________________________
Na : Francesco Lee
Age : 18 (2015)
Birthplace : London, England
Football Club : Arsenal First Team
Championship History : 2014/2015 Premier League, 2014/2015 FA Cup, 2015/2016 Community Shield, 2016/2017 Premier League, 2015/2016 Champions League, and Euro 2016
Season 16/17 stats:
Arsenal:
Match: 46
Goal: 74
Assist: 3
MOTM: 11
POTM: 1
England:
Match: 1
Goal: 1
Assist: 0
MOTM: 0
Season 15/16 stats:
Arsenal:
Match Played: 60
Goal: 82
Assist: 10
MOTM: 9
POTM: 1
England:
Match Played: 2
Goal: 4
Assist: 0
Euro 2016
Match Played: 6
Goal: 13
Assist: 4
MOTM: 6
Season 14/15 stats:
Match Played: 35
Goal: 45
Assist: 12
MOTM: 9
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