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Chapter 482 - 454. Champions League Round Of 16 First Legz

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As they headed for the door, Francesco paused for just a second, glancing back at the silent television. Last night was done, as next challenge was already waiting and he was ready for it.

The days that followed slipped by quietly at first, then all at once.

Time had a way of doing that when the season reached this point when every fixture carried weight, when conversations stopped being about form and started being about consequence.

The storm around Stamford Bridge faded into background noise, replaced by training sessions, recovery work, tactical meetings, and the low, constant hum of anticipation that followed Arsenal everywhere now.

The incident didn't disappear, not completely. Headlines softened, then sharpened again depending on the day. Clips resurfaced. Opinions recycled themselves. But inside the club, it was already old news.

What mattered was what came next.

And what came next arrived quickly.

The Saturday after Chelsea felt almost deceptively calm.

Home ground. Familiar tunnel. Red everywhere. The Emirates under pale winter sun rather than floodlights. Francesco felt the difference immediately, like his body recognized the rhythm of home matches instinctively.

Hull City came to defend deep, compact, disciplined. Arsenal came to dominate.

From the opening whistle, it was clear which way the match would tilt.

Alexis Sánchez was electric. Restless. Relentless. He scored the first just before the half-hour mark, ghosting in at the far post to convert a low cross after relentless pressure. The second came early in the second half with classic Alexis driving inside from the left, shifting the ball onto his right, and whipping it past the keeper before the defense could set.

Francesco's goal arrived later.

A moment of patience rather than force.

Özil slid a pass through the narrowest of channels, the kind that barely existed until it did. Francesco timed his run perfectly, took one touch to open his body, and finished calmly, guiding the ball into the corner as the crowd rose around him.

3–0.

Controlled. Professional. Ruthless in its own quiet way.

No tunnel drama. No flashpoints. Just football.

As Francesco walked off that day, applause followed him again that not the defiant roar of Stamford Bridge, but the warm, steady appreciation of a home crowd that trusted him completely.

That night, back at the flat, he and Leah barely spoke about Chelsea at all.

They talked about Munich.

Then on 15 February 2017, Germany greeted them with cold clarity.

The kind of winter air that felt sharper, cleaner, as if it stripped away excess and left only what mattered. Snow lined the edges of the streets, packed down into grey ridges by passing cars. The sky hung low and pale, sunlight diffused through thick cloud.

The team bus rolled steadily through Munich, flanked by police escorts, the city unfolding outside the windows in quiet, orderly symmetry.

Inside the bus, the mood was focused.

Not tense.

Focused.

Some players wore headphones, eyes closed, locked into their own rituals. Others stared out the window, watching the Allianz Arena grow larger with every passing minute as its curved shell already visible in the distance, faintly glowing even in daylight.

Francesco sat near the front, captain's armband already folded carefully in his bag, his phone untouched in his hand. He wasn't scrolling. He wasn't listening to music.

He was thinking.

About Bayern.

About what this tie represented.

About nights like this with Champions League nights away from home, where reputations were either reinforced or rewritten entirely.

Van Dijk leaned across the aisle slightly.

"Big one," he said quietly.

Francesco nodded. "Exactly the kind you want."

Xhaka sat further back, laughing softly at something Walker had said, but the laughter never fully escaped the bubble of the bus. It stayed contained, controlled.

Wenger stood near the front, hands folded behind his back, eyes forward. He hadn't spoken much since they left the hotel. He didn't need to.

The Allianz Arena loomed now, unmistakable.

A modern cathedral.

The bus slowed.

Turned.

Pulled into the underground arrival area.

And stopped.

The doors hissed open.

Cold air rushed in.

"Alright," Wenger said calmly. "Let's go."

Stepping off the bus felt like crossing a threshold.

The concrete beneath their boots was cold and unforgiving. The air smelled faintly of metal, disinfectant, and something electric with anticipation, maybe. Staff moved with practiced efficiency, guiding the team through secure corridors that echoed softly with footsteps and murmured instructions.

Bayern's presence was already felt.

Red banners. German signage. The subtle confidence of a club that considered this place an extension of itself.

The Arsenal dressing room was immaculate.

Red shirts laid out neatly. Boots lined in perfect pairs. Tactical boards already in place. The hum of the stadium filtered through the walls, distant but unmistakable.

Francesco hung his jacket, sat, and unlaced his shoes slowly.

No rush.

This was routine now.

They changed into training kits without ceremony, conversations low and clipped. A few jokes passed between Gnabry and Sánchez. Koscielny stretched methodically, face set, eyes down. Cech moved quietly, already focused inward.

When they headed out for the warm-up, the stadium revealed itself fully.

The Allianz Arena was a bowl of red and white, stands rising steeply, sound already beginning to gather even though kick-off was still some way off. Bayern supporters filled their sections early, scarves held loosely for now, voices murmuring like an approaching tide.

As Francesco jogged out, he glanced up.

This place had history.

This place demanded respect.

The warm-up was sharp.

Short passes. Quick movements. Shots from distance. Final touches honed and re-honed. Wenger watched closely from the sideline, arms folded, occasionally speaking to Boro Primorac, occasionally gesturing for a minor adjustment.

Francesco finished with a series of controlled finishes, placing rather than blasting, his movements economical, precise.

When the whistle signaled the end of warm-up, he jogged off with the rest of the team, lungs warm, muscles awake.

The real work was about to begin.

Back inside, the atmosphere shifted again.

Training kits came off.

Match kits went on.

Red shirts. White sleeves. Clean lines.

Francesco pulled his shirt over his head, adjusted it, then tied his boots carefully, tugging the laces tight. He slid the captain's armband onto his left arm last, smoothing it into place.

Wenger stood in front of the tactical board now.

"Alright," he said calmly, waiting until every eye was on him. "This is how we start."

He tapped the board.

"Four-two-three-one."

No murmurs. No surprise.

"Petr," Wenger continued, nodding toward Cech. "Goal."

Cech inclined his head slightly.

"Back four," Wenger said, moving his marker from left to right. "Nacho Monreal. Virgil Van Dijk. Laurent Koscielny. Kyle Walker."

Van Dijk's jaw set. Walker rolled his shoulders once. Monreal and Koscielny exchanged brief glances.

"Double pivot," Wenger said. "N'Golo Kanté. Granit Xhaka."

Kanté smiled faintly, as if the pressure didn't exist. Xhaka sat taller, nodding once.

"Mesut," Wenger said, pointing to the central attacking space. "You are the link. Control the rhythm."

Özil nodded, calm, composed.

"Left side, Alexis," Wenger continued. "Right side, Serge."

Sánchez cracked his neck once, eyes burning. Gnabry straightened, face focused, aware of the significance of this stadium for him personally.

"And up front," Wenger finished, placing the final marker. "Francesco. Captain. Lead the line."

Francesco met his gaze.

"I want discipline," Wenger said evenly. "I want courage. Bayern will press. They will try to suffocate you. Do not panic. We play our game."

He gestured toward the bench.

"Ospina. Robertson. Mustafi. Bellerín. Cazorla. Walcott. Giroud."

The substitutes listened intently.

"This is the first leg," Wenger concluded. "We are patient, but we are not timid."

He paused.

Then softened slightly.

"Enjoy it."

Silence followed for a moment.

Then Francesco stood.

He didn't shout.

He didn't pace.

He just spoke.

"Tonight is about belief," he said. "Not noise. Not reputation. Belief in what we do. We've earned the right to be here. Let's show it."

Heads nodded.

Hands clapped lightly.

That was enough.

The walk to the tunnel felt longer here.

The corridor opened gradually, the sound swelling with every step. The Champions League anthem began to echo faintly, then louder, then unmistakable.

They lined up behind the referees.

Arsenal on one side.

Bayern Munich on the other.

Francesco stood at the front, armband bright against his sleeve.

Beside him stood Philipp Lahm.

Bayern captain. Club legend. Calm authority radiating from every movement.

Lahm glanced sideways, offering a brief nod.

"Good luck," he said.

Francesco returned it. "You too."

No tension.

Just mutual respect.

The referee checked his watch.

Looked up.

Gave the signal.

They walked.

Out into the light.

The anthem swelled fully now, reverberating through the stands, through the bones, through history itself. Cameras flashed. Flags waved. The roar was deafening, but somehow distant too, as if it existed on another plane.

They lined up.

Shook hands with the referees.

Then with each other.

Francesco met eyes with Bayern players as they passed from Neuer, Müller, Lewandowski as each moment brief, each one charged.

They took their places for the team photo, eleven men standing shoulder to shoulder, expressions serious, focused, ready.

Then the captains stepped forward.

Francesco and Lahm met the referee at the center circle.

The coin was tossed.

Lahm called it.

Right.

Bayern Munich won the toss.

They chose to kick off.

Francesco turned, jogging back into position, eyes scanning the pitch one last time.

The Allianz Arena hummed with expectation.

The whistle cut cleanly through the noise.

Sharp.

Final.

And just like that, the waiting was over.

Bayern Munich got the ball rolling, a short, practiced tap backward as the Allianz Arena erupted properly for the first time that night. The roar wasn't just loud as it was layered. Thousands of voices stacked on top of each other, echoing off the curved walls, vibrating through the turf beneath Francesco's boots.

He shifted his stance, bouncing lightly on the balls of his feet, eyes locked forward.

This was real now.

Lewandowski drifted centrally immediately, hovering between Van Dijk and Koscielny, always on the shoulder, always testing the space. Douglas Costa hugged the left touchline, boots already chewing up grass as he accelerated and decelerated in quick bursts. Robben lurked on the opposite side, narrower, cutting in early, looking for that familiar angle onto his left foot.

Behind them, Bayern's midfield triangle began to assert itself.

Thiago Alcântara glided into pockets of space, always available, always offering an angle. Xabi Alonso dropped deeper, dictating tempo with the kind of calm that came from years of control. Arturo Vidal surged forward in sharp, aggressive bursts, snapping into tackles, pressing hard, trying to disrupt Arsenal's rhythm before it could settle.

Arsenal absorbed it.

For the first few minutes, it was about shape. Lines holding. Distances tight.

Kanté was everywhere already with closing down Thiago, then turning and tracking Vidal, then darting across to help Monreal as Douglas Costa tried to isolate him one-on-one. Xhaka stayed deeper, anchoring, scanning constantly, his passing lanes already forming in his mind.

Özil floated.

Not fixed.

Not static.

He drifted right to combine with Gnabry, then slipped back into the half-space, always offering an outlet when Arsenal won the ball.

Francesco dropped slightly at first, helping link play, drawing Hummels out of position just enough to create space behind. He barked instructions constantly, pointing, clapping once sharply when he wanted a press triggered.

"Now!"

Sánchez responded instantly, springing forward to close down Martínez. Gnabry mirrored him on the other side, forcing Lahm to play backward rather than forward.

For a few moments, the game teetered.

Bayern probing.

Arsenal resisting.

Then countering.

The first real Bayern chance came through Robben.

In the seventh minute, Alonso sprayed a diagonal ball out to the right, bypassing Arsenal's midfield press. Robben killed it dead with his left foot, shifted inside in one smooth motion, and whipped a curling effort toward the far post.

Cech read it early.

Two quick steps.

Strong hands.

The save was clean, confident.

Francesco clapped once sharply. "Good."

Moments later, Arsenal responded.

Xhaka intercepted a pass intended for Vidal and moved it quickly to Kanté, who didn't dwell on it. One touch, then straight into Özil's path. Özil turned on the half-turn, slipped a perfectly weighted ball out wide to Sánchez.

Sánchez exploded.

He took on Lahm immediately, pushing the ball past him and driving toward the box. Hummels shifted across, forcing Sánchez wide, but the Chilean still managed to cut a low ball across the six-yard area.

Francesco slid in.

Barely inches from contact.

Neuer smothered it at the last second.

The crowd exhaled.

So did Francesco.

He got back to his feet, eyes burning.

"We're in," he muttered to himself.

As the minutes passed, the match found its shape.

Lewandowski vs Van Dijk and Koscielny became a constant physical duel. Lewandowski tried to roll off shoulders, to pin and spin, but Van Dijk matched him stride for stride, strength for strength. Koscielny swept behind, timing his interventions perfectly.

On the flanks, Walker and Monreal were tested relentlessly.

Douglas Costa tried again and again to isolate Monreal, throwing stepovers, feints, sudden bursts of pace. Monreal held his ground, forcing him inside where Kanté waited.

Robben was quieter but more dangerous, choosing his moments, drifting inward, waiting for that one chance to strike.

And up front, Francesco fought his own war.

Hummels stayed tight, aggressive, stepping in early. Martínez covered behind him, alert to runs in behind. Lahm tucked in when necessary, offering extra support.

Francesco dropped deep, dragged markers with him, then spun away sharply when Arsenal recycled possession. He gestured constantly as where he wanted the ball, where he wanted the runs.

Xhaka watched it all.

And he waited.

As the opening came suddenly at 17th minute.

Not from chaos.

From patience.

Bayern had possession deep in Arsenal's half, Thiago and Alonso exchanging short passes, trying to pull Arsenal out of shape. Vidal surged forward, attempting a through ball toward Lewandowski that didn't quite have the weight.

Xhaka stepped in.

Clean.

He took the ball under pressure, body between Vidal and possession, and didn't hesitate. One touch to steady himself.

Then he looked up.

Francesco was already moving.

He'd dropped deep, dragging Hummels with him, then spun sharply, accelerating into the channel between Martínez and Lahm. The space opened for half a second.

That was enough.

Xhaka threaded the pass.

It wasn't flashy.

It was perfect.

The ball slid through Bayern's defensive line, skimming the grass, arriving exactly where Francesco needed it.

One touch.

He took it across his body, opening the angle.

Neuer rushed out, arms wide, imposing as ever.

Francesco didn't panic.

He lifted his head.

And chipped.

Just enough.

The ball arced delicately over Neuer's outstretched arm, kissed the inside of the far post, and rolled across the line.

Silence.

Then shock.

Then a pocket of red in the stands exploded.

Francesco turned away instantly, sprinting toward the corner, fists clenched, jaw tight. Sánchez reached him first, leaping onto his back. Gnabry followed, shouting something unintelligible into his ear.

Xhaka stood further back, fists pumping, eyes blazing.

1–0 Arsenal.

At the Allianz Arena.

Francesco pointed at Xhaka as they regrouped.

"Beautiful," he said.

Xhaka nodded once. "Finish was better."

The Bayern crowd reacted immediately with whistles, chants, a sudden rise in volume. Bayern players regrouped quickly too. Lahm clapped his hands, barking instructions. Alonso gestured for calm.

They had been here before.

They weren't rattled.

Then at 27th minute, Arsenal tried to build on it, but Bayern pushed back harder now.

The tempo increased.

Thiago began to find more space, wriggling free of Kanté's first press, forcing Xhaka to step up. Vidal surged again and again, snapping into challenges, driving Bayern forward.

The equalizer came from pressure.

Sustained.

Relentless.

It started with Douglas Costa, who finally beat Monreal cleanly, pushing the ball down the line and cutting a low cross into the box. Koscielny intercepted initially, but the clearance only went as far as Alonso.

Alonso recycled it instantly, switching play to Robben.

Robben took one touch.

Then another.

He cut inside Walker, creating just enough separation, and slipped a disguised pass into Lewandowski's feet.

Lewandowski spun.

Van Dijk stayed with him.

But Lewandowski was ruthless.

He shot early, low and hard across Cech.

The net rippled.

1–1.

The Allianz Arena erupted.

Lewandowski raised his arms briefly, then jogged back toward the center circle, expression calm, professional. Bayern players gathered, energized.

Francesco stood still for a moment, hands on hips.

Then he clapped.

"Reset," he called. "We're fine."

And Arsenal were.

Then at 30th minute, Arsenal response was immediate.

Not panicked.

Not rushed.

From kickoff, Arsenal moved the ball sharply, refusing to let Bayern's momentum settle. Kanté won a duel against Vidal, poked the ball free to Özil, who turned and slipped it wide to Sánchez.

Sánchez didn't wait.

He ran.

Straight at Martínez.

Then at Hummels.

Then between them.

It was pure individual brilliance.

A slalom through red shirts, feet moving faster than thought, shoulders dipping, balance perfect. Lahm tried to recover, but Sánchez was already past him.

Inside the box, Neuer advanced again.

Sánchez feinted right.

Cut left.

And smashed the ball into the roof of the net from a tight angle.

2–1 Arsenal.

Francesco didn't even celebrate properly.

He just laughed once, shaking his head in disbelief, before sprinting over to Sánchez and wrapping him in a fierce embrace.

"That's ridiculous," he said into his ear.

Sánchez grinned, breathless. "You like?"

The Allianz Arena fell quiet again, stunned by the speed of the response.

Arsenal had come to play.

The remaining fifteen minutes of the half were tense, tactical, unforgiving.

Bayern pushed, but more cautiously now.

Arsenal defended compactly, lines tight, communication constant. Kanté and Xhaka worked tirelessly, shielding the back four, closing passing lanes, forcing Bayern wide.

Francesco dropped deeper at times, helping hold possession, drawing fouls, slowing the tempo when needed. He was fouled twice in quick succession by Vidal, who grew increasingly frustrated.

Robben tried again from distance that wide.

Douglas Costa forced another save from Cech, who punched clear decisively.

Özil nearly slipped Francesco through again in the 42nd minute, but Martínez recovered just in time to block.

The referee glanced at his watch.

Then raised the whistle.

Half-time.

The tunnel swallowed them again, noise fading, adrenaline lingering.

Inside the dressing room, boots thudded against the floor. Shirts were tugged, sweat wiped away. Breathing slowly returned to normal.

Wenger waited.

He always did.

He let the moment breathe.

Then he spoke.

"Good," he said simply. "Very good."

He tapped the board lightly.

"But we can be better."

He pointed toward the flanks. "Bayern will target the wide areas more. We must help our full-backs. Wingers, track back when needed, then explode forward."

He turned to Xhaka and Kanté. "Stay disciplined. Don't get dragged."

Then to Francesco.

"They will try to isolate you," Wenger said calmly. "Use it. Bring others into play."

Francesco nodded.

Wenger stepped back.

"This is not over," he said. "But we are exactly where we want to be."

Silence followed.

Then Francesco stood again.

"They'll come," he said. "Harder. Faster."

He looked around the room.

"We don't blink."

Heads lifted.

Eyes focused.

The second half waited.

The teams emerged again into the noise.

The Allianz Arena had not cooled during the break. If anything, it felt tighter now, more expectant, the air heavy with belief on one side and defiance on the other. The Bayern supporters had found their voice again during halftime, scarves raised, chants rolling in waves around the bowl.

Francesco jogged back into position, adjusting the armband once more, eyes scanning the pitch. He could feel it from the shift. Bayern were not going to ease into this half. They were going to come hard, early, without apology.

Across from him, Lahm was already barking instructions. Vidal slapped his hands together once, twice. Robben stood with his hands on his hips, gaze fixed, unreadable.

The referee checked his watch.

Blew the whistle.

And the second half began.

As the second half start from the first touch, Bayern surged forward with intent.

This wasn't probing anymore.

This was pressure.

Alonso dropped even deeper, almost between the centre-backs, freeing Thiago to roam higher and wider. Vidal pushed on aggressively, arriving late into spaces Arsenal hadn't needed to defend in the first half.

The tempo jumped a gear.

Douglas Costa immediately went at Monreal again, twice in quick succession, forcing Walker to tuck in and Kanté to slide across. Robben began drifting centrally more often, dragging defenders with him, creating overloads.

Arsenal were pushed back.

Not panicked.

But stretched.

Francesco found himself deeper, helping relieve pressure, trying to hold the ball up when Arsenal managed to break out. Twice he won fouls with his back to goal, using his body intelligently, buying precious seconds.

But Bayern kept coming.

In the 47th minute, Thiago slipped free of Kanté with a subtle drop of the shoulder and released Vidal through the channel. Vidal's shot was fierce but straight at Cech, who parried it away with strong wrists.

The crowd roared approval anyway.

The warning was clear.

Francesco jogged back, clapping his hands together.

"Stay compact," he called. "Together."

Van Dijk nodded, breathing hard already.

The next attack came quicker.

Costa darted inside this time, drawing Monreal with him before slipping Robben into space on the right. Robben cut inside, shaped to shoot, then instead slid a pass into Lewandowski's feet.

Koscielny got there just in time, stabbing the ball away.

Barely.

The ball ricocheted out for a corner.

The Allianz Arena rose as one.

Then at 49th minute, the goal came.

The corner was half-cleared, headed only as far as Alonso, who calmly recycled possession again. Bayern reset instantly, refusing to allow Arsenal even a moment's relief.

Costa took the ball wide on the left, standing Monreal up this time, no tricks, just speed. He knocked it past him and whipped a low, vicious cross toward the near post.

Robben arrived like a ghost.

Untracked for half a second.

That was enough.

He met the ball first time with his left foot, guiding it low and hard across Cech before the keeper could set himself.

The net bulged.

2–2.

The Allianz Arena exploded properly now.

Not surprise.

Not relief.

Belief.

Robben wheeled away, fists clenched, jaw tight. Costa sprinted toward him, arms wide, shouting something lost in the noise. Bayern players converged, the red wall of supporters behind them in full voice.

Francesco stood just outside the box, hands briefly on his head.

Then he dropped them.

Clapped.

Once.

Twice.

"Alright," he said firmly. "Alright."

He jogged back toward the center circle, eyes steady, heart pounding. He could feel the momentum swinging, feel the danger in it. Bayern smelled blood now.

But so did Arsenal.

The restart was tense.

Bayern pressed high again, Vidal snapping into challenges, Thiago cutting off passing lanes. Arsenal struggled for a few minutes to get out, forced into clearances rather than construction.

Cech went long twice, aiming for Francesco, who battled with Hummels in the air. He won one, flicking it on for Sánchez, but Lahm recovered just in time to shepherd the ball out.

Then, gradually, Arsenal began to breathe again.

Xhaka slowed things down deliberately, taking an extra touch, forcing Vidal to commit, then slipping the ball sideways to Kanté. Kanté, as ever, was relentless, snapping at ankles, winning second balls, refusing to let Bayern settle completely.

Özil dropped deeper, almost alongside the midfield, offering a calming presence, his touches precise, his movement intelligent.

Francesco sensed it.

The shift.

The space.

He started drifting wider, dragging Hummels with him, then darting inside when Martínez stepped out. He gestured sharply to Sánchez, then to Özil.

"One more," he muttered. "Just one."

And it came.

Then at 57th minute move started innocuously.

Kanté won possession near the halfway line with a perfectly timed tackle on Vidal, poking the ball forward rather than sideways. It rolled into Özil's path, who turned on the half-turn, head already up.

Francesco checked his run.

Then exploded.

Özil slipped the pass into his feet just inside Bayern's half. Not behind the defence. Not into space.

To him.

To his feet.

Francesco took it on the half-turn, feeling Hummels tight to his back, Martínez stepping out, Lahm tucking in. For a split second, there was nowhere to go.

So he created it.

A sharp drop of the shoulder sent Hummels the wrong way. He nudged the ball past Martínez with his next touch, accelerating through the gap before it could close.

Suddenly he was free.

Thirty yards out.

Green grass ahead.

The crowd sucked in air.

Vidal chased, desperate, sliding in from behind, but Francesco rode the challenge, stumbling for half a step before regaining balance. Lahm came across, but he was already past him.

Neuer advanced.

Big.

Brave.

Trying to narrow the angle.

Francesco didn't slow.

Didn't hesitate.

He took one more touch, then shifted the ball onto his left foot, wrong-footing Neuer just enough.

And then he finished.

Low.

Precise.

Into the far corner.

Time seemed to stretch as the ball rolled, kissed the inside of the post, and crossed the line.

3–2 Arsenal.

For half a heartbeat, there was disbelief.

Then chaos.

Francesco slid on his knees, arms outstretched, shouting into the night, emotion pouring out of him. Sánchez sprinted the length of the pitch to reach him, tackling him to the ground in celebration. Kanté arrived next, laughing, breathless, piling on.

Xhaka raised both fists, roaring toward the away section.

Özil smiled quietly, jogging over, eyes shining.

Neuer stood frozen for a moment, hands on hips.

The Allianz Arena had fallen into stunned silence again, broken only by the small but defiant pocket of Arsenal supporters high in the stands.

Francesco got to his feet slowly, chest heaving.

He pointed to the badge.

Then to the away end.

Then he turned back toward his half, face set once more.

Work to do.

Bayern didn't panic.

But they were wounded.

Lahm gathered his teammates quickly, clapping his hands, urging calm. Alonso spoke sharply to Thiago, gesturing toward the center. Vidal wiped his face with his sleeve, frustration etched deep now.

Arsenal regrouped too.

Van Dijk leaned toward Francesco as they took positions again.

"That was special," he said quietly.

Francesco nodded. "Stay sharp."

The next few minutes were brutal.

Bayern threw everything forward.

Long spells of possession.

Quick switches of play.

Crosses from deep and from wide.

Robben tried again from the edge of the box that blocked by Xhaka. Lewandowski got his head to a looping cross over the bar. Costa fired one low that Cech smothered at the near post.

Arsenal defended with everything they had.

Bodies on the line.

Communication constant.

Kanté seemed to multiply, appearing everywhere at once, legs churning, eyes never stopping.

Francesco dropped deeper again, helping track runners, making himself available whenever Arsenal cleared their lines.

Every clearance, every interception felt like a small victory.

Then at 63th minute, Wenger stood on the touchline now, coat zipped tight, eyes sharp. He had been watching closely since the goal, reading the flow of the game.

He turned to the bench.

"Alex," he called.

Walcott was already up, pulling off his tracksuit top.

"And Santi."

Cazorla rose beside him, rolling his shoulders, calm as ever.

Francesco glanced over, reading it immediately.

Fresh legs.

More control.

More pace.

On the other side, Carlo Ancelotti was moving too.

Douglas Costa's number went up.

Joshua Kimmich stood, adjusting his shirt, focus intense.

The fourth official held the board aloft.

Arsenal substitutions first.

Serge Gnabry came off, sweat-soaked, having worked tirelessly. He exchanged a quick embrace with Walcott.

Mesut Özil followed, receiving warm applause even from sections of the home crowd—respect where it was due. He nodded once to Wenger, then to Francesco, before disappearing down the tunnel.

On came Theo Walcott.

On came Santi Cazorla.

Immediately, the shape shifted.

Walcott hugged the right touchline, stretching the pitch, offering an outlet for counters. Cazorla slotted into midfield, bringing composure, press resistance, and guile.

Then Bayern made their change.

Douglas Costa departed, frustration clear on his face.

Joshua Kimmich entered, youthful, intense, adding fresh energy and tactical flexibility.

The chess match continued.

Francesco clapped his hands again, calling the team in tighter.

"Same belief," he said. "Same focus."

The night kept tightening.

Every minute that passed after the substitutions felt heavier, denser, as if the stadium itself was leaning inward, trying to bend the game back toward Bayern's will. The Allianz Arena no longer roared constantly now; instead, it pulsed with surges of noise rising and falling, each Bayern attack pulling breath from forty, fifty, sixty thousand lungs at once.

Arsenal stood in the middle of it.

Holding.

Refusing.

After the changes, the rhythm shifted in subtle but important ways.

Cazorla's first touches were quiet, almost invisible, but they mattered. He didn't force anything. He didn't chase the spectacular. He took the ball, turned away from pressure with that familiar swivel of the hips, and gave Arsenal something priceless: calm.

Walcott, by contrast, was pure threat.

Every time Arsenal regained possession, even deep, Bayern's back line took a half-step back without meaning to. Hummels and Martínez glanced sideways more often now, aware of the space behind them, aware that one mistake could undo everything they were fighting to claw back.

Francesco noticed it immediately.

He started drifting left more often, pulling Hummels with him, leaving channels open for Walcott's runs. Sometimes he didn't even expect the ball as his movement alone was enough to stretch Bayern's shape.

Bayern kept coming.

They had no choice.

At 66 minutes, Vidal surged forward again, muscling past Xhaka and unleashing a shot from distance that screamed just wide of the post. At 69, Thiago danced through two challenges and slipped Lewandowski in behind, but Van Dijk matched him stride for stride and forced him wide enough that the angle disappeared.

Cech shouted constantly now, voice hoarse, organizing, commanding.

"Line! Line!"

Walker threw himself into a block from Robben that left him grimacing, but he sprang back up instantly, clapping, feeding off the moment.

Francesco tracked back to his own half at one point, sliding in to poke the ball away from Kimmich just as the Bayern substitute looked ready to cross. He popped back to his feet, breath ragged, and barked a quick instruction at Walcott.

"Stay high," he said. "Be ready."

Walcott nodded, eyes bright.

The minutes ticked on.

Seventy.

Seventy-two.

Seventy-five.

And then.

Then at 77th minute, the goal didn't come from pressure.

It came from composure.

Bayern had just forced Arsenal into a series of clearances, and the crowd was building itself back up, chanting louder, faster, desperate to drag their team forward again. Alonso pushed up even higher now, almost alongside Thiago, leaving just Hummels and Martínez behind.

That gamble cost them.

Cazorla received the ball deep in Arsenal's half after Kanté snapped into another challenge. Vidal went flying past, overcommitting, and suddenly Santi had space to lift his head.

He saw it instantly.

Walcott had already started his run.

Not straight.

Diagonal.

From the right touchline inward, slicing between Hummels and Lahm before either could react.

Cazorla didn't hesitate.

He slid the pass.

Perfect weight.

Perfect timing.

It split Bayern's back line like a seam tearing open.

Walcott was gone.

One touch to steady himself.

Neuer rushed out, big and brave again, narrowing the angle with that familiar authority.

Walcott didn't try to be clever.

He didn't need to.

He opened his body and passed the ball calmly into the corner, guiding it beyond Neuer's reach.

The net rippled.

4–2 Arsenal.

For a split second, there was nothing.

No noise.

No reaction.

Just disbelief.

Then the away end exploded.

Walcott sprinted toward the corner, arms wide, shouting, eyes blazing. Cazorla jogged after him, fists clenched, a grin spreading across his face.

Francesco reached Walcott first, grabbing him by the shoulders.

"That's it," he said fiercely. "That's it."

Van Dijk punched the air. Xhaka roared toward the sky. Kanté laughed, shaking his head in disbelief.

On the Bayern side, shoulders slumped.

Ancelotti stood frozen on the touchline, hands in his coat pockets, staring out at the pitch as if trying to calculate how this had slipped so far, so fast.

The Allianz Arena fell into an uneasy silence, broken only by scattered whistles and the distant chants of the Arsenal supporters, who now sang with unrestrained joy.

Francesco jogged back to the center circle, chest rising and falling, adrenaline flooding his system.

He looked up at the scoreboard.

4–2.

Away.

In Munich.

He felt something settle in his chest that not relief, not satisfaction, but belief hardened into certainty.

But still.

Work to do.

To their credit, Bayern didn't fold.

They couldn't.

Not in this stadium.

Not with this history.

They pushed again, throwing men forward with a kind of defiant desperation. Kimmich pushed higher, delivering crosses early. Robben swapped flanks briefly, trying to catch Monreal and Walker off guard. Lewandowski dropped deeper, attempting to drag defenders out and create space for late runners.

Arsenal absorbed it.

Bent.

But did not break.

Cazorla and Xhaka formed a clever partnership now, rotating, covering for one another, slowing the game whenever possible. Kanté remained relentless, snapping into challenges even as his legs screamed for rest.

At 81 minutes, Bayern came closest again.

Robben slipped free on the left this time, cut inside onto his left foot, and unleashed a curling shot that had the entire stadium rising in anticipation.

Cech flew.

Full stretch.

Fingertips.

The ball clipped the post and bounced away.

Francesco exhaled hard, hands briefly on his knees.

"Focus," he muttered. "Just focus."

Wenger stood rigid on the sideline, barely blinking.

Then came the corner at 83th minute.

Cazorla walked slowly toward the corner flag, ball tucked under his arm.

He took his time.

Not to provoke.

To breathe.

The noise around him was a strange mix now with anger, anxiety, resignation.

Inside the box, Van Dijk moved deliberately, positioning himself between Hummels and Martínez. He didn't rush. He didn't shove.

He waited.

Cazorla placed the ball carefully, took a few steps back, glanced once into the box.

Francesco caught his eye.

Just for a moment.

Cazorla nodded.

The whistle blew.

Cazorla's delivery was exquisite.

Whipped.

Inswinging.

Perfect height.

Van Dijk exploded into motion.

He rose above everyone, above Hummels, above Martínez, above Lewandowski as his leap powerful, his timing flawless.

He met the ball with his forehead and thundered it down toward goal.

Neuer reacted instinctively, diving left, but it was too close, too powerful.

The ball slammed into the back of the net.

5–2 Arsenal.

For a heartbeat, the stadium was silent.

Utterly.

Then something broke.

A low murmur rippled through the stands, disbelief giving way to stunned acceptance. Some Bayern supporters stood, hands on heads. Others sat back down heavily. A few began to leave, scarves already being wrapped around necks.

Van Dijk wheeled away, roaring, fists clenched, eyes wild with emotion. Teammates swarmed him with Francesco among them, wrapping him in a fierce embrace.

"That's massive," Francesco said into his ear. "That's massive."

Van Dijk laughed, breathless. "You put them under. We finish."

Cazorla jogged over last, arms raised, face lit with pure joy.

The away end was in chaos now.

Flags waving.

Voices cracking.

Belief fully unleashed.

The last seven minutes passed in a blur of control and discipline.

Bayern tried to respond, but the edge was gone now. The urgency had turned brittle, their attacks rushed, their passes just slightly off.

Arsenal managed the game expertly.

Francesco dropped deep, drawing fouls, shielding the ball, forcing Bayern to chase shadows. Walcott and Sánchez tracked back diligently, doubling up when needed, then springing forward to relieve pressure.

Cazorla dictated the tempo like a conductor, slowing it here, quickening it there, making Bayern's players run themselves into exhaustion.

Van Dijk and Koscielny were immense, winning headers, stepping in front of Lewandowski, reading the game perfectly.

At 88 minutes, Wenger made his final gesture from the sideline with hands low, palms down.

Calm.

Just calm.

The referee glanced at his watch.

Added time came.

Two minutes.

Then one.

Francesco stood near the center circle now, hands on hips, chest heaving, eyes fixed ahead.

When the final whistle came, it felt almost unreal.

Sharp.

Final.

Done.

5–2.

Arsenal.

In Munich.

For a moment, nobody moved.

Then arms went up.

Players embraced.

Some laughed.

Some simply closed their eyes and breathed.

Francesco bent forward, hands on his knees, exhaustion finally crashing over him in a wave. He straightened slowly, looking around the stadium, committing the moment to memory.

______________________________________________

Name : 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: 34

Goal: 54

Assist: 2

MOTM: 7

POTM: 1

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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