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Wembley was shaking again. This wasn't just football. It was a war of will, of stamina, of inches.
Then, on the 49th minute, Arsenal nearly doubled their lead — and it felt like the whole of Wembley held its breath.
It began innocently enough: a Chelsea throw-in on the left that was poorly executed. Azpilicueta's pass down the line was too casual, too telegraphed, and Santi Cazorla — sharp as ever — darted in front of Oscar and nicked the ball away.
One touch to settle it. A second to pivot. Then the pass.
It wasn't rushed. It wasn't flashy. It was perfect.
A low, zipped ball that cut clean through the midfield lines, straight into the feet of Alexis Sánchez. And in the same heartbeat, Francesco moved.
He knew what was happening before it even fully developed. Terry was marking him tight, a hand on his back, stepping high to force the offside trap. But Francesco didn't engage him. He didn't even try to win the ball.
Instead, he spun away from it.
A decoy run — smart, subtle. He dragged Terry toward the left, away from the space just in front of Courtois. It only took a step or two, but it was enough. Gary Cahill, focused on Francesco's movement, didn't shift quickly enough. And suddenly, there was daylight.
Alexis saw it and pounced.
One touch forward, then another to push the ball into the space Francesco had cleared — now Alexis was in.
He was through.
One-on-one.
Wembley surged to its feet.
Sánchez closed in fast, his legs pumping, eyes narrowing. Courtois rushed out, massive frame spreading, arms wide like a starfish. The two locked eyes for a split second. Alexis opened up his body to curl it low into the far corner — classic finish — but Courtois guessed right.
The Belgian dropped low, kicked out a leg, and somehow deflected the ball away with the outside of his right boot.
It spun wide, slow and agonizing, rolling just beyond the post.
Arsenal fans groaned. Chelsea's sighed with relief.
Alexis slapped the turf once in frustration, then pulled himself up and jogged back, nodding toward Francesco. "You made that," he muttered in Spanish.
Francesco just gave him a thumbs-up. His lungs burned, his heart raced. But he could smell blood.
Arsenal were getting closer.
The resulting corner was dealt with by Ivanović, but the tempo stayed high. Arsenal pressed again and again, swarming the second balls like a pack of wolves. Coquelin was tireless, flying into tackles, snapping at heels. Özil, still gliding between the lines, nearly released Francesco again in the 52nd minute — but this time, Cahill intercepted.
Chelsea broke then, Hazard leading the charge once more. He skipped past Santi, forced Monreal into a backpedal, and slipped a pass toward Oscar. But Laurent Koscielny stepped in with immaculate timing, nicking the ball with his toe and clearing it high into touch.
The crowd roared — not for a goal, but for the courage of it all. This wasn't just a football match. It was a battle of belief.
By the 55th minute, both sides had settled into a ferocious rhythm. Neither looked willing to concede an inch. Chelsea made another change — Moses finally came on for Ramires, adding raw pace to the right side.
But Arsenal didn't flinch.
They adjusted.
The Ox dropped deeper again, tracking Moses. Coquelin played more conservatively, shielding the back four. And Wenger, arms folded on the sideline, barked clear instructions: control the midfield, press high, but don't overcommit.
Then, in the 57th minute, another chance — and it was Francesco again.
It began with Özil, who turned out of pressure with the kind of graceful movement that made defenders curse under their breath. He danced away from Fabregas, rolled the ball behind Matic with the outside of his boot, and suddenly had space.
One glance forward, and he saw Francesco drifting wide, pulling into the half-space just outside the box. Özil picked him out with a floated pass — a feather-soft ball that dropped right into Francesco's stride.
The teenager brought it down expertly, cutting inside on his right. Cahill stepped up, Terry held his line — but Francesco didn't shoot. He dummied once, let the ball roll further in, then tried to curl it low to the near post.
Courtois was beaten. Everyone could see it.
But the ball kissed the outside of the upright and spun behind.
Another collective gasp from the crowd. Francesco held his head for a moment, then turned to applaud Özil for the pass. The German simply nodded, cool as ever.
Chelsea tried to slow things down after that. Fabregas dropped deeper, orchestrating passes left and right, trying to pull Arsenal out of shape. But there was no panic.
In the 60th minute, Chelsea bring in Falcao for Loïc Rémy. Mourinho wasn't giving up on a comeback.
The next ten minutes were intense.
Hazard had another curling effort go just over. Falcao nearly got on the end of a whipped Ivanović cross. At the other end, Walcott's first touch was a darting run that earned a free kick just outside the box.
Santi stood over it, Francesco beside him.
A quick whisper between the two — a feint run by Francesco — and Cazorla struck it clean. Over the wall, dipping fast. Courtois had to leap full stretch to tip it over the bar.
Then in the 62nd Minute, the game had reached a boiling point.
You could feel it in the atmosphere. Every touch, every pass, every missed opportunity was laced with tension. The energy inside Wembley was volatile — a live wire waiting for a spark.
Mesut Özil was drifting again, elegant as ever, orchestrating in the half-spaces. Fabregas, increasingly agitated, had been tracking him tighter and tighter. Perhaps it was the pressure. Perhaps it was the memory — a part of him still tied to Arsenal, now forced to smother the very style he once embodied.
Özil took a clever touch forward, a little flick that wrong-footed Fabregas just slightly.
It was enough.
Cesc lunged.
Boot high. Studs showing. He clipped Özil square on the shin with a crunch.
The contact wasn't bone-breaking, but it was enough to send the German tumbling to the turf. Özil winced, rolled once, then clutched his leg — not theatrically, but genuinely rattled by the late challenge.
The whistle came immediately — a sharp, furious blast.
But by then, Francesco was already there.
He didn't even think.
In a blur, he rushed toward Fabregas and shoved him in the chest with both hands, sending the Chelsea midfielder stumbling backward.
"What the hell is that?!" Francesco shouted, eyes blazing.
Fabregas recovered his footing quickly. His face twisted, somewhere between anger and disbelief.
"Oh, don't start," he snapped, stepping forward and jabbing a finger at Özil, still on the ground. "He's faking it! Always does!"
Francesco's jaw clenched. He stepped in again, shoulders squared, tension radiating off him like heat. "You really gonna act like that was nothing?"
Fabregas didn't back down. He jabbed a finger toward Francesco's chest.
"Respect, boy. I've won more trophies than you've even dreamed of."
And that was it.
Francesco's eyes flared. His hands curled into fists at his sides.
"Well yeah — because you ran off to Barcelona. Traitor. You left us when we needed you. And guess what? You just became a rotation player there."
The words landed like punches.
Fabregas's nostrils flared. He opened his mouth to reply, but Francesco wasn't finished.
"Me?" Francesco growled, voice low, steady. "I stayed. I chose Arsenal. And I brought them to a title. What've you done since you left? Watch from the bench while Messi won everything?"
That struck a nerve.
Fabregas lunged forward, and suddenly bodies were colliding. Terry grabbed Francesco by the shoulders. Coquelin shoved Fabregas aside. Walcott jumped between them, pushing Francesco back with both arms.
More players joined the fray — Ivanović barking at Cazorla, Matic stepping in with arms raised, trying to separate the packs.
It was chaos.
The referee sprinted over, shouting, his whistle blaring over the noise. He threw his arms wide and began motioning frantically, calling over his assistants. A heated exchange followed. The fourth official was waving both benches down, while Mourinho — arms flailing — was yelling furiously from the technical area. Wenger stayed rooted, tight-lipped, his arms crossed, watching with a stone face.
Eventually, order returned.
The referee marched back into the center of it all, stern and red-faced.
He called out numbers.
Yellow card – Fabregas. Yellow card – Francesco.
The crowd roared — some in protest, some in support. It didn't matter. The damage had been done.
Moments later, yellow cards were also shown to Coquelin and Matic, both booked for their roles in escalating the scuffle.
Four yellows.
The restart was delayed another full minute while Özil received treatment. He was back on his feet soon after, walking gingerly but refusing to come off. Francesco walked up to him as the play resumed and gave him a light pat on the back.
"You good?"
Özil nodded faintly. "I've had worse."
Francesco cracked a smile despite himself.
But inside, he was still seething.
Fabregas's words echoed in his ears — Respect, boy. I've won more champions than you.
It didn't matter. Francesco didn't want to be like Fabregas. He didn't want to be a footnote on someone else's dynasty. He wanted to build one of his own — in North London, where he belonged.
The match continued at breakneck pace.
Chelsea had grown more physical. Azpilicueta chopped down Walcott near the touchline minutes later. Cahill began stepping up early on Francesco, trying to rough him up before he could turn. It didn't work.
Francesco was on fire.
He'd entered a different headspace — that special kind of zone where emotion and instinct fused into something unstoppable. Every touch had purpose. Every move had venom.
In the 65th minute, he nearly made them pay.
Cazorla, now dictating play again, clipped a beautiful diagonal to The Ox. He beat Azpilicueta on the outside, got to the byline, and cut it back low.
Francesco sprinted across the near post, throwing his body into a first-time flick with the inside of his boot.
It was so close.
The ball skimmed just wide, brushing the outside netting. For a second, half the Arsenal end thought it was in. Francesco threw his head back in frustration.
Wenger clapped from the sideline. "Good run, Francesco! Again!"
Then on the 67th minute, Arsène Wenger turned to his bench.
The old Frenchman had remained statuesque through the skirmish moments ago, but now his mind was racing, calculating. The game was boiling — emotionally and tactically — and he knew it was time to tip it further in Arsenal's favor.
With a subtle nod to Steve Bould, the substitutions were prepared. Three changes. Bold ones.
Up came the fourth official's board, red and green flashing in unison.
OUT: Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain
IN: Olivier Giroud
OUT: Francis Coquelin
IN: N'Golo Kanté
OUT: Laurent Koscielny
IN: Virgil van Dijk
The reaction inside Wembley was mixed. Some murmurs of confusion — especially as Koscielny, a defensive mainstay, came off — but Wenger had his reasons.
Giroud's entry pushed Francesco wide right, into a more vertical, free-flowing role where his pace and instincts could be weaponized against a tiring Azpilicueta. Kanté, fresh off his move from Caen and largely unknown to most of the English footballing public, slotted into midfield with the silent composure of a soldier reporting for duty. And Van Dijk — tall, commanding, unfazed — stepped right into central defense as if he'd been born for it.
The chessboard had shifted.
And Francesco? He understood it instantly. The second Wenger called his name and gestured for him to move wide, he gave a nod and jogged out to the right flank, glancing once at Azpilicueta and then toward Mourinho's technical area.
"You're mine now," he muttered under his breath.
Then on the 70th minute, it happened like a lightning strike.
Chelsea had pressed forward, pushing numbers ahead in desperate search of an equalizer. Hazard had tried to spark something — twisting, turning, pulling defenders with him. But Kanté had already begun to suffocate the spaces. Quietly. Efficiently. The little Frenchman had the calm menace of a lion tamer.
He won the ball in a pocket just inside Arsenal's half. A toe poke. A turn. Then a simple five-yard pass to Cazorla.
And suddenly, the gears turned.
Cazorla lifted his head. Scanned. Saw Francesco already in motion.
The Spaniard took one more touch and then threaded a perfectly weighted ball out to the right — into the path of Francesco, who was already accelerating into full flight.
Azpilicueta gave chase, but he was cooked. Tired legs couldn't catch fire.
Francesco burned down the right wing like he was skating on light, the ball glued to his boot as the wind tore past him.
In the box, Giroud made the near-post run, dragging Cahill and Terry with him. It was the perfect decoy.
Francesco didn't need an invitation.
One touch to settle. One to open his body.
Then, from just outside the six-yard box, he laced it with his laces — low, across goal, past Courtois.
GOAL!
The net rippled. The stadium exploded.
Francesco roared as he turned toward the corner flag, arms wide, chest heaving. He slid on his knees, eyes closed, basking in the wave of sound that crashed down from the Arsenal faithful.
Sanchez tackled him first. Then Giroud. Then Cazorla came jogging over, arms high, a grin plastered across his face as if he'd just watched a magician pull off an impossible trick.
"Second one!" Cazorla shouted over the noise. "You're on fire, chico!"
Francesco only smiled. This one meant more.
The first had been instinct. This one — this was crafted. Built. A piece of art painted in full stride.
Above them, Wenger gave the faintest of fist pumps. He didn't show much emotion, but inside, he was glowing. This was his Arsenal. Not Chelsea's bulldozing pragmatism. Not Mourinho's bruising tactics. His side were moving like poetry again.
2–0 Arsenal.
Chelsea looked stunned.
The second goal felt like a dagger — not because it killed the game, but because it showed Arsenal could carve them open any time they wanted.
Fabregas had gone quiet. His earlier venom was gone now, replaced by frustrated glances and flailing arms.
Francesco, on the other hand, was a man transformed.
He buzzed down the right wing with every possession, cutting inside, whipping crosses, turning Azpilicueta in knots. There was a moment in the 74th minute when he feinted one way, stepped over, and dragged the ball back the other — and Azpilicueta nearly sat down trying to keep up.
The crowd ooh'd in unison.
"Take him home, Francesco!" someone shouted from the Arsenal end.
Meanwhile, in the center of the pitch, Kanté had begun to run the show in the quietest way possible. He intercepted a pass meant for Hazard and immediately turned defense into attack, feeding Cazorla, who now had more freedom to roam with Coquelin off.
Van Dijk was commanding at the back. Aerial balls? Cleared. Runners in behind? Tracked and snuffed out. He played like a man with nothing to prove and everything under control.
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Name : Francesco Lee
Age : 16 (2014)
Birthplace : London, England
Football Club : Arsenal First Team
Championship History : 2014/2015 Premier League and 2014/2015 FA Cup
Season 15/16 stats:
Match Played: 1
Goal: 2
Assist: 0
MOTM: 0
Season 14/15 stats:
Match Played: 35
Goal: 45
Assist: 12
MOTM: 9