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Chapter 185 - Round Of 16, Second Leg End

Beep! Beep! Beep!

The referee's whistle cut sharply through the tension-filled night at the Emirates.

Luka was being pulled back by Wilshere and Rosický, while on the Bayern side, Lahm was trying to calm things down.

After a brief scuffle, the referee booked Alaba for the initial foul — and both he and Cazorla received yellow cards.

Cazorla's tumble looked theatrical, and the referee saw straight through it. Alaba, meanwhile, had clearly tugged at him in frustration.

Five minutes later, tempers flared again.

Wilshere went hard into a tackle on Robben near the touchline, and suddenly both benches were on their feet. Lahm stepped in to defend his teammate, and Kai was quick to stand up for Wilshere.

What started as shouting quickly escalated — Lahm and Kai exchanging heated words before Wilshere, who'd had enough, gave Lahm a shove. Ribery then came flying in and caught Ramsey from behind.

It nearly broke into an all-out brawl before the referee stormed in, whistle blaring.

Beep! Beep! Beep! BEEEEEP!

Four yellow cards were shown in one go — Lahm, Kai, Wilshere, and Ribery all booked.

Martin Taylor: "This game's boiling over now, Alan. You can sense the frustration from both sides — Bayern chasing the game, Arsenal trying to protect what they've got."

Alan Smith: "Exactly, Martin. Arsenal are leading the tie but can't afford a red card here."

As the clock hit the 80th minute, tension was written all over the pitch. Bayern looked desperate, Arsenal defiant.

Pat Rice barked from the touchline, "Last ten minutes, lads! Stay sharp!"

Kai, now on a yellow, had to tread carefully. His challenges became more calculated, more controlled — but still fierce enough to make Bayern think twice.

Both sides made changes to steady things. Rosický came off for Flamini, while Bayern replaced Robben with Müller and Kroos with Götze.

Bayern went all-out attack; Arsenal braced themselves for the storm.

The Gunners dropped into a compact 4-3-3, prioritizing shape over flair. Kai continued to shadow Ribery, Flamini picked up Müller, and Cazorla floated centrally to help on transitions.

It was attack versus resistance now.

Bayern threw men forward — relentless pressing, wave after wave. But Arsenal's backline held firm, closing every gap, intercepting every line-breaking pass.

Ribery tried again, cutting inside from the left, but Kai read him like a book. His timing, his positioning — perfect. Ribery just couldn't find a way through.

Still, the Frenchman didn't give up. He dropped deeper to collect the ball, exchanging passes with Götze before surging forward once more.

Kai frowned — he could tell Ribery was running out of steam. The acceleration wasn't there anymore.

Then suddenly — a feint, a change of direction, and a quick diagonal pass!

Kai's Foresight warned him.

"Left side! Watch Müller!" he shouted.

Müller had slipped behind Flamini, racing toward Monreal's flank. Götze's pass sliced right through Arsenal's defensive line.

Monreal scrambled to recover, leaping desperately to get a touch — but only managed to deflect it into Müller's path.

Martin Taylor: "Monreal's missed it! That could be costly!"

Alan Smith: "And Bayern are in here! Big chance!"

Müller collected, cut inside, and whipped a cross toward the six-yard box.

Mandžukić and Mertesacker both jumped — but the Croatian rose first, meeting it cleanly.

Alan Smith: "Oh, that's dangerous!"

Martin Taylor: "Szczesny's got to react—"

In one stunning motion, Szczesny stepped back and launched himself full stretch to the right, palming the ball away at the last possible second.

But the danger wasn't over.

The ball dropped perfectly for Müller, who didn't hesitate — a clever lob over Flamini and toward the far corner!

Flamini sprinted desperately, teeth clenched, but he was a split-second too slow.

"No, no, no…" he muttered under his breath as the ball drifted toward the open net.

And then—

Kai!

He launched himself horizontally in front of the goal, twisting his body mid-air, and swung his right foot clean through the ball.

A freaking bicycle kick clearance.

Thwack!

The clearance echoed around the Emirates like thunder. The danger was gone.

Kai landed hard, rolling once before springing to his feet.

Martin Taylor:"KAI! It's him again! Always in the right place, always at the right time!"

The stadium exploded with noise — a mix of fury, disbelief, and sheer adrenaline. Arsenal fans were on their feet, roaring at the top of their lungs, the sound shaking through the stands as they vented every ounce of tension and excitement.

"Who built a wall in the middle of the field?

KAI! KAI!

He don't dive, he don't yield!

KAI! KAI!

The Gunners cheer and rivals squeal—

'Cause Kai's the boss with boots of steel!

OHHHH KAI!

WHO BUILT THAT WALL?

KAI! KAI!"

Down on the pitch, however, the Bayern players were furious.

"It's a goal! The ball was over the line!" shouted Thomas Müller, storming up to the referee, arms outstretched in protest.

This was it — Bayern's last real chance. Miss this, and their dream of defending the title would be gone.

Several Bayern players surrounded the referee, arguing and pleading their case. Arsenal players soon joined in, defending their side just as passionately. The referee quickly waved everyone away, hands raised, as he listened to the linesman through his headset.

A long, tense moment followed. Then — a sharp whistle.

The referee raised his arm and signaled for a throw-in.

"Damn it!!" Müller shouted, kicking the turf in frustration.

Bayern's players could only look to the heavens, exhaling in disbelief. Their last opportunity had vanished.

Martin Taylor's voice came in through the commentary box.

"The referee's called a throw-in. I'm sure we'll be seeing that again in slow motion."

The replay appeared, showing the ball from a side angle. It was clear — there was still daylight between the ball and the goal line. Not even a millimeter had touched it.

Alan Smith let out a chuckle. "That's as clean a decision as you'll get. It never crossed the line."

The German commentators sounded defeated.

„Es ist vorbei",one of them sighed.

(It is over)

Bayern fans buried their heads in their hands. They had believed, truly believed, that their team could go all the way again. But football can be cruel.

Time ticked away — 89 minutes gone.

Two goals were now impossible unless a miracle intervened. And after 89 minutes of struggling to break Arsenal down, that miracle didn't seem to be coming.

It was over. Bayern's Champions League run was finished.

On the other hand, Arsenal's side of the stadium had completely erupted. Fans were jumping, hugging, crying — they could feel it now.

As Bayern restarted play, the clock hit the 90th minute. The fourth official raised the board — three minutes of added time.

The crowd began to chant in unison.

"Three!!!"

Every second was being counted down.

Bayern threw everyone forward — even Manuel Neuer had charged into Arsenal's box, desperate to get on the end of a cross.

Arsenal's mission was clear: survive, clear the ball, and run the clock down.

"Two!!!"

The Emirates was shaking now. The chants had turned into song — loud, jubilant singing that echoed around the ground.

They were already celebrating. Arsenal were about to knock out the reigning European champions.

"One!!!"

"It's time to blow the whistle!!"

"Come on, ref!"

"The game's over!!"

"Blow it!!!"

"WE'VE WON!!!"

The fans were screaming for the final whistle, urging the referee to end it all. On the pitch, Arsenal's players were shouting too, calling for time as Bayern launched one final, frantic attack.

Then — 93 minutes and 10 seconds.

Kai hoofed the ball clear and out of play.

Beep! Beep! Beep!

The referee's whistle cut through the chaos. It was over.

Arsenal had done it.

The Gunners had defeated Bayern Munich 3–1 on aggregate and booked their place in the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals.

The Emirates exploded in celebration — pure, unfiltered joy.

After three long years, Arsenal were back among Europe's elite. And they hadn't just scraped through — they had beaten the champions.

Alan Smith's voice carried a touch of admiration. "What a night for Arsenal fans. They've waited a long time for this."

Martin Taylor added, "A massive statement win. From group runners-up to knocking out the holders — who'll dare underestimate Arsenal now?"

...

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