God Of football - Chapter 559: Resurrection
Chapter 559: Resurrection
The air coming back out for the second half felt heavier—not from the weather, but from something thicker, more intangible. Pressure, maybe.
Expectation.
Arsenal returned to the pitch without much fanfare, but the players’ expressions were tighter and more focused now.
Arteta’s voice had trailed off into the tunnel before they emerged, barking last-minute positioning tweaks and encouragements that barely cut through the murmur of the Selhurst Park crowd.
Palace were leading 1–0, and the hosts had every intention of sitting on that advantage.
“They’ve been disciplined,” Jon Champion noted on the commentary.
“Not just defensively, but emotionally. Palace haven’t let the moment get too big.”
Beside him, Chris Sutton nodded. ”
And Arsenal? They’ve looked like a team with one eye on the weekend and the other still blinking.”
The ball rolled, and the second half began.
Arsenal pressed much higher than they did in the previous half and more assertively, but Palace weren’t playing into their hands.
Every backpass was met with applause from the home crowd, and every clearance was another needle jab to the visitors’ pride.
Jorginho, patrolling midfield in Rice’s absence, snapped at the ball with grit but lacked the vertical tempo to break Palace’s lines.
Merino tried a few flicks to inject creativity, but too often found himself crowded out by the muscular midfield trio of Palace who had clearly been told to cut the wings, chop the middle, and spoil everything.
Then came the 56th minute.
A floated ball from Martinelli reached Jesus, who controlled it on his thigh and sent a dipping volley toward goal.
It stung the gloves of Dean Henderson but the latter was able to hold on and parry out the ball.
A scramble set but the ball was quickly cleared by captain, Mark Guehi.
The away fans lifted themselves from their benches, gasping as much in frustration as hope.
“Closest they’ve come since the first whistle,” Champion said, leaning forward.
“But still no breakthrough.”
Palace weren’t playing beautiful football—but they were playing smart.
They rotated fouls.
Broke up the rhythm.
Claimed every stoppage like a trophy.
In the 61st, Palace countered down the left, and it took a flying save from Neto to stop what would’ve been a hammer blow of a second goal.
And that was the signal.
In the 65th, murmurs began.
A few fans toward the Arsenal bench stood.
Camera lenses sharpened.
Whispers echoed through the stands like smoke.
Then the board went up.
Number 10.
Izan.
The crowd noise shifted immediately.
Even the Palace faithful, boisterous and buzzing with confidence, quieted just a notch—not in fear, but recognition.
Arteta’s voice rose again, clear through the technical area.
“Find it! Find the tempo!”
Izan shed his bib and jogged to the touchline. His face was unreadable. Calm, sure—but not indifferent.
“It’s the 70th minute,” Chris Sutton said, voice suddenly tight.
“He’s had twenty minutes before to change a match. He’s got twenty now to save one.”
Fans rose behind the dugouts.
Phones lifted. All eyes were on what he would do next.
He stepped onto the grass, and the entire tone of the game shifted—not because the ball moved differently, but because it could.
And Palace knew it.
From the moment Izan took his first touch—tight, tucked close to his ankle on the half-turn—it felt like something cracked open.
One player.
One change.
But the tension in the air?
Like a tide had turned.
……
The clock had already ticked past the 70-minute mark and the away end at the Selhurst Park had changed.
The hum of hope had become a hush of worry.
Arsenal trailed by one.
The scoreboard glared red and white and cruel.
One goal down in a quarter-final.
One chance away from slipping.
But then Izan entered the story again—not as a magician, not as a savior—but as an architect.
He dropped into the pocket just ahead of the backline, calling for the ball with a flick of his wrist and a glance behind him.
Jorginho obeyed, zipping a grounded pass into his boots.
It was tight—Palace had already begun to sink into a shell—but Izan received it with ease.
Two touches to pivot.
One to carry.
And suddenly, the gears began to turn.
[Initiating: Nexus Flow]
The system chimed in his head, low and amused.
{You’re cutting it close, boy.}
Izan didn’t respond.
Not with words.
He just drove forward.
He passed the halfway line like it was nothing—like grass bent just a little softer beneath his stride—and drew in defenders like a magnet wrapped in danger.
His options peeled away, Saka who had subbed on for Nwaneri was shifting wide, Jesus curling centrally, but Izan held it.
One more touch.
One more heartbeat.
Then he slipped a pass between legs, so narrow it might’ve been a glitch in the matrix.
Martinelli ran onto it and took the shot—but Palace’s keeper flew across, gloves like vices, slapping the ball away.
A gasp shook through Selhurst Park.
Close.
But not enough.
Jon Champion’s voice echoed in the background like static on a wire.
“Arsenal are coming to life, and it’s through that young man again. Izan is conducting. It’s like Valencia all over again. Every channel runs through him.”
The next five minutes passed in waves.
Izan again.
Dropping deep.
Shifting the tempo.
Letting others run while he read the game like sheet music.
Another through ball—this time to Jorginho on the overlap—but the cross was cut out.
Another diagonal to Saka was also blocked.
Another sweeping pass to Jorginho, who tried to clip one to the back post—but a Palace head intervened again.
“You can’t say they’re not trying,” Chris Sutton said.
“But the final touch… the luck… it just hasn’t come.”
The Arsenal fans rose.
Not to cheer.
To pull.
To beg.
To summon something.
A memory, a miracle, a moment.
Izan took the ball again.
Back to goal with three players near him.
He turned anyway.
Body low, shoulder to shoulder, legs pumping like turbines.
He beat the first.
Faked the second.
And then carried the ball past the third like a cape of pressure.
Still, nothing came.
The minutes dripped.
79.
80.
82.
Arsenal pushed higher in their quest for the equalizer but that nearly cost them a second goal.
Palace nearly broke twice but Saliba was there.
Then Kiwior.
Then Neto.
By the 85th minute, you could hear everything.
The clicks of seats.
The mutters of fans.
The sharp commands of Arteta on the sideline, urging patience and chaos all in the same breath.
Izan had the ball again.
He paused near the touchline.
Then rolled it forward with a subtle touch.
A disguised step and then he glanced across the pitch.
Nothing changed.
Except everything was about to.
And as he lifted his head, the chants returned—not loud, not massive—but steady.
The tension at the Emirates was close to breaking point.
The clock didn’t feel like it was ticking anymore—it felt like it was grinding.
Every second scraped across the nerves of players and fans alike.
Izan took the ball in midfield, back turned, breath shallow, mind sharp.
He pivoted and picked his moment after spotting Martinelli hugging the touchline on the far left, gesturing once—then again.
The angle was narrow
But Izan bent the pass across the field like he was slinging a beam of light.
It cracked through the air, hissing past a backpedaling defender, and landed perfectly at Martinelli’s feet.
The Brazilian didn’t wait.
A single touch, then a step inside.
Izan was already moving. He peeled into space on the edge of the box, a ghost slipping between defenders too preoccupied with the ball.
Martinelli saw him—early—and pulled the pass back.
The ball rolled clean.
Izan stepped into it.
The strike was vicious—right-footed, low, rising just enough to threaten the roof.
It was poetry shaped like a bullet.
But Henderson flew.
A full-body dive, fingers outstretched like a gymnast on instinct.
The ball caught his wrist, changed direction mid-flight, and spun out of danger.
“SAVEDD!!!” Sutton roared but the roar that followed Henderson’s save from the crowd was deafening—part celebration, part disbelief.
Eze sprinted to his keeper, slapping both palms against his gloves with such force it echoed.
“You’re a monster!” he shouted over the noise.
Guehi was next, bumping chests and screaming into the night sky like they’d just sealed the final.
And maybe, for a few fleeting moments, it felt like they had.
“Palace fans on their feet!” Jon Champion’s voice cracked through the roar.
“That save could win them a final, let alone the quarters!”
“They’ve been battered for the last twenty minutes,” Chris Sutton added, “but somehow—somehow—they’re still standing.”
But their backs were still turned.
Arsenal were already sprinting to position.
Saka didn’t wait.
No arm raised.
No whistle check.
Just the corner.
Quick.
Sharp.
Darting like a blade across the carpet of the Emirates.
“Saka restarts quickly- Here comes Izan”
But not where they expected him.
He didn’t meet it.
He let it run.
Not even a touch—just enough space to send the ball gliding past him.
It found Jorginho, stationed perfectly, eyes up, brain five seconds ahead of the play.
But he also flicked it behind.
The entire Palace midfield turned like they’d seen a ghost.
Because there was Izan again.
On the edge of the arc.
Like he’d predicted it all.
He met the ball in motion, curled his body with a painter’s posture, and struck it on the half-step.
Left-footed.
Clean.
The ball swerved like it was cursed, dipping beneath the bar but only after it kissed the inside of the post.
Henderson didn’t move.
He couldn’t and the irony, he knew since the ball left Izan’s foot.
“GOOOOOAAAALLLLLLLLL!” Jon Champion’s voice cracked like thunder.
“IZAN HAS DONE IT!” Sutton shouted over him.
“MY GOD! What a goal! What a moment! That’s a cup quarter-final strike!”
“From the brink of elimination to resurrection—Arsenal are alive!”
A/n: Last of yesterday. See you in a bit with the first of today.
Your gift is the motivation for my creation. Give me more motivation!Have some idea about my story? Comment it and let me know.
We appreciate you reading! If you loved this chapter, don't forget to bookmark us or share with your friends!