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Chapter 206 - Champions League Quarterfinals, Second Leg 2

Lee Dixon chuckled beside George. "That's what happens when you let Arsenal play. They might not be the same free-flowing side they once were, but when they click like this, they're still a joy to watch."

The flowing beauty of their past was tempered by grit, and while some critics complained that Arsenal weren't as entertaining anymore, that hardly mattered.

Winning did.

After all, what good was pretty football if it didn't bring results?

Arsenal had traded a touch of flair for steel — and the trade was paying off. They could still produce breathtaking football, as that goal just proved, but now they had the muscle to back it up.

George laughed softly. "You tell me, Lee— is that not beautiful enough?"

Lee smiled. "It's perfect football — balance, purpose, and a bit of swagger. Wenger's finally got the mix right."

..

Klopp was pacing furiously.

"Hold the line! Keep the midfield tight!" he bellowed, his voice almost hoarse.

He knew Arsenal were strangling the rhythm of the game. Their structure, their press, and especially Kai's presence in midfield — everything was working in sync.

From the dugout, Wenger sat calmly, arms folded, watching his counterpart with that familiar quiet confidence.

When Klopp glanced over, Wenger simply lifted an eyebrow and gave a faint, knowing smile.

Klopp grimaced and muttered under his breath, "Damn."

.

In the stands, Billy froze for a moment, staring at the pitch.

"Semi-final?" he muttered, almost in disbelief.

Around him, thousands of Arsenal fans were doing the same — exchanging stunned looks that quickly turned into wild grins.

Then came the roar.

A wave of red and white erupted across the Emirates.

Flags waved, scarves flew, and voices cracked as they screamed their hearts out.

"Forward, Gunners!"

"For the semi-final!"

This wasn't just a celebration of a goal — it was the release of a decade's worth of frustration.

For years, Arsenal fans had endured the endless cycle: fight for fourth, scrape into the Champions League, fall short, and do it all over again.

Each disappointment chipped away at them — but their pride never wavered.

That pride had become their armor. It was what kept them going when the glory days felt long gone.

But tonight, something was different.

For the first time in years, the pride wasn't just defensive — it was earned.

As they watched their team stand tall, fearless, and dominant under the floodlights, hope flickered back to life in every fan's eyes.

These weren't the old Gunners weighed down by expectation.

This was a new generation — the third generation — ready to carve their own legend.

And with that belief burning in their hearts, the Emirates roared louder than ever:

"Forward, Gunners!"

"To the semi-finals!"

The roar from the stands came in thunderous waves, rising and crashing like a storm.

They screamed, cried, and laughed all at once, releasing ten long years of pent-up frustration gotten from this competition.

The sound rolled through every inch of the stadium — fierce, unrelenting, alive.

On the bench, Wilshere gazed up at the chaos in the stands, his voice barely audible amid the noise.

"I feel like I'm back at Highbury…" he murmured.

That name alone carried weight.

Highbury — the club's old fortress. Their home until 2006, when they moved to the Emirates in pursuit of a brighter future. But instead came a long drought — years without trophies, without triumphs, until even the proudest of fans began to lose their voices.

What was once a cathedral of football was mocked as a library.

But now — now the echoes of Highbury seemed to return. The chants, the heartbeat, the soul of the club… all came roaring back under the floodlights of the Emirates.

On the pitch, the Arsenal players could feel it too. The energy. The belief.

As they jogged back into position after the celebrations, the sound didn't fade — it grew.

Kai stood at midfield, looking around. The sight before him was breathtaking — a sea of red and white rising and falling like waves.

He thought back to his debut. To that FA Cup match when Henry told him Arsenal needed someone to reignite their fire.

Taking a deep breath, he clenched his fists and roared, "Come on! The fans are shouting their hearts out — let's repay them with the best football we've got!"

He turned, eyes blazing. "Let's take them down!"

"Let's take them down!" his teammates echoed, their voices merging into one.

The referee's whistle blew — and Arsenal charged again.

Every player moved with purpose. The fatigue from earlier was gone; the cheers had revived them.

Borussia Dortmund were on the back foot, trapped under the relentless pressing of Kai, Flamini, and Cazorla. Even Suarez and Walcott were hunting in the final third, forcing mistakes, stealing ground inch by inch.

Dortmund's confidence was slipping. Their faces showed confusion, disbelief.

Then came the moment.

Cazorla and Flamini swarmed Mkhitaryan, and in a flash, the ball was gone.

Mkhitaryan tugged frantically at Cazorla's shirt, but before the whistle could blow, the Spaniard slipped the ball forward and went down.

Advantage play.

Kai was already sprinting onto it.

He wasn't the quickest — but every stride carried conviction. The roar of the crowd and the rush of air filled his ears as he powered forward.

Suarez started his run, then checked back, dragging defenders with him. Podolski and Walcott did the same, stretching Dortmund's line just enough.

Hummels stepped up — calm, composed, reading the play. He knew Kai wasn't a flashy dribbler. He wanted him to go solo.

As Kai approached, he slowed, tapping the ball lightly under his right boot. Hummels held his ground, refusing to bite.

Kai feinted left — nothing.

He smirked to himself. All right then… straight through you.

He hooked the ball forward and threw his body into Hummels', shoulder to shoulder, forcing his way along the edge of the box.

The two wrestled for balance — raw strength against composure.

Then, in one sharp motion, Kai braked hard. Hummels halted too — and that was the opening.

Kai burst forward again. One heartbeat, one window — he swung his right foot and struck cleanly.

The ball arced through the air, curving beautifully toward the far post.

The goalkeeper leapt full stretch — fingertips grazing air.

Swish!

The net rippled.

The Emirates erupted.

George Adams' voice cut through the explosion of sound:

"What a strike! Kai — unstoppable! The power, the precision, the sheer determination. Dortmund simply cannot cope with him."

...

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