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God Of football - Chapter 760

  1. Home
  2. All Mangas
  3. God Of football
  4. Chapter 760 - Chapter 760: Delirium
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Chapter 760: Delirium

“Arsenal thought they had it! They thought the ball was over the line—but now look at Paris! Kvaratskhelia’s away! They’ve turned defence into attack in the blink of an eye!”

The Georgian’s stride ate the turf like a predator hunting prey, each step a blur under the floodlights.

The Arsenal backline was in disarray, caught flat by the sudden surge for the corner.

Izan, who had taken the corner seconds earlier, was already tearing across the pitch, lungs heaving as he chased.

He had given Kvaratskhelia a forty-yard head start, yet somehow he was closing, boots drumming the grass in desperate rhythm.

The crowd roared with every heartbeat of the race, one half urging the Georgian on, the other screaming for Izan to catch him.

The duel carried an aura of inevitability; both men knew it.

Kvaratskhelia, clever as ever, sensed the shadow closing in and refused to risk being swallowed whole, so he veered slightly, shaping his body, before lashing his foot through the ball.

It wasn’t a shot.

It was a dagger disguised as a pass, but in this situation,his pass was expected.

A curling delivery whipped into the middle, a ball of both desperation and artistry, swinging away from defenders and dropping like a blade toward the edge of the arc.

“Look at this counter! Paris have Arsenal on the ropes!” Ally McCoist’s voice cracked, almost panting. “Kvaratskhelia, with a genius pass. Can Dembélé get there?!”

Dembélé stretched, every sinew straining, and his toes met it.

The touch was perfect, cushioning the speed, drawing it under his spell.

Suddenly, it was him against Raya.

The Spaniard had already surged off his line, reading the danger early, his frame looming larger with every step.

Dembélé drove forward, Saliba thundering in from one side, Lewis-Skelly sprinting madly from the other.

The angles were narrowing, and time was collapsing.

One wrong touch, one misplaced flick, and the chance was gone.

He could almost hear the footsteps behind him, could feel the breath of the chasers on his neck.

So he gambled.

A sharp dip of the shoulder, a feint like he was about to smash it past Raya.

The keeper bit, throwing his weight forward.

But instead of pulling the trigger, Dembélé slid the ball sideways, his heart almost in his throat, hoping, praying someone had kept up with the play.

And then, out of the shadows, came Hakimi.

The Moroccan had been tormented all evening, Izan haunting his flank, suffocating his influence.

But here, in this heartbeat, he was free.

He burst into the box like a ghost, the pass rolling perfectly into his stride as Raya, already wrong-footed, scrambled helplessly, arms out, eyes wide.

Hakimi didn’t hesitate.

He planted, swung, and lashed the ball into the open net, sending the crowd into shambles as one side of the Parc des Princes exploded and the other groaned.

“GOOOAL! Hakimi! Paris lead again!” Darren Fletcher’s roar ripped through the night, voices shaking with ecstasy.

“From Desperation to Decimation. Seconds ago, Arsenal thought they’d scored, but Paris have struck! It’s Hakimi, the man silenced all night by Izan, who bursts forward to deliver the blow!”

Hakimi tore away, sprinting toward the mass of PSG supporters packed behind the goal.

He didn’t just celebrate, he dissolved into them.

Vaulting the advertising boards, he flung himself into their arms, swallowed whole by a tidal wave of bodies, limbs, and flags.

The sound was deafening, an avalanche of joy crashing through the stadium as his teammates followed, arms outstretched, leaping into the madness with him.

On the other side of the pitch, silence hung like smoke over the Arsenal end.

Rice stood frozen, the ghost of his earlier strike still vivid in his mind.

His arms had already gone up once; he had felt the moment, believed it.

The fans had celebrated too, their voices already soaring before being gutted by the referee’s cold gesture toward his watch.

Rice snapped out of his trance, storming at the referee.

His face was a storm cloud, eyes wild, finger jabbing toward the goal.

“That was in! That crossed!” he shouted, his voice cracking under the weight of fury.

The referee remained calm, his palm raised, shaking his head.

“No buzz. No goal.” He tapped the watch on his wrist with mechanical certainty.

“I had to wave play on.”

But Rice wouldn’t have it.

He leaned in, spitting words too fast to catch, his hands carving the air as the referee’s patience thinned, before it broke.

“Enough, Declan. Calm yourself. Another word, and it’s a card. Compose yourself.”

Rice froze, fists trembling, before spinning away, his jaw clenched so tightly it looked like it might shatter.

All around him, the Arsenal players were venting.

White with Red shirts crowded around the official, voices overlapping in chaos, their frustration spilling over the way a dam breaks.

But Paris had already reset, their roar still rolling around the stadium like thunder.

And on the touchline, chaos too.

Mikel Arteta was incandescent, his whole body leaning forward as he bellowed at the fourth official.

His voice was sharp enough to cut glass, his hands stabbing the air toward the goalmouth, replaying Rice’s moment of glory in furious pantomime.

“That ball was in! How do you not check it?!” Arteta’s Spanish lilt carried venom, his shouts cutting through the ambient roar.

The fourth official stood his ground, headset pressed tighter, repeating the same calm words.

But Arteta wasn’t hearing them.

He paced, pointed, demanded, his face a portrait of fury.

It took Albert Stuivenberg and Carlos Cuesta to grab him, arms around his shoulders, dragging him back toward the technical area before his anger tipped into disaster.

The Emirates’ dream of taking the lead had dissolved in seconds, first with the referee’s watch refusing to buzz, then with Hakimi burying the counterattack.

From hope to heartbreak, all in the blink of an eye.

The Arsenal players trudged back toward the centre circle, their faces still a mosaic of disbelief and fury.

Some shook their heads, others barked at the referee one last time before giving in to inevitability.

The scoreboard glared cruelly: PSG 1–1 Arsenal.[3-2]

But in the middle of it all, Izan didn’t hang his head.

He glanced up at the giant clock ticking over the eighty-minute mark, 78:06 glowing like a beacon, and something flickered in his expression.

His chest rose, his eyes sharpened.

If anything, the goal had ignited something.

And from the restart, he was everywhere.

A quick dart down the left and a fizzed cross, venomous and bending, begging to be turned in, but Martinelli, who had come on for Havertz, swung and missed by inches.

Groans followed, but Izan didn’t stop.

He drifted inside, popped up, left, collected and whipped again, this time finding Saka, whose header rattled the side netting.

The Arsenal end cried out, hands thrown skyward, as the chances kept begging to be put home.

Still, Izan kept coming.

He tormented the flanks like a man possessed, slipping away from markers, cutting inside with the grace of a dancer, then exploding back down the wing.

Each delivery was sharper than the last, each run dragging PSG’s shape closer to breaking.

“He’s taken it personally! Izan, again with that otherworldly pace, the quality of that ball! Arsenal are knocking, knocking hard!”

“PSG are clinging here, every time Izan touches it, you feel something’s coming!”

And then it was.

Arsenal swept it across midfield, Calafiori feeding Rice, who immediately spotted the run.

A sharp ball threaded between lines, and Izan was off again, springing into space.

Hakimi, the sudden hero at the other end minutes earlier, surged to meet him.

The Moroccan threw everything into the chase, but Izan had already pushed past, long strides eating the grass.

He hit the byline, head low, grass flying.

The crowd leaned forward, the noise swelling into raw electricity as Hakimi’s shadow pressed, and from the other side, Beraldo slid across, closing the trap.

Two against one, but Izan didn’t blink.

With a feint of the hip, he nudged the ball between them, so tight it seemed impossible to get to.

And so, Hakimi’s leg clipped him first while Beraldo’s body brushed the other side as Izan forced the route.

Contact.

Izan felt it, knew it was enough, and went down.

The gasp was universal.

Forty-seven thousand voices inhaling at once, the sound sharp as glass.

Both PSG defenders immediately spun toward the referee, faces twisted with panic.

Beraldo was the loudest, finger stabbing at the air, shaking furiously as if to erase the moment with sheer denial.

“No! No, no, no!”

But then, the whistle, shrill and unavoidable, cut through the gasps and then pleas like a blade through the chaos.

The Arsenal end erupted.

A wall of noise, bodies leaping and colliding, scarves flying.

Players swarmed Izan, where he still lay on the turf.

He sat up slowly, tugging calmly at his socks, face almost unreadable amid the storm.

Paris players crowded the referee, voices rising into a desperate chorus of protest.

Donnarumma stormed out of his box, arms spread, while Hakimi buried his head in his hands.

It didn’t matter.

The referee pointed to the spot, unwavering, and the commentators could barely contain themselves.

“Unbelievable scenes at the Parc des Princes! Arsenal were down, their hearts broken, and now, five minutes later, they’ve got a chance to equalise! A penalty, and who else but Izan, the man, the boy, the kid who’s dragged them back from despair, wins it!”

The stadium was a storm, half delirium, half outrage.

And in the centre of it, Izan, calm amid the wreckage, preparing himself for what came next.

This is the first of the day. Have fun reading and I’ll see you in a bit.

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