God Of football-Chapter 452: Waiting To Be Unleashed [GT - ]
The stadium seemed to hum with its own pulse, a living, breathing thing under the late afternoon sky.
Flares of white and navy rippled across the stands, the sound rolling in thick, unruly waves — chants, jeers, songs old and new.
There was no mistaking the setting: the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, grand and glinting like a battleship, prepared to play host to another chapter in a war older than most of the players on the pitch.
Inside the tunnel, the players stood shoulder to shoulder, the final rituals of concentration wrapping themselves around each man — last-minute stretches, silent prayers, heads bowed, jaws clenched.
Arsenal in their deep black away strip, like a blade drawn against the white of Tottenham.
The rivalry didn't need words.
It was stitched into the fabric of the shirts.
It was the way they looked straight ahead, refusing to acknowledge the opposition a few feet away.
And then, the signal.
The referee stepping forward, the captains nodding.
The walk onto the battlefield.
The roar that met them was physical, a wall of sound slamming into the players as they emerged from the tunnel into the open.
Chants blurred into one another, camera flashes sparked like static, and the drums — deep and thunderous — echoed from one end of the ground to the other.
Above it all, up in the commentary box perched high among the stands, familiar voices laced through the noise.
Peter Drury, his voice steady, almost reverent:
"Some call it the greatest rivalry in English football. Debatable, but those who love it do love it very much. A matter of inches on the map, but galaxies in loyalty.Tottenham versus Arsenal.
A city split."
Beside him, Lee Dixon, voice roughened by experience, grunted his agreement:
"It's not just a game, Peter.
It's a reckoning.
Form, tactics — all that goes out the window in this fixture.
It's about who wants it more when everything gets messy."
The camera panned briefly to the Arsenal bench.
A sharp zoom caught a figure in the second row — young, composed, unshaken by the storm swelling around him.
Sixteen years old, but seated like a man twice that, his expression unreadable beneath the black jacket zipped up to his neck.
The hood was down, his hair ruffled slightly from the walk through the chaos earlier.
His headphones hung loose around his neck, the little blinking light showing they were still on, feeding him whatever calm soundtrack he'd chosen for himself.
And then, as if coordinated, a chant began to swell from the South Stand.
At first a murmur, then a full-throated roar:
"Arteta's son! Arteta's son! He's just Arteta's son!
Little Overhyped Boy From Valencia
Arsenal Have Been Ripped Off"
It rippled and expanded until almost half the ground had taken it up, the words riding the beat of the drums, mocking and relentless.
The camera lingered on Izan for another second, but no flicker of emotion crossed his face, just a slight smile.
If he heard it, he gave no sign.
Peter Drury's voice wove back into the moment, soft but edged with knowing:
"The boy wonder on the bench today.
Yet to be seventeen years old and already the subject of songs from rival fans. I don't know much, but I know you are only mocked if you are feared."
Lee Dixon chuckled beside him, dry as old paper:
"They're relieved he's not starting, Peter, I'll tell you that.
If he was out there from the first whistle, they wouldn't be singing — they'd be worrying."
Down on the pitch, the two captains shook hands.
The referee adjusted his watch.
The whistle poised at his lips.
"There are games you play... and games you live through.
This is one of the latter. The North London Derby... begins now."
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The shrill peal of the whistle broke the tension, and in a flash, it all exploded into life.
Players surged forward, collisions happening almost immediately — a heavy tackle in midfield, a ball smashed into touch, jeers and cheers weaving together.
Tottenham came out swinging — high press, high tempo, the kind of frantic energy that could tilt a match before it had properly found its rhythm.
Their fans sensed it, feeding the players with roars that almost shook the rafters.
Arsenal, for their part, weathered the storm with a kind of grim patience.
They had been here before.
They knew the chaos would burn bright — but if they stayed calm, it would burn itself out.
Still, without Izan's mercurial spark in the lineup, the Gunners looked... a little flatter.
Slick in possession, sure, but missing that sharp knife to cut the spaces Tottenham left behind.
Every sideways pass, every patient buildup, was met with renewed chanting from the stands:
"Arteta's son! Arteta's son!"
The camera caught a brief glance from Mikel Arteta on the touchline — his jaw set, arms folded tightly across his chest.
He heard it too.
But he didn't so much as blink.
He knew what he was holding back.
And when the time came for him to unleash it, it would be him with the last laugh.
Small matchups sparked into life across the pitch, like brushfires flaring in different corners of the battlefield.
At right-back, Ben White squared off against Son Heung-min — one step too tight and Son was gone, one step too loose and White would be humiliated before thousands.
At the other end, William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhães locked horns with Richarlison — a tangle of limbs, a war of little shoves and muttered insults behind the referee's back.
In midfield, Declan Rice shouldered James Maddison away from the ball with grim efficiency, setting a tone that would stretch through the ninety minutes.
Martin Ødegaard buzzed between Tottenham's deeper midfielders, dragging Højbjerg and Bentancur left and right, trying to pry open even a sliver of space.
On Arsenal's left, Gabriel Martinelli and Pedro Porro were already trading fouls — nudges, kicks, tugs of the shirt.
Martinelli's smile was a wolfish thing; Porro's grimace promised retribution.
Everywhere you looked, private wars were being fought — each one capable of tipping the whole battlefield.
Above it all, the fans roared — Tottenham's faithful giving full throat to their anger, their passion, their need to be heard.
"Oh when the Spurs! Go marching in!", the White Wall boomed, the beat pounding against the metal frame of the stadium.
Arsenal's away section, tiny but relentless in the corner, fired back with a defiance that filled every silence they could find.
"We're by far the greatest team the world has ever seen!" they sang, trying to weather off any effect the Tottenham faithful had on its players.
In the twelfth minute, the first real threat came — and it came from Arsenal.
A quick turnover in midfield saw Ødegaard snapping a pass wide to Bukayo Saka, who drifted inside like a phantom, brushing past Destiny Udogie and bending a ball low across the box.
Kai Havertz hurled himself at it but just missed by inches, his studs slicing through empty air.
The away fans rose in a roar, a breathless collective gasp — so close.
Tottenham countered viciously with a long ball from Maddison, catching Arsenal's fullbacks stretched.
Son raced onto it, his feet blurring, but Saliba read the danger perfectly, shoulder-checking Son just enough to send him wide.
The cross that followed was harmless as David Raya gathered it cleanly and pointed immediately, pushing Arsenal back into motion.
The game swung back and forth, a pendulum without rhythm, only violence.
Every 50-50 tackle was met with a roar from one side, a howl of protest from the other.
Every whistle from the referee seemed to inflame the stands anew.
Another Arsenal chance came within seconds after Raya hurled the ball towards Ødegaard, who dinked a gorgeous ball over the top toward Havertz, who tried a cushioned volley back across goal.
Vicario, Tottenham's keeper, threw himself full-length and just managed to palm it away.
"Nananana Saka, Saka, Bukayo Saka!" chanted the Arsenal end, relentless, hurling the name into the South London sky.
But still, no goal.
Tottenham had moments, flashes — a dipping Maddison shot that Raya had to scramble across his goal to cover.
A Richarlison header that was sent wide after a dangerous set-piece.
But it was Arsenal who looked more composed, more patient.
Theirs was a pressure that built like a drumbeat — slow at first, but gaining in volume, gaining in inevitability.
Yet the longer the match stayed goalless, the louder Tottenham's fans grew.
"Stand up if you hate Arsenal!"
ripped across the stadium like gunfire, and thousands rose as one — taunting, spitting their disdain into the chilly air.
Saka, again, beat Udogie down the flank and whipped in another teasing cross — this one grazed across the six-yard box untouched, an invitation refused.
Martinelli picked up scraps on the other wing, wriggling past Porro again, earning another corner under the furious screams of the home support.
He grinned — a glint of teeth, all bite and no apology.
Arteta stood on the touchline, arms folded, lips pressed into a thin line.
He knew the margins.
And somewhere in the back of his mind, somewhere he hadn't yet allowed to the surface, there was a thought forming:
SOON.
A/N; Another, Ticket chapter fulfilled. I'm In Ghana right now and we had the power going out for almost 6 hours before coming back on thats why this chapter delayed. Anyways, Have fun reading and I will see you with the 2nd chapter of the day.