Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 211: Touch The Last Four!
A groan rolled around the Amex as the Ghanaian right back slipped his hands onto his head before he began to jog back into his place.
Feeling the sudden switch again, Ben Amos moved for the restart with no hurry in him now.
A ball boy tossed him the ball, and he caught it with both gloves, but he showed no urgency the game required of him, like intentionally taking small steps before taking almost 5 seconds to set the ball down, before looking back up and then glancing at the scoreboard.
94:37.
"Thirty seconds," he muttered under his breath before looking back at the pitch in front of him.
He had barely set himself before the referee’s whistle pierced the rain, and that startled Amos a bit because out of nowhere, the yellow card came out.
For a second, the keeper stared as if he could not quite believe the timing, then accepted it with a slight lift of the chin that admitted the truth of it.
He had been wasting time.
Not outrageously, but enough.
"And the cards keep coming in these final seconds. Two for Wigan now in the span of 7 minutes. They should be careful because it isn’t over even if they win the match," the commentator said. "The tension’s fraying everyone now."
Amos, not wasting any more time, sent the goal kick long into the centre of the pitch, a hanging all that pulled bodies toward it from both sides.
Most in the stadium expected the referee to take the next natural pause and end it, but he didn’t.
Mac Allister rose and headed the ball back into Wigan territory, but Whatmough met it with his own forehead and sent it right back where it had come from.
The ball bounced once towards the Brighton backline and then dropped near Lewis Dunk.
He had been magnificent for most of the night, stepping out, winning duels, controlling the line with the certainty of a man who trusted himself absolutely.
He looked calm even now, even under pressure, taking the ball down and shielding it with all the poise of an international centre-half.
Then Fletcher and Broadhead came at him together.
It was not elegant pressing.
It was desperate, hungry, ugly pressure, the sort that forces thought to become panic and as Dunk shaped to clear toward the right, he accidentally committed one of the cardinal sins as a defender.
The reaction from the gantry was immediate and sharp.
"Oh, Dunk’s slipped. He’s lost the ball!"
His teammates instantly switched on, moving to recover the ball, but so was Ezra.
He reached the loose ball before Webster could adjust and poked it beyond him into open space, turning the mistake into a sprint toward the Brighton box.
Webster recovered quickly enough to angle him wide, guiding him farther and farther toward the left channel, and the commentator’s words tumbled over themselves trying to keep pace with what was unfolding.
"Ezra’s in again, Webster’s trying to show him away from danger, he’s got to do something here, he has to do something now..."
And truly, Ezra did.
With Webster leaning into him, tugging and clamping and trying to squeeze him out of the move entirely, Ezra dragged the ball back with the sole of his right foot, shifted it across his body with his left leg and then burst around the front of the defender before Webster could reset.
A hand grabbed at him, hard enough to twist his collar and wrench at his shoulders, but Ezra would not go down.
Not here.
Not this time.
He drove on, body tilted, legs pumping through the contact, and then looked up.
On the far side of the box, arriving from nowhere and somehow exactly where he needed to be, was Darikwa.
With no other choice, Ezra hit the square ball across the face of the goal, hoping the ball would reach its target as the gantry lost all restraint.
"Darikwa! Darikwa’s there!"
The right-back reached it just ahead of Steele, got the faintest but truest touch on the ball, and in that same instant Lewis Dunk, scrambling back across the wreckage of his own mistake, scythed through him from behind.
Darikwa slowed and then went down.
But the ball didn’t.
It kept rolling, slow for one sick second and then quicker, past Steele’s rooted stare and into the net.
For a heartbeat, the world at the Amex broke apart.
Then came the scream.
"GOAL! GOAL! GOAL! GOAL"
"WOULD YOU BELIEVE IT? WIGAN HAVE DONE IT! THEY HAVE TURNED THIS TIE INSIDE OUT IN STOPPAGE TIME! FROM THE BRINK OF ELIMINATION TO THE EDGE OF THE SEMI-FINALS, AND IT IS DARIKWA, OF ALL MEN, WHO MAY HAVE WRITTEN THEIR NAME INTO THIS CUP RUN FOREVER!"
The away end detonated as Darikwa bounced back to his feet as if the tackle had lit something in him rather than taken anything away.
He yanked his shirt over his head and tore away toward the bench, chest bare to the rain, roaring with a joy too big to contain.
Every Wigan player not nailed to the pitch flew after him, and even the coaches weren’t shying away.
Nolan lost all sense of decorum while Dawson, usually so measured, was already striding forward into the flood of bodies as the bench erupted to meet their scorer.
Behind them, Brighton stood frozen in little islands of disbelief.
And over all of it, over the rain and the noise and the raw disorientation of a cup tie that had just twisted again, the commentator’s voice drove through with the force of history.
"This is what the FA Cup does to you. It drags hope out of places where reason said there was none. Wigan were battered, stretched, made to suffer, and still they found the heart to believe. Brighton looked to have them beaten. They looked to have done enough. But now, here in stoppage time, with the Amex stunned into silence and one corner of it shaking itself loose, Wigan Athletic can almost touch the last four!"
Darikwa disappeared into the white-and-navy storm around the technical area, shirt clenched in one hand, face split wide by a shout that sounded like every mile of the season pouring out at once. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
And still the noise from the travelling support kept rising.
"Ah, I really want to play," Leo rooted to his chair on the bench, muttered as his mates celebrated right in front of him!







