Harbinger Of Glory

Chapter 361: Not A Fluke!



Chapter 361: Not A Fluke!

Standing behind the sidelines, Seriki took the throw and found Whatmough, who found Leo only for Leo to let it go to O’Shea without touching it.

Jackson had been so keen on getting to the ball that he hadn’t even noticed when the dummy had been executed, as for another second, he continued haggling Leo, who just watched him.

After receiving the ball, O’Shea set his sights on attack.

By now nobody in a Wigan shirt seemed particularly concerned with what their position was supposed to be.

The centre-back strode through Chelsea’s shape with enough confidence that even the home crowd began pointing him out and so did the commentary.

"O’Shea’s gone forward again here," the commentator said, sounding almost amused.

"You wouldn’t think Wigan were the side protecting a three-one lead."

The move continued through him.

He wormed his way through the field, with grace that couldn’t belong to a defender.

And when he had gone enough, he slowed, eyes searching wildly before picking out a Wigan shirt in the core of Chelsea’s parked bus.

Reyes received the ball just outside the area with his back to goal and Colwill tight behind him, trying to prevent the turn.

For a moment it looked as though the Portuguese midfielder would have to recycle possession, but instead he improvised, flicking the ball across his body with his left foot before spinning around the defender in the same movement.

The touch bought him just enough room, and with it, his head came up.

And not long after, his leg went through the ball.

The shot flew through a crowd of bodies and forced Bergström into action, the Chelsea goalkeeper reacting late before throwing out a strong hand to push the effort away from goal.

Unfortunately for Chelsea, it dropped straight into the path of Jake.

The striker attacked the rebound instinctively and got his shot away before Bergström could recover, but just as the Wigan supporters behind the goal began rising in anticipation, Disasi threw himself across the line of the effort and blocked it.

The clearance spun behind for a corner as Jake stopped where he was and stared toward the goal with both hands on his head.

He genuinely couldn’t believe it.

"That should be four," the commentator groaned.

"I don’t know how Chelsea have survived that one. Bergström makes the first save, Disasi rescues the second, and somehow they’re still alive."

"They’re hanging on by their fingertips right now," the co-commentator added.

"Every attack feels like it might end with the ball in the net."

The corner only reinforced the feeling.

Leo made his way across to take it while the Wigan supporters behind the goal remained on their feet, their voices carrying across Stamford Bridge.

Every time the Italian approached a set piece, there was an expectation attached to it, and Chelsea couldn’t help but dread it.

Inside the box, Jake was already battling for position as Silva was leaning into him more and more, but it wasn’t only him.

Colwill was trying to push him away from the space he wanted, and behind him, another Chelsea shirt hovered nearby in case the first two weren’t enough.

But none of it seemed to bother him too much.

Jake kept adjusting his feet, nudging shoulders aside and reclaiming every inch they tried to take from him.

Leo spotted it immediately, and he knew that his striker wasn’t asking for the ball.

He was expecting it.

And he was going to give it to him.

With a short run-up, Leo curled the ball viciously toward the heart of the area and the reaction inside the box was immediate.

Bodies collided.

Arms tangled.

Defenders and attackers launched themselves toward the same patch of air knowing full well that whoever won it would probably decide the attack.

In the midst of that stampede, Jake came out on top, and it was simply because he wanted it more.

Silva rose with him.

Colwill rose with him.

Yet somehow Jake emerged above both, meeting the ball at the highest point and driving his forehead through it with enough force to send it skidding down toward the corner.

Bergström saw it and even moved.

But there was too much power on it and too much placement.

The ball bounced once before nestling inside the bottom corner, and for half a heartbeat Stamford Bridge fell into that strange silence that only comes when forty thousand people have all witnessed the same thing and haven’t quite processed it yet.

Then the away end erupted.

"HE’S GOT IT THIS TIME!" the commentator shouted.

"JAKE MAKES IT FOUR! FOUR-ONE TO WIGAN ATHLETIC AND THIS HAS TURNED INTO AN ABSOLUTE STATEMENT!"

The roar from the travelling supporters rolled across the stadium as Jake wheeled away toward the touchline and from that side Leo was already sprinting toward him.

They met somewhere between the penalty area and corner side, crashing into each other before tumbling to the turf, and within seconds the rest of the team had arrived.

The celebration became a mess of limbs, laughter and shouting as red shirts poured in from every direction.

"Forget the scoreline for a second," the co-commentator said.

"Look at the conviction. Look at the bravery. This is a newly promoted side coming to Stamford Bridge and playing as though they belong here."

"And right now," the commentator replied, "Chelsea have absolutely no answer for them. Every problem Wigan pose seems to create another one. Dawson will be watching this and wondering if he’s dreaming."

Down below, buried beneath a pile of celebrating teammates, Jake was laughing so hard he could barely get up.

And judging by the noise coming from the away end, neither could the supporters.

Across the country, people were looking at their phones.

In pubs and living rooms and offices where work had quietly become secondary, the score was moving from screen to screen with almost unnatural speed.

People kept showing it to each other as if a second pair of eyes might change it.

It never did.

Chelsea 1. Wigan Athletic 4.

Every time someone saw it for the first time, the reaction was almost identical: a pause, a second look, and then the inevitable question.

What on earth is happening at Stamford Bridge?

And back in the stadium, the Wigan players walked back to their half, grinning as the scoreboard above the north stand showed the result of their undying commitment towards the game.

"Full time here at Stamford Bridge," the commentator said, when the referee’s whistle finally came.

"Chelsea one, Wigan Athletic four. And I will say this once, and I will say it clearly.

What Wigan Athletic are doing in this Premier League season is not a fluke, it is not luck, and it is not a story that is going to end quietly."

"They are the real thing. And this league is going to have to start treating them like it."


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