For an hour at Field Mill it felt less like an FA Cup tie and more like an experiment conducted with a stopwatch and a prayer. Mikel Arteta admitted afterwards the players had practised the formation "once… for about ten minutes," and you could believe it.
Arsenal, flying high in the league and fresh from a win over Brighton, arrived in Nottinghamshire with nine changes and two boys who still need parental permission to sit GCSEs.
And yet by the end the Gunners had scraped through 2–1, reached the FA Cup quarter-finals for the first time since 2020, and somehow managed to make history along the way.
Not bad for a night that nearly turned into a full-blown cup humiliation.
Two Sixteen-Year-Olds, One Very Long Evening
The headline before kickoff was obvious: two 16-year-olds in Arsenal's starting XI.
Defender Marli Salmon made his first start while Max Dowman — already Arsenal's resident record-breaker — became the youngest player ever to start an FA Cup match for the club at 16 years and 66 days.
Even more remarkable, it was the first time any Premier League club had started two players aged 16 or under in the same team in any competition.
Bold? Yes.
Sensible? That was another question entirely once Mansfield started flying into tackles.
League One's finest came out swinging. Within fifteen minutes the hosts had fired eight shots, the most Arsenal have faced in that opening period of any game this season. The Emirates youngsters suddenly discovered the FA Cup is not a youth tournament with nicer grass.
Dowman, to his credit, looked like he had wandered into the wrong age group by accident. He drifted through midfield with the calm assurance of someone ten years older — gliding past challenges, scanning for passes, and demanding the ball constantly.
If anything, the teenager looked offended when he missed a chance.
Good sign.
Mansfield Refuse To Read The Script
Eventually Arsenal found a foothold. Noni Madueke struck first, giving the visitors the lead and the vague impression that order had been restored.
Mansfield disagreed.
The equaliser arrived after the break following a misplaced pass from Salmon — the sort of mistake every defender makes sooner or later but which feels like the end of the world when you are sixteen and playing in front of thousands.
To his credit, Dowman was the first teammate over to console him.
It was the moment that summed up Arsenal's night: young players learning the brutal physics of senior football in real time.
Arteta replaced Salmon with Jurrien Timber, but the manager was careful afterwards to keep the perspective that sometimes vanishes in cup scares.
Every player in that dressing room, he said, has made a mistake that leads to a goal.
Just most of them were not teenagers doing it on national television.
Enter The Big Guns
With Mansfield sensing blood and Arsenal wobbling, Arteta finally reached for the cavalry.
On came the senior reinforcements — the players who normally start these matches rather than rescue them.
And it was one of those arrivals who ultimately settled it.
Eberechi Eze, cool where others had been frantic, struck the winner to spare Arsenal's blushes and send them into the quarter-finals.
Cue the collective exhale.
Dowman's Growing Legend
Even in a match decided by substitutes, the name everyone left talking about was Max Dowman.
The midfielder already holds an absurd list of records for someone still closer to primary school than his prime:
- Youngest Arsenal starter in the FA Cup
- Youngest player to start a match for Arsenal (Carabao Cup vs Brighton)
- Youngest player to appear in the Champions League
Observers have begun whispering comparisons to Lionel Messi — something Arteta himself has hinted at carefully.
Hyperbole? Probably.
But the signs are ridiculous.
Dowman carries the ball with elegance, releases passes at exactly the right moment, and constantly scans the pitch like a veteran playmaker. Former defender Stephen Warnock summed it up perfectly:
"Max Dowman is a delight to watch… his vision and understanding of the game is phenomenal for someone so young."
When Arsenal finally escaped Mansfield's clutches, it was impossible not to feel that this might one day be remembered as the night a future star announced himself.
The Bigger Picture
For all the nerves, the result mattered.
The victory was Arsenal's 35th win in all competitions this season, more than any other club in Europe and the highest total of Arteta's tenure.
It also keeps the FA Cup dream alive — the same trophy Arteta lifted in his first season in 2020.
But perhaps the real story wasn't the win.
It was the sight of two academy boys thrown into the storm, one dazzling and the other learning the hard way, both walking off the pitch a little wiser.
Arsenal survived the scare.
And somewhere in the chaos, the future took its first steps.
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