For your own sake and mine, go straight to Chapter 100 as the first 100 Chapters are translated and are shit compared Chapters to Chapters from 100 and above, that's what the reviews are talking.
January 4, 2014: Britannia Stadium - Stoke-on-Trent
.....
The Britannia Stadium was alive with energy, filled with Stoke City supporters draped in red and white. Their chants echoed through the cold January air, a steady rhythm of encouragent for the ho side. On the pitch, Leicester City fought to break through, but with seventy-five minutes gone, the scoreboard still read 1-0 to Stoke.
It had been a tough match for Leicester. Stoke's disciplined, physical approach had made it difficult to create chances, their midfield closing down space and their defenders winning every aerial battle. Every attempt to build an attack had been interrupted by a crunching tackle, a well-tid block, or a towering header.
On the sidelines, Nigel Pearson stood with arms crossed, his expression unreadable as he watched his team struggle. Steve Walsh, his assistant, shifted uncomfortably beside him.
"We're getting outmuscled," Pearson muttered.
Walsh nodded. "They're shutting down the midfield. We need soone who can change the pace."
Pearson's eyes scanned the bench, searching for a solution. Among the substitutes, sitting quietly at the edge, was Tristan Hale. At just 18 years old, he had spent the last season developing with Leicester's U21s, waiting for an opportunity.
His gaze settled on that kid, observing the midfielder's quiet focus. While so substitutes shifted in their seats or chatted, Tristan remained still, watching the match unfold. He wasn't restless or impatient—just focused, following every pass, every movent.
His blonde hair was still damp from warm-ups, pushed back without thought. His green eyes tracked the play, studying the patterns of the ga. A mix of his English mother and Chinese father, he had a distinct look, but Pearson wasn't thinking about that. What mattered was his composure. He looked ready.
Pearson exhaled. Maybe this was the mont.
[Image of Tristan Hale]
For a footballer, monts like these could shape an entire career. The FA Cup, a competition rich in history and famous for underdog triumphs, was the perfect stage for such defining opportunities. For Leicester City, this ga carried extra significance. As they pushed for promotion from the Championship, a strong cup run could build montum, boost confidence, and prove they could compete with Premier League opposition.
Ti was slipping away, and Pearson needed sothing—soone—to change the ga.
In the 75th minute, that soone was ready.
"Tristan! Warm up!" Pearson's voice cut through the noise, urgent and direct.
Tristan felt his heart pound as he sprang to his feet. He peeled off his warm-up jacket, revealing the blue Leicester jersey underneath, the number 22 on his back. This was it—his professional debut.
The weight of the occasion settled over him, but this wasn't just a first match. It was sothing more. Just days ago, he had been in a car accident that should have ended everything. His career. His life at the age of 24.
Instead, he had woken up in his 18-year-old body, back in 2014.
The world thought this was the start of his footballing journey. But Tristan knew the truth. He had been given a second chance—along with sothing extraordinary.
The Champion Codex.
A mysterious system that had awakened within him after the accident, gifting him skills beyond his past abilities. Among them, the [Peak De Bruyne] Star Card—granting him the vision and passing of one of the greatest midfielders in history.
Kevin De Bruyne wasn't yet a global superstar in 2014, but Tristan knew exactly what he would beco. And now, with those abilities running through him, he was about to step onto the pitch and prove it to the world.
Pearson placed a firm hand on his shoulder, stopping him just before he reached the touchline.
"Listen, son," he said, his voice steady. "This is a big mont, but I've seen what you can do. Just stay composed and play your ga. Stoke's midfield will drop deep to protect the lead—use the space between their lines. That's your opening."
He nodded, his heartbeat steadying as determination replaced any nerves. "I'm ready, boss."
Pearson gave a small nod of approval before stepping back. The fourth official raised the substitution board, displaying Tristan's number 22.
As he jogged toward the center of the pitch, the comntator's voice picked up on the broadcast, shifting focus to the young midfielder about to make his professional debut.
As Tristan jogged onto the pitch, the comntator's voice carried through the broadcast, setting the stage for his debut.
"Here cos young Tristan Hale, just 18 years of age, making his professional debut for Leicester City. From what we've heard, this lad has vision beyond his years. The academy coaches have been raving about him, especially his composure on the ball. Let's see if he can handle the pressure of an FA Cup tie in a place as tough as the Britannia."
as he crossed the white line onto the pitch, the Leicester supporters behind the goal erupted into cheers. Their team needed sothing special, and perhaps this young midfielder could provide it.
Among the Stoke fans, there were murmurs of curiosity. A teenager, thrown into such a high-stakes match? Was he truly ready?
Tristan could feel the weight of the mont, the countless eyes fixed on him. But rather than nerves, he felt a sense of control, a quiet confidence settling in his chest.
In his mind, the Champion Codex stirred, a faint hum in the background. The [Peak De Bruyne] card wasn't just a skill boost—it was part of him now. The instincts, the awareness, the ability to pick a pass before others even saw it—it was all there, ready to be unleashed.
His ti had co.
...
With fifteen minutes left, Leicester had reshaped into a 4-2-3-1 formation, a tactical shift designed to break through Stoke's deep defensive block.
Tristan Hale slotted into the No. 10 role, operating between the lines, where space was limited but potential was endless. Ahead of him, Jamie Vardy hovered around the Stoke center-backs, constantly on the move, waiting for that one perfect ball. Riyad Mahrez and Marc Albrighton stretched the pitch, keeping Stoke's full-backs occupied, while the two holding midfielders anchored the middle, giving Tristan the freedom to drift, create, and dictate play.
Barely seconds after stepping onto the pitch, the ball rolled toward him. His first professional touch—a simple sideways pass to Mahrez. Nothing spectacular, nothing that would make the highlights.
But sothing about it was different.
His touch was effortless, smooth, the ball settling perfectly under his control. He didn't rush, didn't force anything. Even as Stoke's midfielders closed in, his posture remained calm, his eyes constantly scanning before the ball even arrived.
From the comntary booth, the analysts took notice.
"He's playing with his head up, always scanning," one comntator observed. "That's sothing you see from experienced playmakers, not an 18-year-old making his debut."
"It's a sign of confidence," his co-comntator added. "He's not overwheld by the mont. He's settling in straight away."
With Tristan on the pitch, Leicester's attacks had more urgency, more rhythm.
Stoke, sensing the shift, retreated into a deep defensive shape, forming two rigid banks of four. Leicester responded by pressing higher, pinning them back, cutting off their passing lanes.
Every ti Tristan received the ball, he operated in the tight spaces Stoke struggled to cover.
To so, the midfield looked crowded, ssy, impenetrable.
To Tristan, it was a pattern unfolding before his eyes.
He saw runs before they were made. Spaces before they opened. Passing lanes that didn't exist yet.
Leicester's possession ga sharpened.
Mahrez dropped inside, exchanging quick passes.Albrighton overlapped down the left, pulling a defender wide.Vardy kept moving, testing the Stoke backline, always lurking, always looking for a gap.
Tristan was at the center of it all, linking play, finding angles, controlling the tempo.
A clever flick to Mahrez here. A one-touch pass to Drinkwater there. Every move carried purpose, precision, and intent.
The crowd murmured, noticing Leicester's growing dominance. The montum was shifting.
Then, it happened in the 80th minute in a mont of pure brilliance.
The ball rolled toward Tristan, just inside Leicester's half, his back to goal.
A Stoke midfielder, seeing an opportunity, rushed in fast, eager to close him down.
Tristan didn't even flinch.
A quick drop of the shoulder. A feint. A delicate half-turn.
His marker lunged—and missed completely.
With a single, fluid motion, Tristan had spun away, leaving his opponent stumbling in his wake.
The crowd gasped—a mix of admiration from the Leicester fans and frustration from the ho supporters.
In the comntary box, excitent rippled through their voices.
"OH, LOOK AT THAT! Tristan Hale just spun his man like a seasoned pro!"
"That's outrageous composure for an 18-year-old on debut!"
But Tristan wasn't done.
As he lifted his head, the Champion Codex's enhanced vision flickered to life.
And in that one split second, he saw it.
Jamie Vardy.
Making his signature run, cutting between the Stoke center-backs, his timing perfect, his acceleration lethal.
Tristan didn't hesitate.
With one smooth motion, he struck the ball.
The ball soared through the air, curling around the defenders, bending just out of reach of the desperate center-backs.
It dipped at the perfect mont, landing right at Vardy's feet, in full stride.
"WHAT A PASS!" the comntator shouted, his voice rising in excitent. "Tristan Hale has just unlocked Stoke's defense with an absolutely world-class ball!"
Vardy didn't even need to break stride.
One touch to control. One touch to finish.
A low, driven shot, arrowed into the bottom corner of the net.
Begović dived, stretching as far as he could—but it was hopeless.
The ball nestled into the net, and the Leicester end of the stadium erupted.
The mont exploded.
Leicester's traveling fans roared, their voices cutting through the Britannia's cold air. In the stands, arms shot into the sky, fists pumped, scarves waved.
Jamie Vardy sprinted toward the corner flag, yelling in celebration, but before he reached it, he turned—pointing directly at Tristan.
"That's ALL YOU, mate!" he shouted over the noise, a grin stretching across his face.
The comntators could barely contain themselves.
"WHAT A GOAL BY JAMIE VARDY!"
"And WHAT AN ASSIST from Tristan Hale!" another voice cut in. "That's a pass that would make any world-class playmaker proud! The vision, the weight on that ball—it's absolutely subli!"
Tristan jogged over, his heart pounding, adrenaline coursing through his veins.
Vardy clapped him on the back, still grinning. "That was top class, mate. Keep feeding like that, and we're winning this."
Tristan allowed himself a small smile, but he wasn't satisfied yet.
The ga wasn't over.
And he wasn't done.
Stoke, rattled by the equalizer, abandoned their cautious approach and pushed forward in desperation. Their midfield, which had been disciplined for most of the ga, was now stretched thin, their defenders pumping long balls forward in search of a late winner.
But Leicester's backline held firm.
Morgan and Moore dominated the aerial battles, eting every cross with towering headers. Danny and Jas shielded the defense, cutting out passing lanes and snapping into tackles.
Each ti Stoke launched the ball forward, it was cleared—and each clearance seed to find its way to Tristan.
And every ti he got it, he made the right decision.
A quick pass to keep possession. A calm switch of play to relieve pressure. A perfectly weighted through ball to release Mahrez or Albrighton on the counter.
Despite the intensity of the mont, Tristan played like he had all the ti in the world.
"The composure on this kid is unreal," one comntator remarked. "He's dictating the tempo like a veteran!"
With minutes left on the clock, Leicester won a corner after Vardy's darting run forced a last-ditch clearance.
Mahrez trotted over to take it, wiping sweat from his forehead as he glanced toward the box. Leicester had sent everyone forward.
The ball was swung in dangerously, curling toward the crowded penalty area.
A Stoke defender rose highest, powering a header clear.
The ball floated toward the edge of the box.
Straight to Tristan.
For a split second, everything seed to slow down.
The ball bounced once, rolling perfectly into his path.
Tristan didn't hesitate.
He adjusted his body and struck it cleanly with his right foot.
The shot soared through the air, curving away from the goalkeeper.
The crowd held its breath.
It dipped at the last mont, rocketing toward the top corner.
The keeper dived, stretching desperately—
Too late.
The ball smashed into the net.
GOAL!
For a second, the entire stadium stood frozen. Then, pandemonium erupted.
"TRISTAN HALE! WHAT A STRIKE!"
"OH MY WORD! On his debut, he's not only provided the assist for the equalizer, but now he's scored an absolute screar to win it for Leicester!"
"This kid is special—mark my words, we're witnessing the birth of a star!"
In the stands, Leicester's traveling supporters lost control.
Down on the pitch, his teammates sward him.
Vardy was the first to reach him, grabbing his shoulders and shaking him with excitent.
"Are you kidding ?!" he yelled, laughing.
Within seconds, Mahrez, Albrighton,Danny, and the rest piled onto him, hugging, shouting, ruffling his hair, their energy infectious.
On the touchline, Pearson clenched his fists, letting out a rare display of emotion as his assistant, Steve Walsh, turned to him, shaking his head in disbelief.
As soon as the final whistle blew, the Leicester fans erupted again.
They had secured a 2-1 victory over Stoke City, and at the heart of it was an 18-year-old debutant who had changed the ga with an assist and a wonder goal.
Tristan stood near the center of the pitch, hands on his knees, still catching his breath from the frenetic final minutes.
Then he heard it.
"Tristan! Tristan! Tristan!"
At first, it barely registered.
Then he looked up.
The entire away section was on its feet, scarves raised, chanting his na.
A standing ovation.
For him.
His eyes swept across the sea of Leicester supporters, thousands of voices singing his na.
For a mont, he just stood there, taking it in.
This wasn't just applause. This was recognition. Appreciation.
It was every young footballer's dream—to step onto the pitch, to change the ga, and to walk off as a hero.
Vardy jogged up beside him, clapping him on the back with a grin.
"Co on,go enjoy it, this is your mont! Go give them a wave!"
Tristan let out a breath, smiling despite himself.
He straightened, lifted his head, and began walking toward the fans, clapping as he went.
The chanting only grew louder, his na echoing through the Britannia Stadium.
From the comntary box, the admiration was clear.
"Listen to that!"
"Tristan Hale, only 18 years old, and he's just been handed a standing ovation after an absolutely extraordinary debut performance!"
"What a day for the youngster—an assist and a goal to win it for Leicester. Talent like this doesn't co around often!"
As Tristan reached the edge of the pitch, he raised both arms, clapping back to the Leicester fans.
This mont belonged to him. But it also belonged to them.
They had cheered for him before he had even touched the ball, and now, he was giving them sothing in return.
He scanned the sea of blue and white scarves. So were waving, others were shouting words lost in the noise, but their smiles said everything.
The connection between players and supporters was forged in those monts.
"Look at this! The fans are still on their feet, giving Hale the kind of ovation you'd expect for a club legend!"
"And why not? This isn't just a debut—this is a statent performance! A stunning assist, a wonder goal, and a confidence that belies his age!"
"We are witnessing the birth of sothing incredible—this lad has the potential to be a world class player! Mark my words."
As the chants of his na echoed through the stadium, Tristan felt a strange wave of disbelief.
Not at the match itself—he had done what he knew he could do—but at how surreal it all felt.
The car accident. The rebirth. The Champion Codex.
It still didn't feel real.
He had been given a second chance at life, a gift that had already transford him into sothing beyond his natural ability.
The [Peak De Bruyne] Star Card had given him the vision and passing of one of the world's greatest midfielders.
Before he could get lost in thought, a familiar voice snapped him back.
"Not bad for a debut, eh?"
Vardy, still buzzing from the win, threw an arm around Tristan's shoulder, his grin wide as ever.
"You've got them eating out of your hand, mate."
Tristan chuckled, shaking his head. "I still can't believe it."
Mahrez jogged up beside them, his own smirk unmistakable. "Believe it," he said. "You were class out there. We knew you had talent, but that? That was different."
The praise from his teammates felt just as good as the roar of the crowd.
The three of them continued their walk toward the tunnel, but Tristan could still hear his na ringing through the air.
"Tristan! Tristan! Tristan!"
The away fans hadn't stopped chanting, their voices growing louder.
One final ti, Tristan turned back toward them, raising his hand in appreciation.
The chanting intensified, and he clapped in rhythm with them, sealing a mont that would live in his mory forever.
"Listen to that!" the comntator's voice crackled with energy.
"Tristan Hale, at just 18 years old, has put in a performance that will be rembered for years to co!"
"An assist and a goal to win the match—this is the kind of night that launches careers!"
"Mark this day down, because Leicester may have just found their player!"
As Tristan walked through the tunnel, Pearson was waiting. He patted Tristan on the shoulder, his expression sowhere between pride and satisfaction.
"You've done well, lad," Pearson said, his voice steady. "Kept your head, delivered when it counted. Just what we needed."
Tristan t his gaze. "Thank you, boss."
Pearson studied him for a second longer, then added, "There's a lot more to co from you, isn't there?"
Tristan didn't hesitate.
"I'll keep working hard."
Pearson nodded. That was all he needed to hear.
The football world had just seen the first glimpse of Tristan Hale.
And they were about to see a whole lot more.
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