Chapter 304: The Two Worlds III: Second Half
The away dressing room at the Etihad was a strange kind of sanctuary. The roar of the crowd was a distant, muffled hum, a world away from the cauldron of noise just outside the door.
The air was thick with the sll of sweat, linint, and sheer, unadulterated effort. My players were slumped in their seats, their chests heaving, their faces a mask of exhaustion. There was no celebration, no back-slapping, no sense of triumph.
Just the grim, quiet determination of soldiers in a trench, taking a brief, precious mont of respite before the next wave of the assault.
I looked at the faces of my players, my warriors. I saw the fatigue in their eyes, the burning in their lungs, the aches in their muscles. But I also saw sothing else. I saw belief.
I saw a stubborn, defiant refusal to be broken. I let them have their mont, let them drink their water, let Rebecca and her team do their work, checking for injuries, massaging tired muscles. Then, I stood before them.
This was not the ti for a fiery, emotional speech. This was a ti for calm, for clarity, for tactical reinforcent. I looked at the half-ti stats Marcus had handed , the almost comical numbers that told a story of complete dominance and utter futility. I held up the tablet for them all to see.
"Possession: seventy-eight percent to them," I said, my voice calm and even. "Shots: fourteen to them, one to us. On paper, we are being annihilated. But the only number that matters is this one."
I pointed to the top of the screen. "Zero-zero. They have thrown everything at us. Their superstars, their tactical genius, their ho crowd. And they have failed. You have not broken. You have not bent. You have suffered, you have bled, and you have held the line."
I walked over to Jas Tomkins, who was having a small cut above his eye tended to by one of the physios. I put a hand on his shoulder. "This man," I said, my voice filled with a quiet pride, "threw his head at a football traveling at a hundred miles an hour to save a certain goal. That is not tactics. That is not data. That is courage. That is what this team is built on."
I turned back to the group. The System was feeding
data, a stream of information that I translated into simple, actionable intelligence. [Opponent Frustration Index: 78%. Key Players (De Bruyne, Silva) showing signs of impatience. Attacking patterns becoming more predictable, more reliant on crosses.]
"They are getting frustrated," I continued, presenting the System’s analysis as my own observation.
"Their attacks are becoming more predictable. They are running out of ideas. They will co at us even harder in the second half. It will be even more difficult than the first. But their desperation is our opportunity. They will push more n forward. They will leave more space behind. And when they do, we will be ready. One chance. That’s all we need. One perfect mont."
I looked at each of them, my gaze lingering on the three young substitutes: Nya, Eze, and Connor, who were watching with a wide-eyed intensity. "Rest," I said finally. "Recover. And then go back out there and show them what it ans to fight."
The players returned to the pitch for the second half warm-up, and the atmosphere was electric. The three thousand Palace fans, who had never stopped singing, greeted them with a roar of defiance that seed to shake the very foundations of the stadium.
They were a sea of red and blue, a vibrant, living entity that pulsed with a belief that defied logic, that defied the stats, that defied the sheer, overwhelming quality of the opposition. They were not just spectators; they were part of the wall.
The second half began as the first had ended: with a relentless, suffocating wave of blue. City, clearly having been given a rocket by Pep at half-ti, were even faster, even more intense. The pressure was imnse. Our players, who had already run themselves into the ground, were visibly tiring. The System’s notifications were a constant stream of amber and red warnings.
[Stamina Alert: van Aanholt (55%)]
[Stamina Alert: McArthur (52%)]
In the 62nd minute, it happened. The mistake. Patrick van Aanholt, who had been a rock all ga, received a simple pass from Sakho. He was tired, his legs heavy, his mind clouded by fatigue. For a split second, he hesitated, his touch uncharacteristically sloppy. It was all the ti City needed.
The ball was stolen, and in a flash, they were on the attack. It was a mont that showed the brutal reality of football at this level. These were not NPCs in a ga; they were human beings, pushed to the absolute limit of their physical and ntal endurance. And sotis, they broke.
The ball was worked to Agüero, who found a rare pocket of space in the box. He turned and shot, a low, hard strike destined for the bottom corner. But Mamadou Sakho, a man who seed to be powered by pure, joyous defiance, appeared from nowhere.
He launched himself into a desperate, last-ditch slide, his body a human shield. The ball cannoned off his shin and looped over the bar. It was a heroic, goal-saving block, a mont of individual brilliance born from collective desperation. The wall had cracked, but it had not broken.
I looked at Sarah, my heart pounding in my chest. She just nodded, her face a mask of grim determination. It was ti. The team was on the brink. We couldn’t hold on like this for another twenty minutes. It was ti to roll the dice.
In the 70th minute, I turned to the bench. "Nya, Eze, Connor. You’re on."
The three young players, who had been warming up with a nervous intensity, looked at , their eyes wide with a mixture of shock and excitent. This was it.
The mont they had been dreaming of. I made the triple substitution, a huge, audacious gamble in a match of this magnitude.
***
Thank you to Sir nayelus for the magic castle.
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