"He’s a ghost now," Arne Slot said, his voice a calm, analytical hum as he pointed at Cole Palr’s icon on the tactical tablet. "He is no longer a defensive anchor. He is a free-roaming number 10, looking for the exact sa pockets of space that you are, Leo." He looked at Leon, his expression one of deep, professional respect. "The second half is not a ga of systems. It is a duel between you two. The team that wins this duel, wins the match."
He then looked at his midfield anchor, Wataru Endō, a quiet, tireless engine of a player. "Endō," he said, his voice firm. "Your job is no longer to just screen the defense. Your job is Cole Palr. Everywhere he goes, you go. You are his shadow. You will not give him a single, easy touch. Understood?"
The Japanese international just gave a single, firm, and utterly reliable nod.
The second half began, and Old Trafford, which had been a nervous, frustrated sea of red, roared back to life. Their team was unshackled, playing with a new, aggressive freedom. And at the heart of it all was Cole Palr.
He was a phantom. He drifted into pockets of space, his movent intelligent, his touch subli. In the 53rd minute, he received the ball, spun away from a challenge with an effortless grace, and played a pass to Marcus Rashford that was so perfectly weighted, so beautifully disguised, it was a work of art. Rashford took one touch and unleashed a furious shot that was brilliantly saved by Alisson.
"THE GHOST HAS APPEARED!" the comntator, Barry, roared. "Cole Palr has been unleashed, and he is a completely different player! He is conducting the orchestra for Manchester United, and Liverpool are struggling to keep up!"
But for every move Palr made, Endō was there, a quiet, tireless, and deeply annoying shadow. It was a beautiful, brutal, and utterly fascinating duel in the heart of the midfield.
The ga was a breathtaking, end-to-end spectacle. In the 61st minute, Liverpool reminded them of their own terrifying power. A long, raking pass from Virgil van Dijk found Mo Salah on the right wing. The Egyptian King, who had been relatively quiet, exploded into life. He dropped his shoulder, cut inside with a devastating burst of speed, leaving his defender for dead. He looked up, and with the outside of his boot, he curled a perfect, wicked cross towards the back post. Alexander Isak, the hamr, was arriving like a freight train. He t the ball with a flying, acrobatic volley that crashed against the crossbar with a sound that echoed around the stadium.
A collective groan of a million heartbreaks went through the Anfield crowd.
The ga was on a knife’s edge. A single mont of genius, a single mistake, would decide it. And in the 72nd minute, the mistake ca.
A tired pass from a Liverpool midfielder was intercepted. The ball was imdiately worked to Cole Palr. He took one touch, looked up, and saw the run. It was his signature move, the pass he had been looking for all ga. He slid a perfect, defense-splitting through-ball into the path of the onrushing Marcus Rashford. The pass was a masterpiece.
Rashford was one-on-one with Alisson. He took a touch, opened up his body, and coolly slotted the ball into the bottom corner of the net.
1-1.
"THEY ARE LEVEL! THE THEATRE OF DREAMS ERUPTS!" Barry scread. "A mont of pure, devastating quality from Manchester United! The pass from Palr, the finish from Rashford! A goal conceived in London, and executed to perfection in Manchester! We are all square in the battle of the titans!"
The equalizer sent a jolt of pure, arrogant confidence through the Manchester United ranks. They poured forward, slling blood. Liverpool, for the first ti, looked rattled.
But in monts of chaos, leaders are born. In the 81st minute, with his team on the ropes, Leon decided to take the ga by the scruff of the neck.
He received the ball deep in his own half, and he just started to run. He glided past the first challenge with his ’Silken Dribble’, the ball a loyal friend at his feet. He shimmied past a second, a blur of white hair and red shirt. He was a man on a mission, a one-man stampede against the tide. He approached the edge of the United box and unleashed a shot, a blast of pure, unadulterated power from his ’Power Shot - Level 2’. The ball flew like a missile, but the United keeper, André Onana, produced a magnificent, flying save to deny him.
The ga was a beautiful, glorious, heart-stopping ss of individual duels and monts of magic. And in the 88th minute, the final, decisive blow was landed.
It started, as it so often did, with Mo Salah. He received the ball, cut inside, and curled a beautiful shot that was destined for the far corner. Onana, once again, made a brilliant save. But the rebound, this ti, fell perfectly, beautifully, to the feet of one man.
Cole Palr, who had been a ghost in attack, had tracked back with a ferocious, defensive desperation. The ball was at his feet, in his own box. He had ti. He could have cleared it. But he hesitated for a single, fatal split second. And in that mont, the predator arrived. Alexander Isak, the hamr, closed him down with a ferocious, relentless press. He didn’t just tackle him; he mugged him, stealing the ball with a clean, powerful, and utterly dominant challenge.
Isak took one touch to steady himself and then, with the composure of a master, he smashed the ball into the roof of the net.
2-1 to Liverpool.
Anfield didn’t just cheer; it detonated. An atomic bomb of pure, unadulterated joy and relief. Isak roared, pointing to the sky, a hero born from a mont of pure, hard work. The players mobbed him, a screaming, joyous pile of red.
The final whistle blew a few minutes later. A glorious, hard-fought, and ultimately deserved victory.
The players did their lap of honor, the sound of "You’ll Never Walk Alone" a beautiful, emotional anthem washing over them. As they walked towards the tunnel, Leon saw him. Cole Palr, his face a mask of quiet, profound disappointnt, was walking alone.
Leon jogged over, a feeling of deep, complicated empathy in his heart.
"Hey," he said softly.
Palr looked up, a small, sad, and deeply respectful smile on his face. "You got ," he said, his voice a low murmur. "Your guy... he just wanted it more in that mont."
"You played a great ga," Leon said honestly. "That pass for the goal was... a work of art."
They stood there for a mont, two friends, two rivals, who had just been through a war. Palr held out his hand, offering to swap shirts.
As they did, a new notification, one that Leon hadn’t seen in a long, long ti, flashed in his Vision. It was from the ’News Feed’, but the source was not a sports publication. It was from a global, high-security intelligence network.
The headline was simple, stark, and sent a wave of pure, ice-cold dread through his entire body, a dread that had nothing to do with football.
[GLOBAL ALERT: Unidentified energy signature, matching the anomaly detected at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, has been recorded originating from a private, off-grid facility in the Swiss Alps.]
[Facility registered owner: Cristian Chivu.]
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