The news hung in the air of Leon’s sleek, modern Monaco office like a beautifully terrifying, perfectly weighted crossfield pass.
The Champions League final was at the San Siro.
And there was a statistically significant probability that his Monaco might face Liverpool in the Round of 16.
He stared out the window at the impossibly blue diterranean, Arne Slot’s cheerful, deadly serious words echoing in his mind. Start preparing your ’confusing butterfly’ formation.
A slow, brilliant, and slightly hysterical grin spread across his face.
His life was officially a movie, and the scriptwriter was clearly a fan of dramatic irony and impossible coincidences.
The next few weeks were a blur of intense focus and beautiful, sun-drenched chaos. Monaco were flying. They were playing with a fearless, attacking swagger, a blend of youthful exuberance and veteran cool that was taking Ligue 1 by storm. Leon, the eighteen-year-old tactical prodigy, the youngest manager in history, was the darling of the French dia.
His training sessions were legendary, a mix of high-intensity tactical drills and monts of pure, unadulterated absurdity.
"Okay," he began one morning, standing in front of his squad, trying to explain a complex pressing trigger. "When their number six gets the ball and turns infield, that is the mont. The exact mont. Our number ten," he pointed at the brilliant but perpetually confused Aleksandr Golovin, "you initiate the press. You are the... the spark."
Golovin just stared at him, a look of profound, existential bewildernt on his face. "Coach," he began, his Russian accent thick and musical. "If I am the spark... what happens if it rains? Does the tactic beco... damp?"
Before Leon could even attempt to answer that glorious, nonsensical question, Thiago, the Brazilian winger with the soul of a bird, chid in. "And if he is the spark, and I am the wing... am I the wind that fans the fla? Or am I the moth that is drawn to it? The taphor requires clarity, Coach!"
Leon just put his head in his hands, a sound that was half a groan, half a laugh escaping his lips. He loved this team. He loved their beautiful, strange brains.
Wissam Ben Yedder, the captain, the calm, experienced eye of the storm, just patted Leon on the back. "Don’t worry, Coach," he said with a wry smile. "They run very fast. They will figure it out eventually. Probably."
Despite the occasional philosophical detour into the aerodynamics of taphors, the team was learning. They were absorbing his ideas, playing with a newfound intelligence and cohesion. His ’Manager Mode’ system, now fully adapted to his new role, was an invaluable tool, providing deep analysis of opponent weaknesses and player performance trics. He was learning to trust his own eyes, his own gut, but the system was his secret weapon, his co-pilot in the beautiful, chaotic cockpit of football managent.
He spent hours in the video analysis room, breaking down their next opponent: Paris Saint-Germain. The Galacticos of France. A team dripping with such obscene talent it was almost unfair. Mbappé. Yamal. Lautaro. It wasn’t a football team; it was a cheat code.
He watched their gas, looking for a weakness, a crack in the armor. And he found one. It wasn’t tactical. It was... human. PSG played with an arrogant swagger, a belief in their own individual brilliance. They were a collection of superstars, not a cohesive unit. They didn’t press with the sa manic intensity as Liverpool. They didn’t defend with the sa selfless desperation as his old Inter team. They were artists who sotis forgot about the ugly, necessary work.
A plan began to form in his mind. A dangerous, audacious, and potentially suicidal plan. They couldn’t outplay PSG. But maybe, just maybe, they could out-work them.
That night, he was at ho, his apartnt filled with the comforting sll of his mother’s cooking (she was visiting again, ard with a suitcase full of "ergency pesto"). He was trying to explain his PSG plan to Sofia, using strategically placed olives and breadsticks on the dinner table.
"...so, we let them have the ball," he was saying, moving an olive representing Mbappé. "We sit deep. We frustrate them. We beco the tactical mosquito, buzzing around their beautiful, expensive heads. And then," he dramatically slid a breadstick representing his own lightning-fast winger, Ademola, across the table, "we hit them on the counter. Pure speed. Pure chaos."
Sofia just looked at the ss of food on the table, a thoughtful, analytical expression on her face that reminded him unnervingly of her father. "It’s risky," she said finally. "You’re inviting the best attacking force on the planet to co and play in your living room."
"I know," he said. "But it’s our only chance."
"Maybe," she said, a slow, brilliant smile spreading across her face. She picked up a cherry tomato. "But what if... what if you don’t just sit deep? What if you press them? Right from the first whistle? High, aggressive, maybe a little bit crazy? They won’t expect it. They’re artists. They hate being rushed. You don’t invite them into your living room," she said, flicking the cherry tomato across the table, "you kick their front door down before they’ve even had their morning coffee."
Leon just stared at her, a wave of pure, unadulterated awe washing over him. It was insane. It was suicidal. It was... perfect. He looked at his beautiful, brilliant girlfriend, the art historian who had just casually solved his biggest tactical nightmare.
"Okay," he said slowly, a huge, excited grin spreading across his face. "Plan B it is."
The Parc des Princes in Paris was a fortress of noise, glamour, and pure, unadulterated arrogance. The air crackled with the expectation of victory. Leon stood on the sideline, his heart pounding a frantic, happy rhythm. He looked at his young, hungry, slightly terrified team. He thought of Sofia’s words. Kick their front door down.
He gave his final instruction, a simple, powerful command that went against every tactical instinct for playing against a super-team. "Press," he roared, his voice barely audible above the din. "From the first second. Press like your lives depend on it! No fear! Let’s go!"
The whistle blew. The match began. And Monaco, the charming little club from the South of France, did not sit back. They exploded. They sward PSG like a pack of angry wasps, pressing high, tackling hard, playing with a ferocious, beautiful, and utterly fearless intensity.
PSG were stunned. Mbappé, Yamal, Lautaro – the superstars looked rattled, rushed, uncomfortable. Passes went astray. Heavy touches were punished. The artists were being dragged into a street fight.
In the 10th minute, the unthinkable happened. A high press from Monaco forced a panicked mistake from a PSG defender. The ball broke to Wissam Ben Yedder. The veteran striker took one touch and smashed the ball into the back of the net.
1-0. To Monaco.
The stadium fell silent, a black hole of pure, disbelieving shock. Leon just roared, pumping his fist, a surge of pure, beautiful adrenaline coursing through his veins. His gamble, Sofia’s gamble, had worked.
As he turned back to the pitch, his mind already racing, calculating the next move, his phone, tucked away in the inside pocket of his very expensive, club-issued coat, buzzed. He ignored it. He had a match to win.
It buzzed again. And again. A frantic, insistent rhythm.
He pulled it out, a flicker of annoyance crossing his face. It was his agent, Marco. He declined the call. Marco imdiately called back.
Leon sighed, stepping back into the dugout, away from the prying eyes of the caras. He answered, his voice a low, frustrated whisper. "Marco, I am literally in the middle of managing a football match against PSG. Can it wait?"
"NO! LEO! IT CANNOT WAIT!" Marco’s voice scread down the line, a sound of pure, unadulterated, world-altering panic. "THEY KNOW! LEO! THEY KNOW!"
"Know what? Who knows what?" Leon hissed back, his blood running cold.
"THE GUARDIANS! THE NETWORK! WHOEVER THEY ARE!" Marco wailed. "I just got a call! An encrypted call! They know about the system! They know about Chivu! They know about you! And they are activating... ’Protocol Oga’!"
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