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Second Half

The cara panned slowly across the pitch as the players re-erged. Jake stood just outside the tunnel, hood down, speaking to no one.

Paul (quiet):

"You think they'll still press?"

Jake:

"They have to. That's where we find the space."

Then the whistle blew again.

48' Minute –

It started with a mistake.

Bradford had earned a corner—not from dominance, but from persistence. Roney and Vélez stood over it on the right. Four red shirts in the box. Kang creeping near post. Richter loitering at the edge. It looked rehearsed.

But the execution? Loose.

Roney tapped it short to Vélez—routine. Vélez shaped to whip it, but delayed by a step. That hesitation... cost them.

Newcastle pounced.

Bruno didn't even wait for the ball to settle. He stabbed it wide to Almirón and took off sprinting without the ball.

Almirón turned and ran.

From the edge of his own third—pure acceleration. No shift of weight. Just forward.

Taylor gave chase, but the gap widened every step.

By the ti they crossed the halfway line, it was 2v2—but Almirón had already opened his stride.

Bruno caught up alongside. So did Harvey Barnes—fresh legs, late run.

Forty yards later, Almirón squared it low across the box.

Kang slid. Barnes didn't even flinch.

He t it on the run and passed it calmly into the bottom corner.

Unmarked. Unrushed. Unfair.

Peter Drury (Sky Sports):

"And there it is again—devastation by discipline. A corner one mont, a dagger the next. Newcastle at their ruthless best."

Jake exhaled. Not sharp. Not loud. Just enough.

Jake (flat, to Paul):

"Three touches. One sprint. Nothing clever—just correct."

Paul said nothing. Just folded his arms a little tighter.

Bradford had committed forward.

And Newcastle had just committed murder in open space.

52' –

Bradford were trying to respond—not with possession, but with pressure.

Newcastle had dropped a bit, playing conservatively after their third goal. For a brief mont, the ball bounced free near the right touchline, and nsah surged forward to challenge.

Bruno was already turning before nsah arrived.

One swivel. One touch. Space.

nsah reached out—not malicious, just reactive—and caught him high across the shoulder with a firm pull.

Obvious.

The whistle ca sharp and early.

Bruno didn't dive. He didn't need to. He just slowed, arms out.

Yellow.

nsah didn't argue. But his jaw clenched as he turned away, nodding once, then again—like he was trying to convince himself it was worth it.

Vélez approached quietly, said sothing low in his ear. No finger-pointing. No scolding.

Just the kind of conversation teammates have when they know they can't afford another one of those.

The cara cut to the fourth official making a note.

The rhythm of the match didn't change. But the margin got tighter.

54' – Double Substitution

Fourth official raised the board.

🔄 Ibáñez on for nsah

🔄 Rasmussen on for Silva

No fanfare. No waves to the crowd. Just two handshakes, one nod, and a clear ssage in the silence.

Ibáñez trotted on like he'd been waiting all match to fix sothing—eyes already scanning the pitch, chest rising slow, thodical.

He moved straight into the pivot with Lowe, letting Vélez push higher, looser, between the lines.

On the touchline, Silva didn't look angry—just disappointed. The kind of disappointnt that lives behind the eyes, not in the body language.

He slapped Rasmussen's hand once as they passed.

Silva (under his breath):

"Take space. Not touches."

Rasmussen nodded once and was gone.

Jake didn't speak. He didn't need to.

The ga wasn't in words anymore.

It was in control, and now Bradford had a midfield capable of taking so back.

57' Minute – Injury – Costa

It happened in silence.

No clash. No roar. Just the sound of boots scraping across wet grass and the dull, unglamorous violence of sothing giving way.

Costa was chasing a nothing ball—a loose touch from Schär near the halfway line. Shoulder to shoulder with Botman, matching him step for step, neither man fully committing to the ball. Just applying pressure.

And then—

He stopped.

Sudden. Sharp.

Like soone had cut his strings mid-sprint.

He reached for the back of his thigh. Then dropped to one knee.

No contact. No foul.

Just one hand bracing the turf—and the other slapping it, hard.

Not rage. Not agony. Just finality.

From the touchline, Jake stepped forward instantly.

Didn't ask. Didn't shout. Just raised a finger and pointed toward the physio team.

They were already moving.

Costa didn't roll or cry out. He just sat. Shoulders slumped forward. Head down.

Paul turned toward Jake.

"Hamstring?"

Jake didn't answer. He was already looking at the tablet clipped to the side of the dugout.

The screen glitched, blinked—and then the overlay appeared.

🚨 PLAYER STATUS UPDATE

Guilher Costa

Injury: Left Hamstring Tear

Severity: Grade 2

Estimated Recovery: 6–8 Weeks

Projected Return: 24 November 2025

Jake stared at it for half a second.

Then looked up toward the fourth official and tapped his own wrist.

He turned to the bench.

Jake (flat, short):

"Richter."

No drama. No comfort.

Just the next move.

Richter was already on his feet, tightening his laces with quick, practiced hands.

He ran past Costa—still seated, legs stretched out and arms wrapped around his shins.

They didn't speak.

They just touched knuckles once. Hard. Silent.

And then Costa was gone.

And the ga? Still ticking.

62' Minute –

It began on the left sideline. Tight space. No angle.

But Ibáñez didn't need space. He just needed a breath.

He baited the press—took a touch inside, waited until Gordon lunged—then spun him like he wasn't there.

One fluid pirouette.

The ball stayed tight to his foot the entire ti. No wasted steps. No panic.

Then ca the pass.

He didn't ping it or drive it. He floated it.

A soft, lofted arc—just enough to cross the defensive line and hang a second longer in the night air.

Rasmussen, wide on the left, pulled two defenders toward him—he didn't touch the ball. He just made them believe he would.

And that belief?

It carved the space.

Richter ghosted behind Botman. Didn't sprint. Didn't signal. Just found the seam.

But it wasn't for him.

Because Rasmussen ca from the blindside—late, fast, clean—and smashed it first ti with his left foot.

Low. Driven. Through the defender's legs. Past Pope. Into the net.

Peter Drury (Sky Sports):

"It's clever. It's calm. And it's 3–2. Bradford will not go quietly into this cup tie!"

Valley Parade's travelling support went wild—arms thrown, flares lit in the upper corner of the stand.

Jake didn't move.

He turned to the system board, tapped once to clear an overlay, then looked sideways at Paul.

Jake (calm):

"Still ti."

71' – Substitution – Both Teams

Fourth official raised the board.

Bradford first:

🔄 Chapman on ➝ Lowe off

🔄 Fletcher on ➝ Nathan Barnes off

Fletcher jogged straight to the back line, gave Kang a quick shoulder tap.

Chapman took a deep breath, checked both wrists—then went to Ibáñez and offered one word:

Chapman:

"Tempo."

Jake nodded once to both as they passed.

71' – Newcastle's Substitutions

Fourth official raised the board.

🔄 Callum Wilson on ➝ Anthony Gordon

🔄 Joelinton on ➝ Joe Willock

🔄 Kieran Trippier on ➝ Tino Livranto

🔄 Harvey Barnes on ➝ Sven Botman

It wasn't a refresh. It was a declaration.

Wilson gave them teeth. Joelinton gave them chaos.

Trippier brought control. Barnes gave them unpredictability wide left.

Peter Drury (Sky Sports):

"And here co fresh legs for Newcastle—power, pace, and a bit of pedigree. Wilson prowls now. Trippier takes command. The plan shifts—but the threat stays sharp."

On the touchline, Jake didn't glance at the scoreboard. He wasn't counting goals.

He was counting shape.

Because that's where the match lived now—not in noise, but in geotry.

In what happened when the second ball dropped, and who wanted it more.

78' –

Newcastle had adapted instantly.

Trippier clipped it long from deep—first ti, angled flat toward Wilson. He held it up against Fletcher, then rolled it into the pocket.

Bruno.

Two touches to kill the spin. Then the killer pass—angled, weightless.

Almirón caught it in stride.

Rojas turned late. Kang couldn't shift across in ti.

The Paraguayan cut inside. One look. Then curl.

Top corner.

It looked perfect.

But Eka flew.

Not flailed. Flew.

Full stretch. Left hand angled just so. Fingers arched.

And he caught it—not parried, not blocked—caught it mid-flight, arms snapping shut around the ball like a bear trap.

He landed hard, one boot dragging a trench in the grass—but the ball didn't move.

Peter Drury:

"Still he stands. Still he stretches. Eka keeps Bradford breathing."

Roney ran over and clapped him on the back. Ibáñez turned toward the sideline, lifted a fist once.

And Jake?

Jake didn't blink.

He was already watching what Newcastle would do off the restart.

83' –

And then—it broke.

Bradford had pushed forward. Risked more. You could feel it in the spacing.

Rasmussen had drifted central again—trying to do too much.

He beat Joelinton once. Then tried again—and lost it.

Tonali didn't wait.

He didn't look for a pass. He already knew it.

One touch forward. Quick look.

Slid it fast between Kang and Rojas, and the channel split open.

Isak was gone.

He didn't need two touches—just one to angle, one to shoot.

Low. Precise. Corner.

Net.

Peter Drury:

"And with that, the door slams shut. Bradford were brave—but Newcastle brought teeth tonight."

The crowd erupted—not euphoric, but satisfied. Like sothing long owed had finally been settled.

Jake lowered his head.

Not in despair.

Just calculation.

He didn't turn to the bench. He didn't speak.

He was already rearranging the shape in his mind.

Because it wasn't over.

And he knew it.

89' Minute –

But the kids didn't quit.

Bradford earned a throw-in deep on the left after Roney forced a clearance from Trippier. The stadium was already dipping into its closing rhythm—fans on their feet, phones out, substitutions waiting.

But Ibáñez was moving.

No glance to the bench. No waiting.

He sprinted across the pitch, demanded the ball from Taylor, and dropped into the space between Kang and Fletcher. Newcastle backed off, thinking it was a reset.

It wasn't.

Ibáñez scanned once and then snapped it cross-field. Long, arcing switch—right to Taylor's boot near the opposite touchline.

Taylor didn't take a touch.

He let the ball bounce once. Then clipped it forward with the outside of his boot, curling it over Joelinton's shoulder toward the half-space.

Vélez tracked it all the way.

The ball dropped hard, but he absorbed it like it was made of air—killed it with one foot, spun off Longstaff, and threaded it first ti to the edge of the box.

Richter peeled off his man.

Botman had paused, half a step too square. That was enough.

Richter didn't touch it twice.

One shift of the body. One swipe of the left foot.

Low. Inside post. Near side.

Goal.

Bradford City 3. Newcastle United 4.

Peter Drury (Sky Sports):

"The fight is real. Richter—off the shoulder, onto the score sheet—and Bradford, even now, are not letting go."

The away end erupted—not in joy, but in adrenaline.

Richter didn't celebrate.

He sprinted into the net, snatched the ball, and jogged back with his head down and his heart pounding.

Jake pointed once toward the opposition half.

Jake (flat):

"Press. Now."

No theatrics. No miracle calls.

Just the next command.

90 4' – Whistle

Bradford pressed to the edge of exhaustion.

One final ball ca through midfield—Vélez toe-poked it to Roney, who flicked it wide for Rasmussen.

Rasmussen's cross deflected. Ibáñez tried to keep it alive, but Trippier muscled him off.

Newcastle cleared.

Joelinton brought it down, turned toward the sideline.

The referee raised his arm.

One long, low whistle.

Full-ti.

Bradford 3.

Newcastle 4.

Jake didn't blink.

He turned to Paul, nodded once, then walked toward the tunnel.

Behind him, players bent at the waist, hands on knees, chests heaving.

No one spoke.

But no one gave in.

Not tonight.

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