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Date: Saturday, 28 February 2026

Location: Valley Parade

The cold in Bradford didn't bite—it carved. Sharp breeze curled off the west stand like a blade run flat against skin, dry but insistent. Valley Parade carried the weight of Thursday's triumph still in its bones, but the banners fluttered with sothing fresher now: expectation. Not hope. Not pressure. Just quiet certainty.

Jake stood near the dugout, coat zipped to the chin, one glove off to flip his notepad open. His notes didn't sprawl. They whispered. Just like his team would.

Four changes. Not rotation. Calibration.

Cox back between the sticks—earned. Richards tucked in on the right again, steady and sharp. Barnes led. No questions. No ceremony. Fletcher returned, slotted in like a breath taken mid-stride. Holloway filled the left—aggressive, smart, newly confident.

Lowe dropped deepest. The gatekeeper. Ethan beside him, posture more upright than usual. Still light in the legs, even after Belgrade. Walsh started just ahead, already bouncing in warm-up, eyes locked on the way QPR's back line drifted.

Silva hugged the right. Fluid. Silent. Rin on the left, pulling at his gloves, glancing up every few seconds at the sky, then the pitch, then the crowd—like reading three languages at once.

Costa stood alone on the halfway line, adjusting his shin pads beneath his socks. Not tired. Not anxious. Just waiting for his mont to arrive, like always.

Jake turned to Paul Robert.

"Control the tempo," he said again, quieter this ti.

Paul just nodded.

Kickoff neared. Flags rose behind the ho goal. The anthem from the tannoy faded into murmurs, boots shuffled toward the center circle, and the crowd leaned forward like one body bracing for impact.

Jake's arms stayed folded. The wind sliced past him, untouched.

This wasn't about speed.

It was about control.

And control was Bradford's.

Ninth minute and Silva was already dancing.

Not drifting—cutting. Like a blade off its leash. He took the pass from Richards just inside the halfway line, feinted left, then burst right, dragging his marker halfway to the touchline before slicing inside with two steps of pure electricity.

The QPR left-back slipped. Silva didn't. Ball still tight to his foot, he reached the edge of the box and fired low with his left, aiming near post. Smart strike. Smarter save—pald away by the keeper diving full stretch.

The ball bounced out to Walsh, arriving late like thunder behind lightning. One touch to settle. Then the hit—firm, skipping just past the upright. Close enough to draw a gasp from the west stand.

Jake said nothing at first. Just raised one hand toward Ethan, gestured downward, then opened his palm to the pitch.

"Let the press co," he said, sharp but even. "Then move."

Not two minutes later, Ethan did.

Sixteenth minute. QPR had crept up, pressing too wide—too fast. Lowe played the bait pass, Ethan received, back to goal. One touch. Then the disguise—right-foot drag and pivot. He didn't even look before sliding it through the inside-right channel.

Silva didn't hesitate. Exploded into space, inside his man again. One chop to open the angle, then the lift—quick, tight, wicked. The cross floated just behind the last defender but in front of the keeper.

Costa read it two seconds before the crowd did.

He adjusted in one step, let it drop off his back hip, then struck it clean on the volley. No wind-up. No extra touch. Just contact.

The net cracked.

Valley Parade didn't roar—it howled.

Rob Hawthorne, already halfway up in the comntary box, barely got the words out.

"Costa doesn't wait. One swing—one goal."

Karen Carney's voice followed fast.

"He's pure instinct. That was always going in."

Bradford City 1–0 QPR.

Sixteen minutes in.

And the tempo belonged to them.

Twenty-three minutes gone and Bradford didn't rush. They pulsed.

Lowe anchored the middle like a trono—one step ahead, always scanning. His passing wasn't flashy, but it was fatal to QPR's rhythm. Ethan mirrored him a step higher, pivoting in sync. Every ti the press ca, it passed through them—disard before it could bite.

Bradford slowed the tempo just enough to make QPR twitch. Holloway spotted it.

A lull in pressure, a pocket of space—and he surged. Long stride, high drive, slicing up the left like a fullback with fire in his boots. The crowd stirred. Costa peeled wide. Silva cut inside. But Holloway didn't cross. He earned the corner, forcing the block and flashing a thumbs up toward the dugout.

Walsh placed the ball with care. No short routine. Just a slow breath and a lofted swing. It hung mid-air—begged for a header—but no one t it. The ball scraped the top of the crossbar and dipped behind the net. A warning more than a threat. Still, it had QPR's keeper barking orders, hands slicing the air.

Jake didn't react. He hadn't moved more than a ter since the first whistle. Just stood near the edge of his box, arms crossed, eyes on the shape. When Richards cut out a sudden QPR switch—a curling ball aid for their winger—Jake gave a single nod. asured. Nothing more.

By the thirty-fifth, Bradford weren't just playing well. They were in control. Ethan dropped deeper, nearly level with Lowe, letting Walsh push higher into the half-space. Silva stayed tucked in, closer to Costa. Rojas hovered, baiting QPR's left, waiting to intercept a tired diagonal—and he did. One step early, chest high, clean take.

The crowd murmured approval.

Halfti approached without panic.

Bradford 1–0 QPR.

In the tunnel, Jake didn't raise his voice.

"They'll co out scrappy," he said, looking first at Lowe, then at Ethan. "Stay calm."

He looked toward Costa, Silva, Walsh.

"Then finish them off."

Valley Parade hadn't even resettled from the halfti tea before QPR tried their jab.

Just two minutes after the restart, they found a gap behind Holloway. Their winger darted down the left, fast and fearless. The delivery ca flat and quick across the six-yard box—but Fletcher, reading it like scripture, launched himself into the line of fire. Head first. Clean.

The ball cannoned back out, only for QPR's other flank to swing it back in. This ti, high and curling. Cox claid it mid-air with both hands, body twisting under pressure, boots clipping shoulders. He didn't spill. He didn't flinch. Just landed, turned, and rolled the ball calmly to Richards.

Then ca the answer.

Fifty-first minute. No build-up. No warning. Just ignition.

Silva received with his back to goal and three markers close. Two feints—one right, one sharper left—and space cracked open for a mont. He slipped it short into Walsh's stride, just twenty-five yards out, almost whispering the pass into being.

Walsh didn't rush. Didn't prep. Just stepped forward, opened his body, and let the ball fly.

It cut through the wind like a weapon. Rose, then dipped late, violent and clean. The keeper dove for the photo—but never had a chance. Net rippled. The crowd lifted.

Bradford City 2–0 QPR.

Karen Carney said it first, laughter in her voice, almost surprised by the purity of it:

"That's a goal you only try if you've got confidence. And right now, Walsh is glowing."

Rob Hawthorne followed, voice rising above the cheers:

"A thunderbolt to end the contest!"

On the sideline, Jake didn't celebrate. Just turned to Paul Robert and muttered sothing low.

Then he pointed to Holloway. "Reset. We don't drift."

Because this was the kind of match that could lull a team into softness.

And Jake Wilson never let his side soften.

60 minutes in, the temperature had shifted—not in the sky, but in the match's rhythm. Bradford weren't hunting anymore. They were managing.

Jake stood at the edge of his technical box, arms folded, gaze scanning the midfield. Ethan glanced over as he jogged back into shape, sweat running down the side of his neck, the wind catching in his shirt. That was enough.

Jake gave the nod.

Paul Robert raised the board.

Ethan off. Soro on.

The applause ca soft but honest from the west stand—ho fans knew what they were watching: a teenager playing like a pivot who'd seen three lifetis of football. Ethan touched gloves with Soro, gave him a brief word—nothing long, just timing and lines—then took his seat beside Walsh, exhaling with a grin.

Soro didn't rush his first touch. He didn't need to. Bradford were up two, and QPR were beginning to stretch. It was the perfect mont to draw them in.

On the next possession, Soro dipped into the pocket, dragged two n with him, and let Lowe drop behind. Simple. Clean. The shape reset with no drama. Bradford's double pivot moved like sliding doors—one stepped, one screened. QPR couldn't press both.

By the 68th minute, Jake turned again. Roney was already up and moving. He ca on for Rin, who'd been electric but erratic in bursts, sharp early but fading. The hug between them was fast—Rin didn't sulk, just jogged straight to the bench, fists pumping once toward the crowd.

Roney's first involvent ca within ninety seconds—chasing a switch that no one else would've bothered with. He trapped it on the line, held up play, then earned a throw after bouncing it off the QPR fullback's knee.

"Earned the yard," Jake muttered. Paul nodded beside him.

At 74 minutes, the final card ca out. Vélez on. Walsh off.

No limp, no fatigue—just managent. Walsh jogged toward the sideline, having already delivered the killer blow in the 51st minute. His shot still echoed in the stands when the replay boards showed it again—his na flickering under the scoreboard. He clapped above his head as he ca off, nodding toward Silva on the opposite wing.

Vélez entered like a trono. His first three touches went sideways. The fourth went forward—curled diagonally toward Costa, who checked back to receive and shielded against two QPR defenders like they were training mannequins.

As the clock rolled into the eighties, QPR began to gamble. They pushed their left winger higher, their fullback overlapping. But Richards didn't bite. He held position, nudged Soro inward, and waited for the gap. When it ca—a slightly loose touch from QPR's No. 10—Richards snapped in, toe-poked it clear, and watched Soro spin on it like he'd been waiting all night.

Jake gave no shout. No fist pump. Just paced backward two steps and let the rhythm settle.

Costa dropped deeper in the final minutes—not as a false nine, but as a buffer. When QPR pressed from behind, he took the bump, absorbed the pressure, and earned a foul that took ten seconds off the clock.

Even the restarts were managed. Cox waited for the referee's nod, then rolled it out short. No long punts. No panic. Bradford weren't just playing well—they were playing wise.

As the board went up with three additional minutes, Holloway launched one final throw down the line, and Roney—relentless even at the death—chased it into the corner and earned back-to-back throw-ins. He raised a thumb to the dugout.

When the whistle blew, it wasn't a roar.

It was a full-body exhale.

2–0. Another clean sheet.

Jake didn't break stride. He clapped once, then walked straight to Fletcher—his first full ninety since December—and patted his shoulder.

Silva exchanged high-fives with Cox, both still smiling as they turned toward the tunnel.

On the bench, Ethan leaned into Soro, arm slung across his teammate's shoulder, already laughing at sothing that hadn't happened on the pitch.

Bradford weren't just winning.

They were growing. Minute by minute. Match by match.

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