Chapter 159: No Ti to Celebrate
October 29th, 2010
The morning air hung crisp and cold over the Crawley Town training grounds.
Each breath from the players rose in soft clouds, brief and vanishing, like thoughts not yet spoken.
A thin sheen of frost clung to the blades of grass, crunching quietly beneath their boots with every step.
For Dev Patel, the cold cut sharp across his skin but it couldn’t reach the warmth blooming quietly inside him.
That warmth had taken root after his conversation with his dad. Sothing had shifted.
A weight he’d carried all season had lifted not vanished, but transford.
What replaced it wasn’t emptiness, but sothing stronger.
Purpose.
Out on the pitch, the team moved through drills, the ball thudding rhythmically against leather and turf, a heartbeat that filled the space where Wembley’s roars had echoed just days ago.
The "Giant Slayers" were back at work.
But things had changed.
The wild disbelief of toppling Chelsea had faded.
In its place was sothing quieter sharper.
A steely kind of clarity.
They weren’t chasing a miracle anymore.
They were building sothing real.
And in front of them, another test lood: an away match against MK Dons.
No trophy.
No global spotlight.
Just three points, and the need to prove it hadn’t been a fluke.
They were no longer the hunters.
Now, they were the marked.
And Dev, standing at the edge of the pitch with the frost crackling under his studs and the sun just beginning to lt through the mist, knew exactly what they had to do.
Fight again. Earn it again.
Every ti.
Coach Niels stood on the sidelines, his hands tucked into the pockets of his jacket, observing every subtle movent.
The new fitness coach, Thomas, was a study in precision. He was a man of few words, his presence alone a form of motivation.
He moved along the sidelines, a stopwatch in his hand, a ticulous eye on every player’s stride, every quick turn.
"That’s it, Dev, hold the line!" Thomas’s voice was a low, commanding rumble.
Dev was sharp today. His first touch was clean and confident as he wove between the cones. He wasn’t thinking about the past, or the future, or the reporters. He was simply playing, his feet moving instinctively, the ball feeling like an extension of his body.
He found pockets of space and made quick one-two passes with Nate Sutton.
"Still buzzing, mate?" Nate panted, his breath fogging in the cold air. "I swear I can still hear them. Every ti I close my eyes, it’s just ’Crawley! Crawley!’"
Dev grinned, trapping a pass with the inside of his boot. "Was. But that was last week." He paused, a new gravity in his voice. "This week, it’s about showing them it wasn’t a fluke. It’s about earning the right to be here."
A sense of profound belonging washed over him as he passed the ball back to Nate. He was here, on this field, with this team. That was all that mattered.
In the center of the pitch, Jamal Osei moved with a stillness that stood out. While others rushed and shouted, he didn’t need to.
He was the calm in the storm, the anchor. The kind of player who never made headlines but always made the difference.
Always in the right place, always at the right ti.
The ball ca to him, and with one smooth motion no fuss, no waste he turned and released it.
His head stayed on a swivel, eyes sweeping across the pitch like radar. He spotted the space before anyone else did, and with a short, sharp pass, found Tom Whitehall breaking forward.
Tom was the team’s engine the relentless heartbeat of the midfield.
He didn’t just run, he hunted, covering ground like it was second nature.
Each stride kicked up tiny shards of frozen turf, his cleats digging in, pushing hard.
There was no off switch.
His energy was infectious.
Demanding.
He didn’t just play with intensity he raised the standard.
Around him, players lifted their ga without even realizing it, pulled into his rhythm, his pace.
He was the force of pure will holding the midfield together not by talent alone, but by effort, grit, and the refusal to let anyone slack for even a second.
Between Jamal’s quiet control and Tom’s burning drive, the spine of Crawley held strong.
The new arrival, Paul Pogba, was a quiet spectacle.
He didn’t need to announce himself he just was.
On a muddy, frost-bitten pitch where most players wrestled with the ground, Pogba moved like he was dancing on glass.
There was a grace to him that felt almost surreal in the rough morning light.
Reece Darby fired a pass his way.
One touch just one and Pogba changed the shape of the drill.
A simple shift of his weight, a glance over his shoulder, and suddenly the entire flow of play tilted on its axis.
He didn’t shout. He didn’t command.
He didn’t have to.
His presence did the talking a quiet, magnetic pull that drew the attention of every player on the pitch.
Heads turned.
Movents paused, just for a second.
There was sothing in the way he played that made the space around him feel bigger, clearer.
The drill finished with one final crisp pass from Pogba smooth, precise, without effort. It found Thiago in stride, who absorbed it with a silky touch, before laying it off to Max in one fluid motion.
It was just a training ground routine.
But it felt like the beginning of sothing more.
The captain, Max Simons, led the charge eyes forward.
The Chelsea win was already in the past and even recent win against Fiorentina was past. The dals, the headlines, the noise it didn’t matter now.
What mattered was the next battle.
With the ball at his feet, Max moved like a striker who’d already done it on the biggest stage but hadn’t lost his hunger.
He carved through the line of cones, sharp and precise, before unleashing a low, driven shot into the corner of the makeshift goal.
The net snapped with a clean thwack.
No celebration needed.
He turned imdiately, clapped his hands once, loud and sharp.
"Alright. Listen up!"
The team circled around him without hesitation, sweat on brows, breath steaming in the cold. Heads lowered slightly not in fear, but in respect.
They knew Max didn’t speak unless it mattered.
He scanned each of them, locking eyes one by one. Reece. Thiago. Dev. Jamal. Luka.
Even Pogba, who t his stare with a quiet nod.
"We just did sothing special," Max said, voice steady but charged. "The whole country knows our na."
He let that sink in for a beat, then cut it down with the next line.
"But that’s over now."
Silence. Focus sharpened.
"The dia’s calling us ’Giant Slayers.’ Sounds nice. ans nothing if we can’t beat the teams right in front of us." His tone didn’t rise it didn’t need to. "MK Dons. They are physical and play smartly. And they’ve been watching us. They know we’re not just Crawley Town anymore, we’re the ones to beat."
He stepped forward slightly.
"And they’ll want it more because of Chelsea. They’ll want to take us down harder than before. That ans we fight harder. We stay sharper. No slip-ups. No ego. Just us doing what we’ve always done."
A pause.
"Earn. Every. Inch."
His voice echoed against the stands.
The squad didn’t cheer. They didn’t need to. The fire was already there, burning behind their eyes.
Training resud but sothing had shifted.
The pace was tighter. The touches cleaner.
The energy crackled with sothing just beneath the surface.
Max didn’t have to look back.
He knew they were following.
He paused again, his voice dropping to a more intimate, urgent tone. "So this isn’t about celebrating what we did. It’s about proving we belong here. We play our ga, we play with confidence, and we show them we’re not just a mont, we’re a team."
The training session continued with a renewed sense of purpose. Max’s words had landed, grounding them in the reality of the coming match.
The weight of the crown was heavy, but they had the players and the mindset to carry it.
The ga against MK Dons would be a different kind of fight, and they were preparing to et it.
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