Harbinger Of Glory
Chapter 60: Young Mind

Chapter 60: Young Mind

McClean was already walking off the far side of the pitch, slow but steady, handing the captain’s armband to Will Keane.

He passed by Leo, tapped his chest once, then held out his hand.

"Go show them," he said.

The high five cracked clean between them as Leo stepped forward.

One foot, then the other as the grasses rustled under his boots.

The ones Mia had painted.

The noise from the away end rose, trying to wish their still-unfamiliar youngster well.

"Game on" the commentator croaked as the restart began.

Leo hovered just ahead of the defensive line, not a spectator, but an axis.

He had only come on but the sweat trailing down his back would make you think otherwise.

Whatmough had the ball now, but there was no immediate pressing.

Just two Watford forwards loitering near the box.

Leo took two steps back, showed, and opened his stance.

"Whatmough!" he called. "Middle!"

The veteran turned towards Leo and with the trust built from a few days of training together, the pass came — straight, firm — and Leo welcomed it like a metronome finding its beat.

He turned once, saw the passing lanes blocked, and didn’t force it.

Just tapped it back to Jones and shifted.

Again.

And again.

Side to side.

To any ordinary eye, it might have looked like Leo was just playing it safe but anyone with a bit of footballing intelligence could see Leo’s passes forcing his mates and opponents to play into the shape he desired.

The tempo dipped.

Wigan’s earlier anxiety gave way to structure.

Players started turning their heads before receiving the ball.

Calls became clearer and pressure outlets multiplied.

Tom Naylor came deeper, took a ball off Cousins while Leo dropped behind him without asking.

"On you—!" Leo barked as an opponent tracking Naylor lunged but the latter returned it, quick and neat before the opponent could get it.

Leo’s second touch sent it wide to Bennett, who was already in motion.

"You can see Calderón’s fingerprints all over this now. Every time Wigan get into trouble, they find him. And he finds calm."

"He’s sitting so deep, you’d think he was a third centre-back — but he’s giving the team balance they didn’t have earlier. Very rare trust this team has in this unproven youngster."

By the 60th minute, Watford had slowed their press.

The bite they had in the first half had softened.

Their coach gestured from the sideline, but his players didn’t close Leo down.

Maybe they didn’t see the threat yet — a kid standing still and moving everything around him.

Leo switched the ball again — left to right — with a measured curl that skipped inches above the turf.

He was talking constantly now.

"Drop in, Cousins."

"Broadhead, stay wide — I’ve got cover."

"Chris, leave that run — space’s behind."

The thought of a young boy calling the shots made the veterans play a bit reserved but a quick glance at Dawson on the sidelines made them change their minds.

Whatmough received the ball once more, near the halfway line, and looked up.

Leo pointed where he wanted before it came.

"Now!"

It zipped in and Leo, mid-stride took it in and let it roll across his body, inviting one Watford midfielder forward, only to skip past him with a feint.

That was the first burst.

Suddenly, space opened up.

He glanced up farther up the pitch, where Fletcher was on the shoulder again — nudging his defender, trying to time the gap.

Leo took one touch, and confidently whipped it.

A backspin pass, fast and flattening.

It swerved between full-back and centre-back like a thread pulled through fabric, just ahead of the break line.

"Oh, that’s a gorgeous ball from Calderón!", the commentator croaked.

Fletcher was already moving.

The Watford defender raised their hand in the air, calling for an offside but it wasn’t even close.

He beat the trap clean, gathered it on the bounce, and surged into the box as the Wigan crowd backed him up.

But he didn’t shoot.

He slowed just enough to draw the keeper out, opened his body — and slid it sideways where Will Keane was arriving like a freight train.

And he didn’t miss, smashing the ball into the side like the goal owed him money.

1–1.

"GOAL! Wigan equalise! Keane finishes it, but Calderón... oh, Calderón unlocked the whole thing!"

"That pass was outrageous — the vision, the disguise — and Fletcher with the awareness to square it. That’s top-level understanding right there coming from a young mind.."

Keane ran straight to Fletcher while Fletcher pointed to Leo, who had been suddenly engulfed by the rest of his teammates near him.

"Nice ball," McLean called from the bench pumping his fist as the doctor looked at him to sit down.

"At the restart and it’s currently 1 goal each for both teams."

The Wigan players returned to their half after the celebration, walking past the Watford players whose hard work had been undone in a matter of seconds.

They restarted after the referee’s whistle, but the bite in their rhythm was gone. Still, instinct took over. A few passes. A sharp switch to the right. João Pedro drifting into space.

Then a moment — one of those flashes that can rewrite a match.

Pedro opened up his body near the edge of the box and whipped a curling shot toward the far post.

It beat the keeper.

But not the post.

The ball crashed off the inside of the upright and rolled loose.

Curtis Tilt was first to it, clearing his lines just before the follow-up.

Wigan breathed again.

And Watford let out a collective groan — heads dropped, shouts quieted.

And then, the match slowed again.

Not by accident. By design.

Because Leo was beginning to feel the space between every pass.

The pitch wasn’t rushed anymore — not for him.

It felt open, stretchable, like he could smooth it out under his studs if he wanted...

Another pass zipped into his feet — this one slightly behind him.

He let it run across his body, took a touch to settle, and carried it forward, skipping past the first marker with a shift of weight.

Not a burst of pace, just momentum.

A Watford midfielder closed in fast but Leo chopped the ball with the outside of his right, then cut back with his left.

Low to the ground, like he was gliding between lines.

"Don’t let him turn!" someone barked from the Watford defence.

But he was already gone.

Another body stepped into his path, arms out, shirt tugged — Leo gritted his teeth and kept going.

The ball bobbled loose, clipped off a shin, and for a second, it looked like he’d lose it but that was far from what Leo had in mind.

He rolled his foot over it, spun into space with a clean roulette.

The crowd behind the dugout stood up as a ripple moved through the away end.

Joe Bennett was already making the overlapping run.

Leo didn’t look.

He just fed it through the channel, weighted low and straight, splitting the gap between Watford’s full-back and centre-half.

Bennett took it in stride, nearing the edge of the box, but the second touch was heavy.

His cross looped up and over the bar, landing on the roof of the net.

Groans from the bench sounded while heads dropped but not for long as the referee’s whistle sounded.

Behind the play, the referee raised his arm.

Foul — brought back to where Leo had been dragged earlier in the move.

Wigan free kick.

The midfielder who’d clipped Leo jogged past, exhaling through his teeth.

"That kid again," he muttered, almost to himself as Naylor jogged over and bumped Leo’s shoulder.

"You gonna do that again or you done showing off?"

Leo cracked a small grin, still catching his breath before turning towards the free kick spot.

Soon, Cousins stood over the ball while Leo hovered nearby, one foot resting on the ball like he might take it short.

The Watford defence waited, checking their line, calling out assignments.

Leo leaned in to Cousins.

"Hit it early. Curl it behind them." Cousins heard Leo say as he drifted away, dragging his marker toward the touchline.

Cousins, shook his head and then stepped into the ball in one motion.

Fast, curling and accurate.

Broadhead broke into the box, nudged off his defender’s back shoulder and lunged forward.

He caught it with the outside of his boot — just enough to flick it toward goal.

The keeper froze, eyes being the only thing tracking the ball but it flashed across the face and whistled past the far post by no more than a foot.

"Oh, Nearly! Broadhead with the touch, and Wigan are knocking now. They’ve taken control of this match — it’s a different tempo since that Calderón run."

The Watford defenders turned to each other, arms spread, already arguing.

But Wigan?

They were silent.

No one even looked disappointed.

Broadhead turned, nodded toward Cousins, then reset into position.

"Time slowly slipping away here at Vicarage Road. Will one side come out on top or will they be forced to share the spoils?"

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