Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 159 - 1-0, Wigan!

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Chapter 159: 1-0, Wigan!

Leo’s surge instantly snapped the stadium awake.

The crowd lifted as he cut through the centre, slipping between Hull’s midfielders with touches so tight the defenders could only twist and chase shadows.

"Look at him go," the main commentator said, voice rising in step with the run.

"Calderon’s just gliding through the middle and Hull can’t get close."

"He’s picked the perfect moment," his partner replied.

"Everybody was bracing for another cagey spell, and he’s gone straight through the gap."

Leo carried it until the last midfielder lunged across his line, and only then did he adjust, dipping his shoulder in the process before rolling the ball out to McClean on the left.

McClean hit the path at full speed, straightened up, and cut toward the byline, evading the pressure of the right back, before threading a cross through the smallest pocket between two shirts.

It skidded across the area, but Hull managed to swipe it away.

The clearance only made it a few steps before the ball bounced right back to Leo.

"Second ball’s his again," the main commentator noted. "He’s everywhere."

Leo glanced up and saw the pressure bearing down on him.

And then setting his thoughts straight, he steadied himself and sent a lifted pass back into the box.

The delivery hung long enough for Will Keane to rise above his marker and meet it.

"Keane’s up...!" the commentary came through wildly as the former connected with the ball.

The header tracked toward the far corner, but Matt Ingram exploded across the goal, fingertips stretching just enough to redirect it over the bar, sending the home crowd groaning with disappointment.

But then that turned into applause as the replay flashed across the screen because Will Keane had done all he could.

"That’s a stunning save," the co-commentator agreed.

"Wigan’s best spell of the match, and Keane does everything right. Ingram just finds that extra inch."

"It’s the first real warning Hull have had tonight," the main commentator added.

"Calderon started it, Keane nearly finished it, and the DW suddenly believes something’s brewing."

Wigan gathered in the Hull City box, hoping one of their set-piece routines from training could prove the magic.

Behind the corner flag, though, was Mclean, who placed the ball, glanced into the box, but then nudged a short pass to Leo waiting a few yards away.

"And here comes the corner," the commentary came in again. "McClean rolls it into Calderon..."

A Hull shirt closed in, then another, so Leo shifted the ball back behind him to the right, where Mclean had peeled toward the edge of the box.

It was the kind of position that begged for a hit or a whipped delivery, but McClean didn’t do either.

Hull saw that and swarmed him until he had no time left to think, only enough to stab a desperate pass toward the byline.

Leo had just started drifting away from the area when he realised the ball was rolling straight toward the chalk.

He spun quickly, chased after the ball, lunged, and threw himself into a slide to keep it alive.

His studs clipped the turf, and the ball stayed in by inches.

The fans in that corner erupted, amused at the scramble while urging him on as the right back, Cyrus Christie, thundered down on him.

Leo pushed himself up, heart thumping, thought running ahead of him.

He didn’t have time for a trick or a clean touch, so he nudged the ball forward on instinct while rising to his feet, and it slipped straight through Christie’s legs.

The crowd behind the goal lost it, stamping and shouting as the nutmeg opened a lane back toward the box.

Leo leaned left, darted right, and was past him before Christie could spin around.

Somehow, he carried the ball cleanly into the area.

He felt a hand at his back, then a knock on his hip.

His breath caught, and he let himself drop, hoping the contact was enough as the grass rushed up, getting nearer and nearer from his vision and before he even settled on his side, he heard the whistle.

The DW roared as the shouts folded into each other until they sounded like a single wave crashing down from the stands.

Then the commentary jumped in over the noise on the broadcast.

"That’s a huge moment. Calderon’s kept a hopeless ball alive, nutmegs Christie, drives into the box, and the right back clips him. The referee hasn’t hesitated."

"Christie’s furious, but he knows what’s coming," the co-commentator added. "He’s late, and he’s beaten. Calderon earns every bit of that."

Hull’s players crowded the referee, pointing back at the spot where Leo fell while Christie held both hands up as if trying to plead his way out of what he already knew was coming.

The referee waited for the noise to settle a little, then reached into his pocket and lifted the yellow, while on the other side of things, the Wigan players arrived around Leo.

He was sitting upright now, hand on his ribs, trying to catch his breath until Mclean crouched beside him.

"You alright?" Mclean asked quietly.

"Yeah. Just winded," Leo answered, shaking his head and taking Mclean’s hand to stand.

"Thought he’d let me go, but he clipped me at the end."

"Doesn’t matter. You got us the call," Mclean said, giving him a firm pat on the back.

"Top work keeping that in."

The cameras zoomed in on the group as they steadied him.

"Listen to this place," the main commentator said while the stadium noise rolled on. "Calderon drags Wigan forward again. He saves the ball on the byline, gets past Christie, wins the foul, and suddenly this whole arena feels different."

"Wigan have been leaning on him the last ten minutes," the co-commentator replied. "And he’s delivered every time. Nice work from the 17-year-old."

Leo dusted his hands off and tried to breathe normally again while his teammates fanned around him jokingly, blocking off Hull’s complaints.

The referee stepped back into position and pointed to the spot while everything else waited for whoever would take the penalty next.

Will Keane stepped in from the side of the box to take charge of the moment.

He held the ball under his arm while the referee shooed away the cluster of players still murmuring around the arc. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮

Hull’s defenders backed off with their hands out in frustration, and Wigan’s boys pulled away to give Keane room.

The referee paced back to the spot, glanced once at Leo, who was now moving out of the box and then looked at Keane.

The tension around the DW thickened in a way that made the whole stadium feel like it was holding its breath.

The commentary dropped into the gap.

"Keane’s been trusted with it as usual. Calm as you like, and he is taking his time."

"He’s scored these under far more pressure," the co-commentator added, keeping his voice steady. "But that doesn’t make this quiet any less loud."

Keane knelt, set the ball cleanly on the white mark, and straightened up.

He gave the net a brief look, then waited.

The referee took two steps back, checked the keeper, checked the players on the edge of the box, then lifted the whistle to his lips.

The sound cut through everything as Keane ran up with purpose and struck through the ball with no hesitation.

The shot tore past the keeper’s dive and hammered into the back of the net, and the stadium burst open, noise pouring out from all sides as the commentator’s voice rose with the crowd on the broadcast.

"There it is. A striker’s penalty and Wigan take the lead at the DW. Will Keane tucks it away with absolute conviction."

"Keeper had no chance," the co-commentator replied. "Very Clinical. Wigan get the reward for Calderon’s work on that byline."

Keane jogged toward the corner flag first, punching the air, then veered back when he spotted Leo heading toward him.

They met halfway, smacking double high fives before Keane hooked an arm around his shoulder for a second.

"Good shift, kid," Keane said under the noise. "You earned that."

Leo grinned, still rubbing the spot on his ribs.

"You finished it though," he said as the rest of the Wigan players pulled together, tapping backs and shirts before drifting to their half for the restart.

The crowd kept singing while Dawson clapped from the touchline, nodding at each player as they passed by him.

The commentary rode the wave without drowning it.

"That goal lifts everything. Wigan have been building toward it, and now they have the advantage."

"Now the test," the co-commentator said. "Hold it, or make it count even more."

The players settled into shape again, still buzzing, waiting for Hull to take the kick-off.

....

[In the stands]

"I didn’t really believe it when they said, but is this the kind of player we let go?" a man in a puffer jacket said as he watched the Hull City players restart the game.

The man he had thrown the question to just shrugged, while the former turned towards the pitch.