Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 165: A Very Slow Day.

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Chapter 165: A Very Slow Day.

From the first whistle, it was clear Dawson had not come to play open football.

The back three held a tight line, and the midfield triangle sat deep.

Leo anchored it, Max Power drifting to his left, Naylor to his right.

On paper, it was a 3-5-2 formation, but in motion, it looked more like a wall.

Rotherham, with the ball possession, tried to lead the Wigan players on.

They pushed their fullbacks high and played early balls into the channels, testing Wigan’s shape more than their goalkeeper.

The home crowd responded to every forward run with noise, urging shots even when there was no space.

"Bright start from Rotherham," the commentator said. "They want to pin Wigan back and ask questions early."

Leo stayed where he was told.

He kept his distance from the back line, always five or six yards ahead, scanning before the ball even reached him.

When it did, the passes were simple.

One touch to Power.

A short roll to Naylor on the next, with the ball being smashed wide when the press eased.

Nothing flashy. Nothing risky.

Wigan’s first real moment came ten minutes in when a loose touch from Rotherham’s midfielder let Power step in, and suddenly the away side were running.

The ball broke to Leo just inside his own half.

He looked up, saw space, and drove a firm pass into the right channel.

The move fizzled out before it reached the box, but the away end liked the intent as a short burst of applause cut through the noise right then and there.

"Lovely pass by Calderon. Quick decision, good weight on the pass." Almost gave Wigan a chance but in the end it fizzled out," the co-commentator noted.

Rotherham adjusted afterwards, weighing their options and staying cautious after that chance.

Two midfielders began to sit on Leo’s shoulders, not close enough to foul him, but close enough to block the passing angles.

Whenever he dropped to receive, one stepped in front while the other stayed tight behind.

The effect was clear.

Leo still saw the ball, but was always facing his own goal or wasn’t in a position to launch one of his long balls.

And so, the forward passes disappeared.

What remained was recycling, keeping possession and staying calm under pressure.

Wigan tried to explore other options, including Max Power and Mclean playing more through the left, but Rotherham accommodated, shifting their shape to their right side while causing Wigan to accommodate to their shift.

By the half-hour mark, the game had flattened out.

Rotherham had the better of the chances, first in a low cross flashed across Wigan’s six-yard box with no one there to tap it in.

And then a curling effort from the edge of the area to force a comfortable save.

Each time, the home crowd rose, then fell back into their seats with groans.

Wigan answered in moments rather than spells.

A set piece that drifted just too long.

A half-volley over the bar from the edge of the box.

Enough to remind Rotherham they were still in a contest.

Leo’s role became quieter.

He spent more time pointing than passing, shifting Power a step wider, telling Naylor when to drop.

When Rotherham tried to play through the middle, he read it well, stepping in to break things up and taking the contact that followed.

"Not the game we usually see from him," the commentator said as Leo played another sideways ball. "But Rotherham deserves credit. They’re doing a good job of keeping everything in front of them."

The first half ended without a goal and without much argument.

Both teams might have been satisfied to go to the break without conceding, but to the fans, it felt like they had watched a game of table tennis without anybody scoring a single point.

In a game, they expected goals to be flying; what they got was a stalemate battle instead.

"Let’s hope the break brings more inventiveness," the commentary came as the last of the players made their way down the tunnel.

But after the break, the pattern stayed the same, just a bit faster.

Rotherham came out sharper, pressing higher for the first five minutes while Wigan sat low and absorbed it, clearing their lines and slowing the game whenever they could.

The referee had words with a few players, the kind that suggested he was close to reaching for his pocket.

Leo dropped even deeper now, sometimes level with the centre backs when the pressure came.

The crowd noticed him less, and in turn, the game got more and more boring for a crowd that was just getting used to the exciting football of their team.

Still, they weren’t complaining because they weren’t a goal down, as it normally went when playing against opponents like Rotherham, which had won 2 out of the last 3 games played between these two teams.

Ten minutes into the half, Rotherham had their best chance.

"Bramall with the ball down the flank here, and is he going to go for it alone?"

As the commentary had said, the Wigan players expected Bramall to go alone because that was what he mostly did on breaks like these and had even been doing so for the whole of the match, but in a twist, he cut inside, just like the Wigan players expected, but then slipped the ball behind the backline to the flanks.

A quick switch caught Wigan narrow as the cross came in low, and for a split second, the net looked ready to move, but the shot went straight at the keeper as a loud intake of breath swept the stadium.

"Horrible. Very Horrible miss by Chiedozie Ogbene. That was the moment," the co-commentator said. "They may regret that one."

The Rotherham striker slowly got off his feet, putting his hands on his head before he began jogging back to his half.

Wigan responded by slowing everything down again.

Throw-ins took longer.

Free kicks were placed carefully as they tried to kill the momentum Rotherham were reining in.

Leo stood over one near the halfway line, waiting for the referee’s whistle, eyes flicking between options.

Still, the space never opened.

"It’s been a quiet afternoon by his standards," the commentator admitted. "Not because he’s playing poorly, but because Rotherham have made it their business to limit him."

Just past the hour mark, Leo glanced toward the touchline and saw Cousins warming up.

He had been there a few minutes already, jogging along the sideline, stretching his calves, rolling the ball under his sole.

Leo watched him for a second longer than he meant to, then turned back to the pitch.

The next stoppage came near the benches where Cousins had finished his run and walked over to Dawson.

The two leaned close while Dawson spoke first, low and quick, one hand resting on his hip as he talked.

Cousins nodded.

Once.

Then again.

Beside them, the fourth official reached for his board, fingers pressing buttons as he looked down.

The board finally went up. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎

And immediately it did, a ripple moved through the ground because the numbers glowing red were clear enough for everyone to see.

Leo, already knowing but still a bit surprised, glanced once at the board and began making his way down the touchline.

"There it is," the commentator said. "Calderón’s afternoon comes to an end."

He paused for a beat before continuing.

"It hasn’t been a bad performance by any stretch, but it hasn’t quite been the standard we’ve come to expect from him either. That says a lot about how quickly expectations have grown around a seventeen-year-old making real strides in the Championship."

From the away end came applause while Leo lifted a hand in acknowledgement as he crossed the white line.

The broadcast chuckled lightly as a graphic slid onto the screen.

"And this tells its own story. Ninety-eight per cent pass completion today. The two per cent comes from a throw-in that McLean fired into him, a brief loss of control, and then he won it straight back. Hardly a moment of panic there."

Leo met Cousins first before the two exchanged a quick double high five, before Cousins stepped past Leo, immediately gesturing towards Naylor.

Dawson waited a step closer to the dugout.

He took Leo’s hand firmly, pulled him in, and gave him a brief hug.

"Well done," he said, low enough that only Leo could hear.

"Now take a breather!"

Leo nodded, muttering a low, "Yeah," and that was it.

He jogged down the bench line, slapping hands with Ezra, Aasgaard, Fletcher and a couple of the forwards as he passed.

Leo dropped onto the bench, pulling the bib over his shoulders as he settled in and leaned forward, elbows on his knees, eyes back on the pitch as play restarted.

"Well, Cousins is now on for Leo, and we live to see if that is what could either make Wigan’s day or break it?" the commentary ended as Tilt slipped the ball inwards towards Cousins.