Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 182: Wigan Kid’s Club.
The team bus rolled into the Wigan complex just after dark, headlights cutting across the quiet car park before easing into its bay.
The engine idled for a moment, then fell silent as one by one, the players stood, stretching stiff legs, reaching for bags and already halfway out of the day in their minds.
Dawson was on his feet early.
He grabbed a kit bag from the rack near the front, one that could have stayed right where it was, and turned back down the aisle.
"Leo," he said, casually. "Carry this for me, will you?"
Leo, with his own bag slung over his body, looked at the bag, then at Dawson. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖
It was too light to matter, with Leo staring at it for a tad bit longer before finally taking it anyway.
Once outside, the breath of the players clouded as they began moving towards their cars or respective modes of transport.
"Night, gaffer."
"Good work today."
"See you in the morning."
Dawson answered each of them until the group thinned and the car park emptied into scattered taillights.
When he turned toward the main building, Leo was already there, bag in hand, falling in beside him without being told.
They walked in silence down the corridor until they got to a door, where Dawson unlocked it and stepped aside to let Leo in first.
"Put it there," he said, nodding toward a chair.]
Leo set the bag down and stayed standing while Dawson closed the door behind them and leaned against his desk, arms folded, studying him for a second longer than necessary.
"I'm guessing you've been told," Dawson said at last.
Leo raised a brow, thinking about what that could mean, before nodding after arriving at what he thought it could be.
"Yeah," he said. "I have."
Dawson straightened slightly, ready to continue, but Leo spoke again before he could.
"Agent called me earlier," Leo added.
"Didn't want to waste your time pretending I didn't know."
Dawson let out a slow breath, half a laugh without humour.
"Figures," he said.
Leo nodded once.
"He said they came to him unofficially after you guys told him about the offer."
Dawson shook his head, pacing a step to the side.
"These people just don't understand, do they? They think if they say the name enough times, it pulls players back on instinct."
Leo watched him, calm, measured.
"Some part of me might always be tied to that place," he said.
"I won't lie about that. It's where I started. But right now?"
He paused, choosing his words carefully.
"My heart's here. With Wigan. I don't want every week turning into a conversation about leaving or what could happen next."
Dawson stopped pacing and looked at him properly now.
"That's good to hear," he said. "Not just for me but for the club and your mates."
Leo shrugged lightly. "I just want to play. Improve. That's it."
Dawson nodded, the decision settling in his posture.
"That should put things to rest," he said. "At least on our end."
He glanced at the clock on the wall, then back to Leo.
"Get some rest," Dawson added. "We go again tomorrow."
Leo nodded. "See you in the morning."
He turned and spun out of the room afterwards, with the door clicking shut behind him.
The next morning, the training pitch was already alive when Dawson stepped out of his office.
Balls rolled across the grass while shouts bounced between drills.
He kept his eyes on his players, watching them go through their respective trainings with coaches before settling on Leo, who was off to one side with a coach, resistance bands looped around his waist as he drove forward in short, controlled bursts.
Dawson watched without saying a word until, behind him, footsteps approached.'
"Nice of you to finally get to work," Dawson said without turning.
Nolan snorted. "Don't start."
Dawson glanced over his shoulder, a small grin creeping in.
"I've wanted to say that for years."
Nolan rolled his eyes.
"You're the one who sent me back out of the car park to pick something up. You knew exactly what you were doing."
"Did I?" Dawson replied, still smiling.
They stood side by side now, eyes on the pitch.
Leo had moved on to agility sticks, feet tapping quickly and precisely as the coach counted him through.
After a moment, Nolan spoke again.
"Did you have the talk with him?"
Dawson nodded once, still watching Leo.
"Yeah."
"And?"
"He's with us," Dawson said simply.
Nolan nodded slowly before it got repetitive after a moment.
"Perfect."
On the pitch, Leo finished the sequence and straightened up, hands on his hips as he shoved a loose ball towards Fletcher, who rose to the skies, only to miss the empty goal causing some of the players to laugh including Leo, just before he glanced toward the touchline, caught Dawson's eye for a brief second, then jogged back into position without a word.
....
The sun had already begun showing signs of setting by the time the first scarves appeared on the walk up to the DW Stadium.
The draw at Kenilworth Road had left a strange taste.
Good enough to survive.
Now the third round replay sat on home ground, and fans streamed in with the hope that this time, Wigan would make a statement.
Word spread quickly outside the turnstiles, talking about Dawson's decision regarding the squad for the game.
A lot of senior names were on the team sheet, and that got the fans excited, thinking that it was a sign that their club had decided not to forsake the FA cup.
But half an hour before kickoff, when the lineups flashed up on phones and screens around the concourse, the tone shifted.
"Half the starting lineup are kids," someone muttered, staring at his screen.
Another fan leaned in. "He's serious? In a replay?"
"They've already thrown it away," a voice said from behind them.
"The squad list might have just been to appease."
Yet even as the doubts spread through the stands, the noise inside the stadium kept building.
The seats filled as the players began to emerge from the tunnel.
Leo, already sitting on the bench, watched as the starting elevens for both teams lined up.
Ezra, in the starting lineup, bounced on his toes, restless and standing beside him, and a bit calmer was Duvan, another kid Leo had played with in his short time with the Wigan U21S, who was now playing with the U23S but had been brought up for the game in particular.
A few minutes later, everyone was in position, and after the last checks, the referee blew his whistle as Luton kicked off, and the moment they did, any thought of a cautious start vanished immediately.
Because Wigan pressed high, young legs driving the tempo, as if the game had been waiting for them all week.
Ezra was everywhere early.
He drifted wide, hugged the touchline, then cut inside without warning.
Amarii Bell tried to match him step for step, but Ezra kept changing the rhythm.
One moment slow, inviting pressure, and in the next sequence, he would be taking on the Luton Town wingback, like his life depended on it.
"Ezra again," the commentator said as the winger skipped past Bell for the third time in ten minutes.
"He's playing with no fear at all."
Each burst forward pulled a roar from the stands.
Each tackle won by a Wigan shirt earned applause.
The kids were not playing like placeholders.
They were playing like they had something to prove.
In the middle, Duvan was relentless.
He snapped into challenges, timed his interceptions perfectly, and recycled the ball with quiet efficiency.
Whenever Luton tried to build through the centre, he was there, breaking it up before it could breathe, forcing Luton to turn their thoughts towards the flanks, but that didn't really prove fruitful.
"He reads the game so well," the analyst noted. "Doesn't look rushed for a kid making his debut and in the FA cup no less."
From the bench, Leo leaned forward, elbows on his knees.
Seeing Duvan's game from the U21S translate on the senior level felt nice to see.
Luton tried to respond, but every time they threatened to find a foothold, Wigan met them with energy and belief.
The press stayed coordinated, and the back line held firm.
In the stands, the early frustration began to fade.
"These lads are serious," a fan said to a stranger beside him.
"They're not backing off at all."
"Playing them like it's even," the other replied. "No respect. I like it."
Back on the pitch, Ezra nearly made the breakthrough just before the half hour.
He drove at Bell again, chopped inside, and whipped a low cross across the box.
A defender got there first, sliding it behind at the last second to keep the score level.
The corner from that came to nothing, but the message was clear.
Wigan, despite playing kids, hadn'tthought about throwing the game away, and as halftime approached, the momentum stayed with the home side.



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