Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 54: Just A Start

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Chapter 54: Just A Start

"And now the Wigan captain is down again. This time, it looks more serious. You can see Dawson on the sideline — he’s already turning to his bench."

The home fans erupted again.

Booing.

Pointing at invisible watches.

Waving for cards, the atmosphere, and being a bit impatient all in all.

Leo leaned back slightly, heart racing.

Things were edging closer.

.....

Loftus Road — 63’

The change came quickly after the second collapse.

Darikwa sat down again, this time with a slow shake of the head.

He didn’t call for the physios. Didn’t need to.

Everyone already knew.

Dawson’s jaw tightened.

A second later, his arm was up, waving.

"Chris! Fletch!" he barked.

Sze and Fletcher, now in their jerseys jogged toward the fourth official as the board went up.

QPR fans groaned, accusing time-wasting while the away fans clapped louder to drown it out.

The match restarted.

QPR came again — nothing clean, but forceful.

Angled crosses.

Set pieces curling into dangerous zones.

It was pure pressure now.

Wigan were still holding on, but barely — QPR kept swinging the momentum back their way, pushing with more bodies, more corners, more pressure, and less patience, the game hadn’t opened up, it had just begun to crack.

Fletcher was isolated up top, chasing scraps, and Chris Sze had dropped deeper, plugging gaps while Cousins shouted instructions non-stop, dragging the midfield into line.

Dawson hadn’t moved from the edge of his box, arms crossed, unreadable, just staring at the pitch like it owed him something.

QPR’s best chance of the half came in the 79th minute — a loose ball on the edge of the area was struck on the half-volley, clean, dipping, and just grazing the top of the bar, landing behind the net with that deceptive ripple that made half the home end celebrate before realising the truth.

Dawson didn’t flinch, just turned to his staff, murmured something, and then faced the pitch again, focused, locked in.

Then, he looked down at the bench.

"Calderón."

Leo’s head snapped up — no hesitation, just a spark of nerves flickering through his chest, as he pulled off his bib, checked his laces, and started moving.

No fanfare from his teammates, just a few claps on the back, a grin from Nolan, and one dry joke he didn’t catch.

He stood, moved to the touchline, and slipped slightly on the rubber mat at the edge of the bench, catching himself quickly, triggering a few quiet laughs from the lads still sitting down — not cruel, just human.

He jogged along the sideline to stay warm, trying not to overthink it, trying not to stare at the crowd or the scoreboard or the dugout, trying to act like this wasn’t the biggest moment of his life.

The ball went out of play, showing a throw for Wigan, and the fourth official lifted the board.

11 off. 22 on.

McClean came off to solid applause from the away end, nothing dramatic, just a short wave and a nod, no eye contact with Leo as they passed — none needed.

Leo clapped his hands twice, almost as a reset, and stepped forward, his name already floating from the press box overhead.

"And here comes Leo Calderón, just 17 years and 77 days old — Wigan’s youngest ever debutant, stepping onto the pitch here at Loftus Road. Came up through Manchester United’s academy, and joined Wigan’s development side a few months ago. Not much info on him yet, but these are the kind of debuts that can turn into stories."

"Plenty of good players have left United young and found their path elsewhere. Who’s to say this isn’t one of those?"

Leo couldn’t hear the words but he felt the shift in energy, the subtle lift in the crowd as he stepped on, the way a few nearby QPR fans leaned forward just a little more, curious now, sensing the new face, the unknown factor.

Dawson didn’t say anything, just gave him a look as he crossed the line — not a warning, not pressure, just a glance that said: Don’t hide and with that, the match continued.

Whatmough had the ball at the back, saw Leo out wide, and played it fast, skipping low along the turf.

Leo went to meet it, but the touch was off — the ball bounced too far in front, and QPR jumped on it immediately, winning the second ball, and regaining ground.

"Tough touch from Calderón there — the kind of thing that reminds you how hard this level is, especially when you’re not just new, but away, in front of 15,000 people."

Whatmough snapped at him, just one word — "Be ready" — but it was sharp enough to sting.

Leo nodded once and just repositioned himself to meet the next ball.

QPR after regaining the ball couldn’t go far after their attack was thwarted by Cousins, who sent the ball out for a throw, most fans thinking it was QPR’s but the referee had a different view on it.

He gestured pointing towards the half of the pitch QPR were attacking from.

The QPR player that had grabbed the ball sighed in resignation and tossed the ball to the nearest Wigan player.

Cousins with the ball in hand, glanced sideways.

"You good?"

Leo nodded and Cousins launched it in, chest height.

Leo brought it down a little awkwardly, not clean, not poor either as a QPR midfielder stepped in to press, heavy-footed and fast.

Leo shifted, fainted a pass behind him and rolled the ball under his foot like he was going to slide it down the line.

Most players would have fallen for it and so did the QPR midfielder who leaned in to block the supposed pass.

Leo stopped, turned, and played it back to Cousins instead.

The crowd near the touchline gave a soft cheer, hoping to encourage the new face that had just shown a glimpse of what he could do with the ball.

"Sold him there, didn’t he? Good little disguise from the debutant — not bad under pressure."

The away end responded with a quick chant, not about Leo exactly, but for the team, for the effort, for holding the line this long, with this little.

Leo didn’t smile, but his breathing settled — just a little.

One final QPR cross — hopeful, desperate — floated into the box, but Amos rose clean, claimed it, and punted it long with both fists clenched.

The referee raised his arm, and then the whistle blew.

Wigan’s bench didn’t explode — they just stood, hands in the air, heads exhaled, fists clenched with relief more than joy.

Players on the pitch dropped into each other, some flat on their backs, some bent at the waist, jerseys soaked.

Dawson shook the opposing coach’s hand, then walked down the line, barely acknowledging the noise.

The away end was roaring now — not wild, just loud, steady, like they’d been waiting to exhale for weeks.

"Full-time here at Loftus Road, and Wigan Athletic finally break their four-match losing streak with a 1–0 win. It wasn’t pretty, but it was deserved — and it might just be the result that settles the storm around them."

"James McClean’s goal in the first half proves decisive, and a debut for 17-year-old Leo Calderón, who becomes the youngest player to appear for Wigan Athletic. Didn’t get much time to convince the fans but he’ll be one to keep an eye on."

Leo walked slowly toward the middle of the pitch, heart still thumping against his ribs, no celebrations, no photos, no fanfare.

Just a few minutes played, a couple of touches made, and his name in the books and that was enough for now.

As the last handshakes were exchanged and the crowd began to file out, Chris Sze jogged over to Leo, bumping him lightly with a shoulder.

"First one’s done," he said grinning.

Leo let out a slow breath and nodded.

The two walked side by side toward the tunnel, boots dragging a bit over the turf.

The floodlights above made everything look brighter than it felt — the kind of false daylight that made post-match fatigue hit faster.

Inside the tunnel, the sound changed — from crowd noise to rubber soles squeaking on concrete, water bottles clinking, and distant chatter from the home side’s changing room.

Leo didn’t say much and neither did Chris.

They pushed through the doors into the away dressing room. freewebnσvel.cøm

Some players were already slumped on benches.

Leo found his spot, sat down, and started unlacing.

The door opened again, and Dawson stepped in.

He didn’t speak right away. Just looked around the room for a second, watching them — the tired ones, the quiet ones, the subs, the kid who’d just touched the pitch for the first time.

"Good job," he said finally, voice low but steady.

"It wasn’t clean, but it held. And that’s what we needed."

He glanced over at a couple of players still breathing heavily, still peeling off kit.

"We’ll talk more on Monday," he added, nodding once.

"Finish up, get changed. Coach leaves in an hour."

He turned, pushed open the door again, and disappeared back into the corridor.

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