My Ultimate Gacha System-Chapter 285 - 274: Fiorentina vs Atalanta - First Half III
The Danish striker’s first touch took him slightly left while his body opened toward goal, and Terracciano was diving forward to close the angle desperately but the shot came immediately—right foot striking across the ball with controlled power—and the placement was perfect because it curved away from the goalkeeper’s outstretched hand toward the far post.
The ball nestled inside the side netting.
GOAL: FIORENTINA 1-1 ATALANTA (28’)
The away section behind Musso’s goal erupted—maybe two thousand Atalanta supporters creating noise that cut through Fiorentina’s stunned silence—and Højlund sprinted toward the corner flag with both arms spread wide while his roar was visible even though the sound was swallowed by celebration.
Demien raised one hand in acknowledgment toward Højlund before turning back toward the halfway line, and his expression showed satisfaction without excessive celebration because the job was equalizing not celebrating, and Gasperini’s fist pump from the touchline communicated the same professional response.
Commentary Booth
"GOAL! Atalanta equalize!" the commentator shouted. "What a response! Koopmeiners with that gorgeous diagonal, Demien Walter with the perfectly weighted through ball, and Rasmus Højlund finishes clinically!"
"That’s why Walter is so highly regarded," his colleague added as replays began showing the sequence. "Watch his movement before Koopmeiners even strikes the pass—he’s already anticipating where the ball will land. First touch is clean, scan happens instantly, and that through ball splits two defenders with inch-perfect weight. Brilliant football."
The replay showed Demien’s positioning in slow motion—his body shape as he received, the minimal touches required to create the assist, Højlund’s perfectly timed run—and the commentary emphasized how quickly Atalanta had responded to going behind.
"Game on at the Artemio Franchi," the lead commentator said. "One-all after twenty-eight minutes, and this match is absolutely alive."
28’ - 35’ |
The equalizer shifted momentum as both teams pushed forward with renewed urgency, and the match opened up properly because Fiorentina needed to restore their lead while Atalanta sensed vulnerability in the home side’s defensive transitions.
Fiorentina’s pressure intensified as González beat Hateboer on the outside before curling a shot that sailed two feet over Musso’s crossbar, and moments later Bonaventura dragged an effort wide after receiving Adriano’s layoff twenty yards from goal, and the crowd’s noise sustained itself because chances were arriving even though finishing wasn’t clinical.
Atalanta defended through organization rather than desperation—bodies throwing themselves into passing lanes, communication constant between defensive players, transitions happening quickly when possession was recovered—and the structure held even when Fiorentina’s movement created dangerous positions.
In the thirty-third minute a half-cleared corner dropped loose at the edge of Atalanta’s penalty area and bodies converged toward it simultaneously, but the ball bounced awkwardly through the congestion before skidding toward where Adriano had positioned himself unmarked fifteen yards from goal.
Demien was closing from five yards away but Adriano’s touch came first—right foot cushioning the ball while his body shaped to shoot—and the Fiorentina wonderkid shifted the ball half a step to his left with one touch that created a narrow shooting lane through traffic.
The shot came immediately—right foot striking through the ball with controlled power that kept it low—and the trajectory was perfect because it traveled through a forest of legs while bodies screened Musso’s view until the final moment.
Musso reacted late—unsighted by his own defenders—and his dive came desperately toward his right post but the ball was already past him before his hands could reach it.
The shot nestled into the bottom corner.
GOAL: FIORENTINA 2-1 ATALANTA (41’)
The stadium detonated for the second time—purple scarves waving wildly while drums thundered from the Curva and fifty-five thousand voices created noise that felt infinite—and Bonaventura wrapped Adriano in a bear hug before teammates swarmed both players with jumping celebrations.
Adriano’s celebration was measured even through the chaos—pointing toward the crowd before turning back toward the center circle—and his professionalism showed because he understood that four minutes remained before halftime and concentration couldn’t break.
Demien stood with his hands on his hips and exhaled sharply through his nose, and his jaw worked side to side once before he clapped twice and turned toward his teammates to organize the restart.
Commentary Booth
"GOAL! Fiorentina restore their lead!" the commentator roared. "Adriano Ventresca strikes again! What a player! What a performance!"
"Clinical finish through traffic," his colleague added once the noise allowed speech. "Musso had no chance—completely unsighted until the shot was already past him. Ventresca with his second direct goal contribution tonight. He’s absolutely running this match."
The replay showed the sequence from multiple angles—the loose ball dropping, Adriano’s positioning unmarked, the shot threading through bodies—and the commentary emphasized how the Fiorentina wonderkid had imposed himself on the fixture at crucial moments.
"That’s world-class awareness," the commentator said. "Everyone else is ball-watching, but Ventresca positions himself exactly where the clearance will drop. First touch creates the shooting lane, second touch finds the bottom corner. Outstanding football."
35’ - 45’ |
The final minutes of the first half were frantic as Atalanta pushed forward desperately seeking another equalizer before the interval, and Lookman forced Terracciano into a low save with a driven shot from the edge of the box that the goalkeeper parried away with strong hands.
Fiorentina defended deeper now—protecting their lead through numbers behind the ball—and every clearance was greeted with thunderous applause from the home supporters who sensed their team was closing out the half successfully.
The fourth official’s board showed two minutes of added time, and both teams used the additional period with maximum intensity—Atalanta circulating quickly trying to create one final chance, Fiorentina pressing to win the ball back and run down the clock.
In the second minute of stoppage time Koopmeiners played a diagonal ball toward Malinovskyi on the right wing, but Biraghi read it perfectly and stepped in front to intercept before the Ukrainian could receive, and the clearance went long toward Atalanta’s half where Fiorentina’s forwards chased without genuine hope of reaching it before the whistle.
The referee checked his watch while both teams settled into their final positions.
Fweeeeeetttttttt! Fweeeeeetttttttt! Fweeeeeetttttttt!
HALFTIME: FIORENTINA 2-1 ATALANTA
The whistle’s three sharp blasts cut through the Florence night and players began walking toward the tunnel while applause crashed down from the home sections celebrating their team’s halftime lead, and the away end behind Musso’s goal remained mostly silent because satisfaction from the equalizer had been erased by conceding again before the interval.
Commentary Booth
"Halftime here at the Artemio Franchi, and what a first half we’ve witnessed," the lead commentator said. "Fiorentina lead two-one, and it’s been absolutely earned through their intensity and clinical finishing when chances arrived."
"The contrast between the two wonderkids has been fascinating," his colleague added. "Ventresca with two direct goal contributions—the assist for Cabral’s opener, then that brilliant finish for the second. Walter equalized with a lovely assist for Højlund, showing his quality. But in a match like this, good isn’t quite enough when you’re facing someone performing at Ventresca’s level."
The screen showed match statistics:
FIORENTINA 2-1 ATALANTA
Possession: 47% - 53%
Shots: 11 - 8
Shots on Target: 6 - 4
Corners: 6 - 3
Pass Accuracy: 85% - 87%
Demien Walter - 45 minutes played:
Touches: 38 | Passes: 31/34 (91%) | Key Passes: 1 | Assists: 1 | Duels: 5/8 | Rating: 7.2
Adriano Ventresca - 45 minutes played:
Touches: 42 | Passes: 34/37 (92%) | Key Passes: 2 | Assists: 1 | Goals: 1 | Duels: 7/9 | Rating: 8.8
Demien walked toward the tunnel with his teammates and his hands hung at his sides while his breathing was controlled, and the weight of the situation settled across his shoulders because one goal down at halftime meant the second half required everything.
The mission was still active.
Adriano had imposed himself.
The night was still open.







