Chapter 89: Catch Me If You Can.
The dressing room door creaked open, then closed with a dull thud as Nolan stepped in.
From behind, Dawson didn’t storm in for the appalling first half display; he walked with a kind of still anger that would have been easier to appease, had he poured it all out.
He stopped just inside the room, folded his arms, and let the silence drag long enough for everyone to feel it.
Finally, he spoke. "Can someone tell me what I just watched out there?"
No one answered.
A few players stared at the floor, some busied themselves peeling off tape or tugging at their socks, but nobody had the courage to meet his eye.
Dawson gave a small, bitter laugh.
"Because whatever that was, it wasn’t football. Not from us. Not from a team that’s supposed to be fighting to push up the table."
"We looked... soft. Hesitant. Like we were waiting for Sunderland to make all the decisions for us."
He shifted his gaze around the benches, pausing on one face, then another.
"Where was the bite? Where was the urgency? Did any of you actually want the ball? If this is the kind of football you are going to play every time, then there’s really no need for us to attend games because it wouldn’t matter if we lost or forfeited."
His voice wasn’t raised, but the edge in it made the words sting sharper than if he’d been shouting.
One of the centre-backs muttered something under his breath about the pitch feeling heavy, but Dawson’s eyes flicked to him.
"The pitch?" he repeated, voice flat.
"Is that what we’re blaming it on? Not one of you can take a touch under pressure because the grass isn’t perfect? Come on. You know better than that. I expect better than that."
The room stayed quiet, the players shrinking into themselves.
Thelo Aasgaard sat slouched in the corner, staring at the floor, his knees bouncing as the coach turned towards him.
Dawson looked at him for a long moment before speaking again.
"Thelo," he said, quieter now. The midfielder’s head jerked up.
"You’ve had good days for us. Plenty of them. But today? You’re hiding. You’re drifting out of the game. And I can’t afford that right now. We can’t afford that. Not in a match like this."
Thelo swallowed hard, but he didn’t argue.
He just gave a small, stiff nod and pressed his lips together.
Dawson let the silence hang again, then straightened his jacket.
His tone shifted, firmer now, almost clinical.
"Leo," he said, turning toward the young forward.
"You’re on for Thelo at the start of the second half. I want energy. I want someone who’s not afraid to get on the ball and make them uncomfortable. Doesn’t have to be perfect, doesn’t have to be pretty. Just make them feel you."
Leo nodded, pulse quickening at the words.
He could feel the eyes of the room flick toward him like he was the next scapegoat, but that wasn’t in Leo’s plans.
He was going to be the one player, and not just part of the team.
Dawson exhaled through his nose, slowly and then turned towards the rest of the players.
"The rest of you, look, I’m not asking for miracles. Just pride. Show me you’ve got a bit of fight in you, because right now it looks like we’re sleepwalking through ninety minutes. And if that’s all we’re bringing, then we’re wasting everyone’s time, yours, mine, and especially the fans."
He glanced at the door, then back to his players.
"Second half’s yours. Go out there and fix it."
The room seemed to shrink under Dawson’s words, his disappointment cutting deeper than a shout ever could.
He turned his gaze one last time toward Thelo Aasgaard, then toward Leo, gave a curt nod and then turned and left, the door clicking shut behind him.
For a second, nobody moved.
The tension broke only with the sound of a few players exhaling at once, like the whole room had been holding its breath until Dawson was gone.
Boots shuffled against the floor while some players muttered under their breath.
Thelo sat forward, elbows digging into his knees, rubbing his face with both hands.
"Leo."
Dawson called, standing near the door, hand resting lightly on the handle as the teenager’s head snapped up.
"Come on. Let’s get you moving."
Leo blinked, then gave a quick nod, shoving his phone into his locker.
When he reached the door, Nolan was waiting, holding it open.
The hallway outside was cooler, quieter, the noise from the stands a distant hum compared to the suffocating air of the locker room.
"Best to stretch your legs before the whistle," Nolan said as they started walking.
"If you still get nervous for matchday, you have to do away with that. Half the job’s keeping your head right before you step on."
Leo swallowed, nodding again, but didn’t say much;
They reached the tunnel exit, the faint light spilling in from the pitch ahead.
Nolan stopped and clapped him lightly on the shoulder, motioning him forward.
Leo met his eyes for a moment and managed a small smile before stepping past the ’We are Wigan’ mural and then out of the tunnel.
...
After the 15 minutes of rest time passed, the low murmur of half-time talk gave way to a rising swell as the players began to emerge again.
First came the officials, then the clusters of red-and-white shirts from Sunderland, followed closely by Wigan in blue.
Applause rippled down from the stands, a more pleading rhythm with the fans clapping to shake life into their side, to will someone to find the spark that could tilt the game.
On one side of the tunnel, Thelo Aasgaard came out a step slower than the rest.
No kit now, just the padded jacket zipped halfway up.
His head was low, eyes scanning the floor rather than the stands.
He clapped faintly as he walked toward the bench, but his shoulders carried the weight of the substitution.
Behind him, stepping into the light, was Leo, who had just met the Kitman in the tunnel for his Jersey.
He drew in a breath, letting the cold October air sting his lungs as he looked across the pitch.
Sunderland’s fans whistled, trying to drown out the cheers on the home side, but all Leo could hear was the pulse in his ears.
"Change for Wigan at the break,"
said the commentary, the words brisk but with a curl of intrigue."Thelo Aasgaard, who didn’t quite find his rhythm in that first half, is replaced by the teenager Leo..., ...a player who’s caught attention with a few bright cameos this season. Now, Dawson has turned to him in a game that desperately needs a spark."
His co-commentator chimed in, a note of curiosity in his tone.
"Well, it’s a brave move, but maybe the right one. Aasgaard looked out of sorts. And with Leo, you know what you’ll get: energy, direct running, a bit of fearlessness. Sometimes that’s exactly what a game like this needs. From what we’ve seen in recent games, too, he’s got the passing ability to break down defences, so all we have to do is wait."
The referee raised his whistle as both sides spread out, Sunderland tapping the ball ready for the restart.
Leo rolled his shoulders once, glancing at the nearest opponent already eyeing him up, then back toward the player behind him.
The whistle blew, and then the second half began, but the restart settled quickly into the kind of pattern everyone had seen in the first half.
Sunderland kept their lines neat, Wigan tried to probe, and the crowd shifted between groans and encouragement as passes broke down or rolled harmlessly backwards.
For Leo, the opening minutes were about steadying himself.
The ball came to him once, and what followed was a simple layoff to Darikwa overlapping on the right.
Another touch followed a minute later, and he cushioned a header into midfield when Cousins shouted for it.
Nothing risky, nothing sharp yet.
Just the basics, keeping rhythm with the
With every small touch, every shout from a teammate, the nerves began to smooth out, replaced by that simmering readiness he always carried beneath the surface of what most scouts and coaches could see.
Then it came.
The ball fizzed across the middle, a slightly loose pass from Power, and a Sunderland midfielder snapped toward it.
Leo darted across, quicker to it, body low as he shielded the challenge.
A snap of boots clattered against his shin pad, a defender sliding in desperate to nick it away, but instinct took over.
He rolled his heel over the ball and spun, the defender’s legs slicing through the grass where he’d just been.
In one fluid motion, Leo was facing green space, an open pitch stretching in front of him.
Gasps rose from the stands, that sudden intake of breath when the fans were expecting the burst.
And so Leo drove forward.
He knew the Sunderland players would close.
Space in this league never stayed open for long.
But that was the thing: they had to catch him first.
And they could only take the ball if he let them.