Chapter 90: First Of Many.
Leo kept driving forward, the grass under his boots blurring into streaks of motion and noise.
The first Sunderland man lunged, looking to nib the run before Leo got momentum, but the latter just dropped a shoulder, one way and slipped past the former in the other way, a sleeve grazing his arm as the Sunderland player tried to grab hold of him.
The second came harder, timing his step to pinch the ball from the side, but Leo’s right foot darted across, shielding the ball and dragging it away before contact came and then spinning him half around, body tight and balanced.
The Wigan fans wished their younger player on, as a third challenge arrived with a Sunderland midfielder bursting from his blind side, studs scraping as he tried to intercept.
He got to Leo, clipping the latter, with the referee almost ready to blow his whistle, but Leo stumbled and recovered, the ball almost sticking under his feet before a flick of his toe pushed it back into stride.
It wasn’t clean, but it was enough to keep the move alive as the roar grew louder.
"He’s gone past a third," one of the commentators said as Leo moved onto the next challenge.
And then came the fourth, bigger, faster, determined to end the run.
Leo braced, feinted inside, and when the opponent player opened up just enough space, he slipped through, the ball skimming ahead into open field.
He could hear the shouts now, teammates urging him on, the bench half-standing, Dawson’s voice cutting through the air, though he couldn’t make out the words.
"Look at that from the youngster!" one of the commentators gasped, his tone caught between disbelief and admiration.
"He’s wriggled through four of them, and this might be exactly why Dawson brought him on!"
Leo slowed, the box unfolding ahead as the goal framed perfectly in front of him.
He steadied his footing, drawing in a breath, while the crowd noise folded in on itself, muffled, like the air before lightning.
He could see the keeper shifting, the defenders recovering, the entire moment poised on a knife’s edge.
Then—"Leo! Leo!"
Darikwa’s voice cracked through the focus like a ripple in glass.
He was bursting down the right, unmarked, hand out.
Leo hesitated just for a heartbeat.
"Next time," he muttered under his breath, more to himself than anyone, before sliding the pass outward.
Darikwa didn’t wait.
With one touch, he sent a first-time cross, driven and whipped into the box with pace and curl.
Broadhead rose, hanging in the air for what felt like a moment too long as the whole stadium held its breath for the impact.
His forehead met the ball clean, the sound of impact sharp and hollow, and then the ball drifted wide, slicing across the goal and rolling behind the netting.
A wave of groans followed, mixed with applause from the home end and some shouting amongst the away team.
"Much better from Wigan," came the commentary again, steady now.
"That was the sharpest passage of play we’ve seen all game, and it all started with the young man, Leo, weaving through half of Sunderland’s midfield like it was nothing."
The camera panned briefly to Leo, who was catching his breath, one hand on his knee, a small smile tugging at the corner of his mouth.
The Sunderland keeper jogged behind the goal, collecting the ball from one of the boys standing by the boards.
He placed it down calmly, rolled it short to his defender, and the game moved on, like nothing had happened.
Dawson was already on his feet by the touchline, palms coming together in sharp, ringing claps.
"More of that!" he roared, voice carrying across the pitch.
"Keep it moving, Leo! Keep it moving!"
Leo gave a small nod from midfield, already turning his attention to the Sunderland buildup.
The visitors were trying to settle things down again, keeping the ball between their backline and deep midfielders.
Their rhythm was neat, almost taunting, short, angled passes that tested Wigan’s shape, pushing, pulling, prodding for gaps.
One of their midfielders found a pocket just beyond the halfway line and turned sharply, threading a pass between the lines.
A Sunderland runner darted forward, and for a second, it looked like Wigan were about to be sliced open.
But before the red shirts could capitalise, James McClean came flying in, a blur of green and blue, sliding across the turf with perfect timing.
His boot cut the ball cleanly, sending it spinning away, with no hesitation, no foul, just commitment and control.
The ball skipped free, rolling aimlessly for a moment before McClean was up again, already sprinting back toward his own goal.
He scooped it up and shifted it to Curtis Tilt, who took a steadying touch before feeding Max Power in the centre.
Max turned a tad bit too slow and soon, three Sunderland players closed on him at once, red shirts swarming.
You could almost hear the gears clicking in his head, the veteran trying to find a way out before the trap.
Leo, sensing it, moved towards the veteran, calling out before settling into space.
"Max!" he called, hand out, eyes sharp, and Power didn’t hesitate, stabbing the pass toward him.
But before the ball could even reach Leo’s feet, Embleton was on his heels, snapping, biting, kicking at air, desperate to break up the play.
Leo gave a quick glance behind before the ball came and made his decision not to take hold of the ball.
Instead, he let the ball roll straight through his legs, timed perfectly, and in the same heartbeat, it nutmegged Embleton too.
The stadium gasped as Leo spun off his marker, smooth and sudden, body twisting to collect the ball again.
Embleton gave chase, reaching, clawing, but Leo was already slipping it wide to McClean, who had burst into the open channel.
McClean drove down the wing and whipped a low ball across the box where Keanemet it near post, but his timing and direction were off.
The shot sliced wide, thudding against the advertising boards behind the goal.
Before Sunderland could restart, the referee blew his whistle, running back toward the earlier foul, where Leo was just getting off the ground after releasing the ball to Mclean.
He reached into his pocket and flashed a yellow at Embleton, who stood there shaking his head, hands out in disbelief.
"Play on or don’t, make your mind up!" Embleton barked, but the referee was already jogging away, making it clear the advantage had been used.
The crowd clapped, a mix of appreciation and frustration, and from the touchline, Dawson cupped his hands around his mouth.
"Perfect! That’s what I want! Sharp, direct, brilliant work, Leo!"
Leo was brushing off his kit as he stood again, a faint grin tugging at his lips.
His hair was stuck to his forehead, sweat streaking his temple, but he looked alive, like something inside him had clicked back into rhythm.
The game resumed, Sunderland pressing harder now.
They tried to wrest control again, moving it left and right, switching play fast to drag Wigan’s midfield apart.
But Leo was everywhere, shadowing passes, closing angles, forcing hurried touches.
Each time Sunderland thought they’d broken free, a flash of blue and white was there to spoil it.
A body.
A boot.
A tug.
And then, just as one of their midfielders tried to spin into space, a sharp, low interception intruded, and it was Leo again.
He slid in clean, his boot snapping the ball free and cushioning it back under control as if he’d planned it all along.
The crowd rose in approval, applause spilling from the stands as Leo stood right back up, shielding the ball before Cirkin, one of Sunderland’s wing backs, could intercept.
And then, Leo managed to slip past Cirkin with a clever little touch, a burst of energy that left the Sunderland wing-back wrong-footed.
The crowd stirred, the rhythm of the match shifting in an instant as Leo rolled the ball into Tom Naylor’s path and darted into open space.
Naylor spotted the movement, his instinct honed by experience, and returned it with a first-time pass that met Leo’s stride perfectly.
"Here they come again!" the commentator’s voice sharpened over the rising noise.
Leo carried it forward, head up, defenders closing in.
He moved slightly to his right, forcing the Sunderland players to come to him, but then, with a sudden jerk of balance, he cut back onto his left, not his strongest foot, but the space ahead was too good to turn down, and he didn’t think twice.
He wasn’t going to let any calls deter him.
The shot came low, quick, and heavy, the kind that traded precision for pure force.
It skimmed the grass, a streak of intent, before nicking the outstretched leg of Danny Batth, and the deflection changed everything.
A sharp gasp rippled through the stands as the ball spun cruelly away from the keeper’s reach and nestled inside the far corner.
GOOOOOOOAAAALLLL, the home crowd roared as Leo stood still, before turning towards the bench.
"It’s in! It’s in!" the commentator exploded, voice nearly cracking.
"Leo’s strike takes a wicked touch off Batth, and Wigan have the lead! His first goal in the English Championship, and he will remember it for a very long time."
The roar followed, not just from the stands, but from the Wigan bench, with Dawson pumping both fists in the air.
On the pitch, Leo slowed his run, turned towards the goal, to see once again if it had really gone in before continuing his run towards the bench and then jumping on Dawson.
Then came the wave of sound, the blur of teammates rushing toward him, arms thrown wide, pulling him and Dawson into the celebration as his name echoed across the stadium.