Chapter 27 – Shadows Between Teammates
Rain fell in sheets the next evening, streaking the windows of Broadfield Stadium like an old film reel unraveling. The locker room buzzed with the usual noise—studs clacking against the floor, the soft rip of tape, bits of banter flying across the benches—but something about it all felt different.
Not tense. Not explosive.
Just… quieter.
Niels leaned against the doorframe, arms folded, observing like a man watching a room rearrange itself in real time. Some of the lads were gathered around someone's phone, chuckling at a video. But further back, Luka sat alone, hunched forward, untying and retying his boots with mechanical precision. Again and again.
A few feet away, Simons and Dev exchanged glances during their stretches. They spoke, but the rhythm between them was off. Their body language—closed, careful—told more than words ever could.
None of it was a crisis. Not yet.
But it was enough for Niels to feel the early stirrings of something beginning to fray.
He made his way over to Luka slowly, crouching to the young midfielder's eye level.
"Didn't see you at training yesterday," Niels said casually, keeping his tone light.
Luka didn't meet his eyes. "Yeah. Sorry. Had something come up."
"You okay?"
A shrug. "I'm fine."
Niels waited. Luka was only nineteen, but he had an old soul when it came to football. Fierce. Disciplined. Driven. He played every game like someone trying to prove the world wrong. But lately, he'd been different. Still solid on the pitch—but quieter. Quicker to look down. Less of the fire that made him stand out.
"Look," Niels said, voice gentler now. "If something's going on—family stuff, pressure, whatever—you can talk to me. I'm not just your coach."
For a second, Luka's eyes flicked up. There was a tiredness in them that hadn't been there before. Maybe even a flicker of uncertainty. Then it vanished, like mist off glass.
"I'm good, coach. Just tired.
Niels didn't push.
"Alright. But if you skip another session without saying anything, I'm benching you. Not because I'm pissed—but because this team works on trust. One guy checks out, even just for a moment, and the whole thing shakes."
Luka nodded, this time slower. "I understand."
Niels stood, ready to walk away, but Luka's voice stopped him—soft, uncertain.
"Do you think I'm… falling behind?"
Niels turned, expression calm.
"No," he said, steady. "But I do think there's something off the pitch following you onto it. And if you don't face it, it'll keep following you. Doesn't matter how talented you are."
Luka didn't reply, but the next day, he was the first one in the film room.
The following morning, the squad gathered in the tactics room. Their next opponent ran a tight 4-4-2 diamond—classic shape, overloaded midfield, aggressive press. But they were vulnerable. Niels had spotted the gaps.
He pointed to the screen, remote in hand.
"They crowd the middle, so we stretch them. Force them out wide, make them chase. Then we hit the half-spaces when they start scrambling. But to do that, we stay compact behind the ball. Jamal, Ryan—you two are the first line of pressure. No chasing ghosts."
He clicked to the next freeze frame, highlighting the channel between the opposition's holding midfielder and center backs.
"Dev, Simons—this area here is your battleground. You control that space, you control the match."
Dev nodded. Simons stayed still, but Niels caught the way his jaw tightened slightly. Something was off.
After the session, Niels found Simons by the coffee machine, stirring sugar into a paper cup with more force than needed.
"You alright?" Niels asked.
Simons hesitated, then sighed. "Just feel like I'm covering double. Dev's been… slow. Out of position. Doesn't press when he should."
"Have you talked to him about it?"
"I tried. He thinks I'm calling him out. Gets defensive."
Niels leaned against the wall, arms folded. "And now you're keeping it in."
"I just want the shape to hold, you know?" Simons said, voice tight. "We've worked hard to get here. We can't let it slip."
"I get it," Niels said quietly. "You care. And you're right to speak up. But silence turns tension into resentment. And resentment… breaks teams."
Simons looked down at his coffee, then back at Niels. "What do I do?"
"Leave it with me. And remember—you lead by action, not just words. That's why the boys follow you."
That brought the ghost of a smile to Simons' face. "Thanks, coach."
Later that evening, the stadium had gone quiet. Rain tapped gently against the office windows like a distant ticking clock. Niels sat alone in the assistant's office, his laptop open but untouched, the screen paused on a frame of an old match.
He sighed.
There were days when he missed the simplicity—back when football lived in his controller, his YouTube playlists, his endless spreadsheets. No emotions. No bruised egos. Just logic and results.
But this… this was the real thing. Imperfect. Raw. Human.
He opened his old notebook, flipping past diagrams and plans, until he found a clean page. Then he wrote:
"Not every win is progress. Not every conflict is failure."
Underneath, he added:
"Build the room, not just the tactics."
His phone buzzed.
A message from Wallace.
"Board's watching the next two games closely. Not a threat—just transparency."
Niels read it twice. No alarm. Just pressure. The kind that never went away.
He let the phone rest face-down on the desk and leaned back in his chair. Outside, the rain had slowed to a light mist.
Calm. Still.
The kind of quiet that settled before something big.
If you're having fun reading, please consider voting with Power Stones!
It really helps boost the novel's visibility on the Webnovel app and gives me tons of motivation to keep writing.
Thank you for your support! 🙏