Chapter 29 – Lines in the Grass
The crisp morning air at Broadfield Stadium felt heavy, as if the sky itself was holding its breath. After clawing back from a goal down against Aldershot, Niels wasn't quite sure what to expect today. Crawley's confidence was still riding high—but underneath, a quiet tension pulled at the edges. A string stretched tight. Ready to snap.
Shrewsbury Town weren't the kind of team to give up a lead easily. Compact, structured, and ruthless on the break. Niels had reviewed their tape all week, but now he wasn't thinking about them. He was watching his own team. Looking for signs of wear.
The warm-up felt off.
Luka went through the motions, his eyes adrift somewhere beyond the pitch. Dev was stretching alone by the corner flag, fidgeting with his wrist tape, like he needed something to hold onto. Simons barked a correction during a rondo drill—uncharacteristic, even for him.
Even Niels felt it. That creeping sense that after the adrenaline of Aldershot, this one—this quiet, cold league fixture—was going to test more than just shape or tactics.
Kickoff
The game opened flat. Both sides cautious. Shrewsbury pressed in waves—not aggressively, but with quiet intent, pinning Crawley into slow, awkward buildups. The ball moved. But the rhythm never arrived.
Crawley's midfield gave it away too easily. Simons dropped deeper and deeper, trying to link play, but the connection was missing. Dev drifted between roles, caught between instructions and instinct. Luka's feet moved, but his head didn't follow.
In the 23rd minute, it cracked.
A shaky pass from Bennington—too soft, too central—was pounced on by Shrewsbury's forward, who broke clean through. One touch, then a calm finish.
0–1.
The stands groaned. The bench tensed. Niels didn't move—just closed his eyes for a second, forcing the frustration down.
Halftime
The dressing room was colder than usual. Quieter.
Simons slouched against the wall, jaw clenched. Dev stared into his boots. Luka sat, motionless, head down.
Niels stood by the whiteboard, marker in hand, but didn't speak right away.
"Too much through the middle," Simons muttered. "They're reading us like a book."
Niels nodded. "We're jamming traffic into a single lane. We need width."
He turned to the board. "Push the fullbacks higher. I want overloads on the flanks. And Dev—stay wide. You've got the pace to drag their line. Stop coming inside too early."
Dev gave a short nod, but his expression stayed distant.
"Jamal," Niels added, "keep pulling their midfielders wide. Create the channels for Luka."
He let the silence linger. Not as pressure—but as space to refocus.
"Keep your heads," he said quietly. "Frustration's the trap. Don't fall into it."
They filed out. No shouts. No fists. Just tension wrapped in boots and breath.
Niels stayed behind a moment longer, staring at the whiteboard. He wasn't just tweaking shape. He was trying to pull his players back into themselves.
Second Half
The restart brought more urgency. Crawley moved the ball quicker. Darby and Haines pushed forward, giving shape to the flanks. But Shrewsbury held their lines, absorbing the pressure with discipline.
In the 61st, Luka finally found a pocket of space. A cross came in, perfect height. He rose—clean header.
Just wide.
He punched the air in frustration, jaw tight. Niels didn't look away. Luka didn't just need a goal. He needed clarity. Belief.
And then came the moment.
74th minute. Dev, wide left, just where Niels had told him to stay. He dragged the right-back out, feinted inside, then curled a chip into the box.
Simons—lurking between defenders—read it early. One perfect step. One clean strike.
1–1.
The stadium exhaled. The bench lifted. Simons didn't even celebrate—just turned, head down, back into shape. There was no time to savor.
Final Whistle
Crawley pushed. Luka nearly forced a mistake with a sharp press. Dev danced past two but mis-hit his final ball. Jamal cut out a dangerous counter in the 89th with perfect timing.
But there was no winner.
1–1.
Not a loss. But not the statement they'd hoped for.
After the Match
The locker room was still. The kind of silence that held more weight than noise.
Luka tapped his boots absently, gaze lost. Simons sat with an ice pack pressed to his shin, eyes closed. Dev busied himself with his gear, avoiding everyone's eyes.
Niels sat down beside Luka.
"You good?" he asked quietly.
Luka didn't answer at first. Then a flicker of a smile, too quick to be real. "Yeah. Just... thinking about the game. About where we go from here."
Niels nodded slowly. He recognized the look. Not doubt. Restlessness. The kind that eats at people who expect more of themselves than anyone else does.
Out in the tunnel, Wallace waited.
"Not quite the result we wanted," he said, offering a shrug and a half-clap. "But you're keeping us in the fight. Keep your foot on the gas."
Niels nodded, but his mind was elsewhere—on Luka's stare, on Dev's tension, on Simons' silence.
The cracks were hairline, but they were there.
As the floodlights dimmed and the stadium emptied, Niels stayed by the touchline, hands in pockets, breath curling into the air.
The lines in the grass still held shape, even after ninety hard minutes.
But the question wasn't about today.
It was about how long those lines could hold—under pressure, under expectation, under the weight of what came next.
Because something was coming.
And Niels would need more than tactics to face it.
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! 🙏