White Team

The whistle shrieked, sharp and sudden, cutting through the twilight. Leon felt the ground hum beneath his cleats as James nudged the ball gently toward him. 

He took a calm touch, the ball settling like an old companion at his foot. Across the field, the white team buzzed with intensity. Leon's eyes automatically picked out the familiar glowing numbers above their heads.

The central midfielder, a wiry kid named Alex, had numbers hovering over him: Potential: 88, Current: 67. He moved with a quiet efficiency, his eyes always tracking the ball. A tough opponent. Their main striker, Ben, was a blur of aggressive energy: Potential: 85, Current: 70. Fast, strong, always looking for a gap.

Leon ignored the numbers for a second, focusing on the feel of the ball, the fresh scent of the turf. This wasn't about data; it was about instinct, about the rhythm of the game. He saw Byon sprint down the right wing, a flash of red.

"Byon!" Leon called, a crisp, low pass zipping across the grass, perfectly weighted.

Byon, with his Potential: 90, Current: 72, took it in stride, his first touch already pushing it past their left-back. The defender, caught flat-footed, stumbled. Byon was off, a blur of red, eating up the grass. The Aston Villa scout leaned forward, his pen already poised over his notepad.

The white team's defense scrambled. Leon, still in the center circle, watched the ripples. He saw James, his Potential: 83, Current: 68, peeling off his marker, creating space near the penalty box. Leon started moving, a quiet engine in the midfield, directing traffic with subtle gestures.

Byon reached the byline, his cross a low, curving whip into the box. It flew just past Ben, the opposing center-back, but too close for comfort. James stretched, a desperate lunge, but the ball was cleared by a white jersey.

"Good run, Byon!" Leon shouted, already falling back into position. "Keep the pressure up!"

The game flowed back and forth, a tug-of-war in the midfield. Leon focused on control, slowing the tempo when needed, then injecting pace with a sharp pass. He intercepted a loose ball, pivoted, and threaded a pass through two defenders to James, who had drifted into a dangerous pocket of space.

James took a touch, then another, but the white team's central defender, Mark (who was solid, Potential: 79, Current: 65), closed him down quickly. James tried a quick shot, but it was blocked and ricocheted wide. Corner kick.

"Unlucky, James!" Leon encouraged, jogging over. "Next time, you've got it."

The corner floated in, high and swirling. Joey, in goal, his Potential: 74, Current: 62 showing just a hint of anxiety in the way his shoulders were hunched, hesitated for a split second. A white team player jumped highest, connecting with a powerful header.

Leon's heart jumped. It was going in! But at the last moment, Joey launched himself, a desperate, flailing dive, and somehow, miraculously, managed to tip the ball over the bar. It scraped the crossbar, sending a shiver down Leon's spine.

A collective gasp went through the small crowd of parents and academy staff. Even the scouts exchanged quick glances.

"JOEY! WHAT A SAVE!" Byon yelled, running to pat Joey on the back.

Joey, flushed with a mix of fear and relief, managed a shaky smile. "Almost... almost messed up!"

Leon jogged over, clapping him on the back. "You didn't mess up, Joey. You saved it. That's what counts. Keep trusting yourself." He looked into Joey's eyes, and for a moment, the nervous energy in the boy seemed to recede, replaced by a flicker of pride.

The game resumed, the white team, spurred by their near-goal, pressing harder. Alex, their midfielder, started dictating play, his passes sharp. Leon found himself working overtime, chasing, intercepting, trying to break up their rhythm.

Then came the moment. A quick one-two between Alex and Ben, a sudden burst of speed from Ben, and he was through. He blasted a shot from just inside the box. It was a missile.

Leon saw it in slow motion: Joey diving, arms outstretched, but the ball was too fast, too perfectly placed. It slammed into the back of the net.

White Team 1 - Red Team 0.

A groan rippled through the red squad. Leon felt a familiar knot tighten in his stomach—the old fear, the feeling of losing control. But then he remembered his own words: "When you're given a second life… you have to live it without fear."

He jogged to the center circle, clapping his hands. "Heads up, everyone! One goal. We still have plenty of time. We stick to the plan." He looked at James, then Byon. "More movement! Let's get it back!"