Chapter-66 Finally

The walls of the Bastia locker room seemed to throb with anticipation as Hadzibegic's voice boomed from the entrance.

"Haha, lads! Get your damn heads up! Look at your teammates beside you! You're all absolutely mad!"

The Bosnian's face glowed crimson with an excitement that was infectious. Sweat appeared on his forehead despite the cool Mediterranean evening air coming through the stadium's corridors.

The players looked up from their half-time ritual of toweling off and catching their breath. Some sat hunched over, shoulders heaving from the forty-five minutes they'd just endured.

Others stood against the whitewashed walls, legs trembling slightly from the adrenaline that still coursed through their veins.

"You're all madmen, a bunch of lunatics who forced a Ligue 1 powerhouse to resort to mindless crossing at the Cesari Stadium!" Hadzibegic's laughter was rich, the sound of a man who had witnessed something beautiful in the chaos of football. "Haha! You made Rennes forget how to play football here! They really are just like the fans say—they're soft! They have no balls!"

"Haha heehee"

The locker room erupted in a cascade of laughter that seemed to wash away the exhaustion from their bodies. It was the kind of laughter that bonded men together in the face of impossible odds, raw, honest, and filled with the intoxicating possibility of glory.

"Julien!"

Hadzibegic called out his name, and everyone's eyes turned to him.

Julien also looked toward the coach.

Hadzibegic's thumb shot up, the gesture carrying more meaning than any persuasive speech. "You did beautifully! The kid who could barely get a game six months ago, the fool who stupidly got arrested for robbery, now you're about to become Bastia's hero!"

Rothen wrapped his arm around Julien's shoulders, flashing a huge smile while also giving him a thumbs up.

"You old timer who was unemployed for a year," Hadzibegic turned his attention to Rothen, "I hope you burn the last drop of fuel in your tank! For Bastia!"

"For Bastia!!" The response came as one voice from more than twenty throats.

But Hadzibegic wasn't finished. His eyes blazed with the fire of a man. "But don't think that's enough—in the second half, I want you to stuff their arrogance into those Breton pickle barrels! Make them get out of Bastia! In the French Cup, where upsets happen every year, we're going to be the brightest star!"

Across the corridor, in a locker room that mirrored Bastia's in everything except atmosphere, Antonetti's fury was a living, breathing thing.

The Rennes coach burst through the door like an enraged Corsican boar, his face was contorted with rage that had been building for forty-five minutes. His usual appearance was disheveled—his tie awry, his hair tussled from running his hands through it in frustration.

The tactical board that had held his carefully planned formations became the first casualty of his anger. He seized it with both hands and hurled it against the wall with such force that it shattered into a dozen pieces, fragments scattering across the floor like the remnants of his tactical philosophy.

"You bunch of weaklings!" His voice was a roar that seemed to echo from the depths of his Corsican soul. "Even Breton clams have more backbone than you! Letting a 17-year-old kid from Ligue 2 dance around under your noses? Are you playing football or shopping for potatoes in the market?!"

The players, accustomed to their coach's volatile nature, sat in stunned silence. Some stared at the floor, others at the wall, anywhere but at the man whose disappointment was obvious in the cramped space.

He moved through the room like a general inspecting defeated soldiers, calling out each of their names, every missed opportunity.

When his rage finally began to subside, settling into something resembling controlled anger, Antonetti's glare swept across the room like a searchlight. "Rennes' crest bears the year 1891—we're not some amateur club! Second half, either you make that scoreboard read 2-1, or I'll carve your names on Rennes' wall of shame!"

High above the pitch, in the terraces of the North Stand, Modoso stood like a conductor before his orchestra. His voice, hoarse from a lifetime of shouting his beloved club's name, rose above the noise of thousands of throats.

"Everyone shout it out! Show them what we're made of!"

Modoso's hands gripped the metal railing as he surveyed his area. His family had been bleeding blue and white for generations. When Bastia had hit rock bottom, when other supporters had drifted away like autumn leaves, Modoso had remained.

He had taken on the responsibility of leading the UB organization not out of ambition, but out of love—pure, unconditional love for a club that had given him everything and nothing in equal measure.

Tonight, as he watched his boys take the field for the second half, he felt the weight of history. He successfully brought together like-minded fans to witness Bastia's return.

This season, they had not only gone further than ever in the French Cup but were also dominating their league.

And their greatest prize—

"Julien!! De Rocca!!"

When the young striker's name left his lips, it was picked up by thousands of voices, creating a wall of sound that seemed to shake the stars above the Cesari Stadium.

Fans from every corner of the stadium joined in, their voices creating a symphony of hope that continued until the referee's whistle pierced the night air once more.

The second half began with the intensity of a prize fight's final rounds. Both coaches lurked around their technical areas.

Both Antonetti and Hadzibegic looked extremely tense on the sidelines. They both knew this game had reached its crucial moment.

The players on the field understood this too. So, Bastia's players maintained their philosophy of constant minor fouls without committing major ones.

They used various small tricks and trash talk to keep the Rennes players distracted.

This psychological warfare was a double-edged sword, and both coaches knew it. Against players with fire in their bellies, such tactics often backfired spectacularly. But Rennes was different, they lacked the street fighter's mentality that Bastia wore like armor.

In the fifty-seventh minute, when Montanio, Rennes' Colombian forward, was brought down by Choplin during a promising wing attack, the theater reached its crescendo.

The South American squirmed on the turf, his face contorted in apparent agony, his hand raised in appeal for justice.

But the Bastia faithful were having none of it.

"Softies!" The word erupted from the stands like a volcanic explosion, thousands of voices united in derision.

"Softies!!"

Many fans made racist gestures toward Montanio, the Colombian black player, mocking his race.

As the minutes ticked by like drops of water in a desert, the scoreboard remained stubbornly unchanged: 1-0 to Bastia.

Antonetti's patience finally snapped in the sixty-fifth minute. He made the kind of substitution that coaches make when desperation overrides caution—gambling everything on a single roll of the dice.

Off came Apam and M'vila, solid, dependable players who had been the backbone of Rennes' structure. In their place came two forwards, attacking players whose only work was to find the back of the net.

The formation shifted from a balanced 4-3-3 to an all-out 3-2-5 assault formation. It was tactical suicide or tactical genius—there would be no middle ground.

Hadzibegic, reading the game, countered immediately. David, the attacking midfielder, made way for another defender. Now Julien stood alone up front.

"Jires!"

When this substitution was made, Mbappé's entire family became excited.

Jires was coming on!

After waiting over an hour, they could finally see Jires perform.

Young Ethan tugged at his brother Kylian's sleeve. "Will Jires score?"

Mbappé wasn't sure and could only reply, "Maybe."

Their father, Wilfrid, remained silent, his experienced eye already seeing what his sons could not. He wanted to say Jires probably wouldn't get the chance, but he held his tongue.

Watching the match to this point, he had to admit that Bastia was unnaturally strong for a Ligue 2 team.

Ethan didn't see Jires score.

Instead, he watched Jires lose possession repeatedly against Bastia's defense.

"He's having an off night," Mbappé explained to his brother.

Ethan was disappointed.

His beloved brother Jires hadn't scored.

Mbappé kept checking the time on the scoreboard, thinking, "When will this end?"

It was already past seventy minutes.

Even after bringing on two forwards, Rennes still couldn't find a breakthrough against Bastia's iron defense.

Instead, De Rocca had several good counterattacking opportunities.

Unfortunately, his pace wasn't quite enough.

He couldn't shake off the defenders. Otherwise, it would have been a one-on-one!

But he successfully used his dribbling ability to draw fouls, go down, and waste considerable time.

As the clock approached ninety minutes, Bastia fans became increasingly excited and elated!

Until—

PEEP!!!

The final whistle—long, clear, and absolutely beautiful—cut through the Mediterranean night like a sword of pure joy.

The entire stadium erupted.

They had done it. They had advanced!

At that moment, as the celebrations erupted around the Cesari Stadium, the ancient seawater of Bastia's harbor seemed to boil with the same passion that coursed through the veins of every supporter.

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