Chapter 28: Breaking the Shape
There was something strange in the air that afternoon at Broadfield Stadium. It wasn't nerves. Not exactly. Crawley had been on a winning streak, riding the high of belief and momentum. But today, Niels could feel a different kind of weight pressing on his chest — like the feeling you get before a thunderstorm breaks.
Aldershot Town were no title contenders, but they weren't pushovers either. Sitting just above Crawley in the table, they had a compact midfield diamond that squeezed the life out of teams who liked to play through the middle. And Niels knew his boys liked the center. Too much, sometimes.
As the players jogged out, Niels folded his arms near the dugout, eyes scanning the shape Aldershot had lined up in. Just as expected. Diamond. Narrow. Squeezing space.
"Eyes up, boys," he muttered under his breath.
Kickoff
From the first whistle, it was clear Aldershot had come prepared. They weren't flashy, but they were smart. Their midfield triangle suffocated Crawley's passing lanes. Dev, ever eager, kept drifting into pockets that didn't exist, getting dispossessed or funneled into traffic. Simons, playing as the deeper midfielder, grew increasingly agitated with every turnover.
"Get your bloody head up!" Simons snapped after another pass went astray.
Dev shot back with a glare, saying nothing, but his clenched jaw spoke volumes.
Niels didn't react. Not yet. He just watched.
By the 26th minute, Aldershot's pressure paid off. A sloppy pass from the back was intercepted, one ball split the center-backs, and the striker slotted it past Ashton. 0–1.
The stadium murmured with frustration.
The Halftime Switch
In the dressing room, the air was tense. No shouting, no outbursts — but the silence was louder than noise.
Simons sat with his arms crossed, sweat dripping down his temples. Dev kicked at his shin pads, eyes avoiding everyone's. Luka, oddly quiet all half, leaned forward with his elbows on his knees, staring at the floor.
Niels stood by the whiteboard. Calm. Steady. His voice cut through the silence.
"They've boxed us in. Too narrow. We're playing straight into their hands."
He pointed to the wings.
"We're changing shape. Fullbacks push higher. I want overloads on the flanks. Dev, stay wider and draw them out. Jamal — keep dragging their midfielders wide."
Then, softer: "And keep your heads. If we start fighting each other, they've already won."
A few nods. Some reluctant. But they got the message.
Second Half: Response
The second half started with intent. Crawley stretched the pitch, finally pulling Aldershot's diamond apart. Crosses started flying in. One met Jamal's head, narrowly wide. Another saw Luka ghost in from the back post, only for the keeper to parry.
Then, in the 64th minute, the breakthrough.
Dev, holding wide near the touchline, skipped past his marker and whipped a low cross in. Simons — of all people — had charged forward, arriving like a freight train. He slid in, toe-poking it home.
1–1.
He didn't celebrate. Just turned and jogged back, nodding once at Dev as he passed him.
A crack of ice, maybe, but not quite healing.
With momentum now theirs, Crawley pushed. The final blow came in the 78th minute. A quick corner caught Aldershot sleeping. Jamal cut inside and bent a low shot through a sea of legs.
2–1.
Relief exploded around the stadium.
After the Whistle
The locker room after full time was buzzing — players laughing, high-fiving, letting the adrenaline run wild. But Niels' eyes were elsewhere.
Dev and Simons sat on opposite ends of the bench. Not glaring. Not speaking either.
And Luka?
Luka was by himself, sitting with his back against a locker, taping his wrist like it was routine — but his hands moved slower than usual. His gaze was distant. Tired. Not physically. Mentally. Like the world was getting heavier.
Niels crouched beside him for a moment.
"You alright?" he asked quietly.
Luka looked up. Smiled. A little too quickly.
"Yeah. Just... thinking."
Niels didn't push. Just nodded and stood.
Tunnel Talk
As Niels made his way up the tunnel, Wallace was waiting. The club president looked sharp in his tailored coat, arms folded, a faint smile on his face.
"Another good result," Wallace said.
Niels nodded. "The boys earned it."
Wallace's gaze was measured.
"You're doing well, Niels. Just... don't take your foot off the gas."
Then he clapped him on the shoulder and walked away.
The weight returned.
Later That Night
The floodlights had dimmed, and the stadium was quiet again. Niels stood by the edge of the pitch, hands in his coat pockets, looking out into the emptiness.
There was no crowd now. No noise. Just the echo of boot steps and distant traffic.
Three points in the bag. A comeback win. Still, his mind wasn't at ease.
He thought of Luka's tired eyes.
He thought of Simons and Dev — brilliant, talented, but slowly fracturing.
He thought of Wallace's hand on his shoulder.
The hardest part of managing wasn't the tactics. It wasn't substitutions or formations or game plans.
It was this.
Keeping people — fragile, fiery, complex people — together.
A gust of wind swept across the pitch. Niels pulled his coat tighter and turned to head inside.
Tomorrow was another training session.
And another war to manage.
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