Reincarnated As A Wonderkid

Chapter 202: Title Race



The commentator, ever the narrator of the drama, noticed the shift instantly. "A smile on the face of Leon! In a match of this magnitude! Is it confidence? Is it arrogance? Or is it the look of a man who knows something the rest of us do not?"

On the pitch, the change was immediate and electrifying.

The ball came to Leon in the 14th minute.

He wasn't just playing football anymore; he was dancing. He received the ball, glided past one midfielder with a feint that was barely a shimmer of movement. He approached the second, a tough-tackling defender, and with a breathtaking piece of skill, he performed a perfect Zidane Roulette, spinning away from the challenge with an elegance that drew a collective gasp from the entire stadium.

He drove forward, the Sassuolo defense in a full-blown panic. He played a quick, clever one-two pass with Cole Palmer, a telepathic connection that left another defender for dead. He was in the box, the goal at his mercy. He could have shot.

But he saw Lautaro in a better position.

He slid a perfect pass across the face of goal. Lautaro met it with a first-time shot... but the Sassuolo keeper, Andrea Consigli, produced a miracle save, throwing himself sideways to somehow palm the ball away.

The chance was gone, but the San Siro was on its feet, roaring its approval.

The team was flying, playing with a freedom and a joy that was infectious.

The game was a beautiful, one-sided affair. Inter was weaving intricate patterns, their movement fluid, their confidence sky-high.

Sassuolo was chasing shadows, their 'Giant Killer' midfielder Stefano Sensi barely able to get a touch of the ball.

But in football, a single moment can change everything.

In the 28th minute, Lautaro Martínez received a pass just outside the box.

He turned his man with a brilliant burst of power, a move he had done a thousand times. He was about to unleash a shot when a Sassuolo defender, in a desperate, last-ditch attempt to stop him, came flying in from the side with a brutal, cynical, hip-level tackle.

It was a horrible challenge. A sickening thud echoed around the silent stadium.

Lautaro went down in a heap, clutching his ankle, his face a mask of pure, unadulterated agony.

The referee immediately blew his whistle and brandished a yellow card, though the entire Inter team was screaming for a red.

The medical staff rushed onto the pitch.

"Lauti! You okay?!" a worried-looking Bastoni yelled as he ran over.

Lautaro just shook his head, biting his lip to keep from screaming.

This was bad. Really bad.

After a few tense minutes, the physio made the dreaded signal to the bench.

He couldn't continue.

The captain, their leader, their top scorer, was out of the most important game of the season.

As Lautaro was carefully helped off the pitch, the San Siro rose as one to give him a standing ovation, a heartfelt tribute to their fallen warrior.

The captain's armband was handed to the vice-captain, and then, the substitution was made.

The agent of chaos, Julián Álvarez, was coming on.

Julián jogged onto the pitch, a look of grim determination on his face. He ran over to Leon.

"New plan," he whispered, his usual goofy grin completely gone. "We score so many goals they forget how to count. For the Captain."

The injury had completely shattered Inter's rhythm.

Their free-flowing, joyful football was replaced by a nervy, disjointed anxiety.

They had lost their focal point, their leader, and the confidence that had been coursing through their veins just moments before had evaporated.

Sassuolo, sensing the shift, began to push forward, their belief renewed.

And in the 39th minute, the disaster was complete.

A simple, harmless-looking back-pass was played to Yann Sommer.

The Swiss keeper, one of the most reliable in the world, had all the time in the world.

But perhaps the shock of Lautaro's injury had unsettled him.

He took one touch too many, trying to decide whether to clear it long or pass it to a defender.

In that moment of hesitation, the 'Giant Killer' struck.

Stefano Sensi, who had been a quiet, disciplined presence all game, suddenly exploded into a full-blown sprint, closing the keeper down with ferocious speed.

Sommer panicked.

He rushed his clearance. Instead of a clean connection, he scuffed the ball, hitting it with his shin.

The ball cannoned directly into the face of the oncoming Sensi, who knew nothing about it. It ricocheted off Sensi's head, looped up into the air in a bizarre, comical arc, and bounced slowly, agonizingly, into the empty Inter net.

Goal. 1-0 to Sassuolo.

The San Siro was utterly, completely silent, a cathedral of disbelief.

The Inter players just stared at each other, their faces a mixture of horror and pure shock.

Sommer just sat on the grass, his head in his hands.

The commentator was almost lost for words. "A CALAMITY! A CATASTROPHE! A COMEDY OF ERRORS OF THE HIGHEST ORDER! Yann Sommer, the ever-reliable, has gifted his former teammate a goal in the most ridiculous fashion imaginable! Stefano Sensi scores without even knowing it! And Inter, who were dancing just ten minutes ago, are now behind, their captain is injured, and their Scudetto dreams are turning into a nightmare!"

The clock showed 40:00.

The halftime whistle was moments away.

Inter was losing. Their leader was gone.

And the weight of the world had just come crashing back down on their shoulders.

Leon looked at the scoreboard, then at the devastated faces of his teammates.

The joy was gone. The magic was gone.

All that was left was the cold, hard reality of a title race that was slipping through their fingers.

The halftime whistle was a shriek of mercy.

The Inter players walked off the pitch and into the tunnel like ghosts, the stunned silence of the San Siro a heavy shroud around them.

They were down a goal, their captain was in the medical room with a suspected sprained ankle, and their Scudetto dreams were evaporating in the Milanese sun.


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