Reincarnated As A Wonderkid

Chapter 252: Against Napoli [2]



In the 12th minute, Liverpool finally found a crack in the fortress, not through tactics, but through pure, individual genius.

Mo Salah received the ball on the right wing, marked by two defenders.

He shimmied, he feinted, his feet a lightning-fast blur, and then, with an explosive burst of speed, he was gone, squeezing through an impossible gap between the two of them. He drove into the box, and the third defender, in a blind panic, lunged in with a clumsy, desperate tackle.

The whistle was immediate. Penalty to Liverpool.

The Napoli players surrounded the referee, screaming, but the decision was clear.

Salah himself, the king of Anfield, the 'Alpha Attacker', calmly took the ball and placed it on the spot, completely unfazed by the deafening whistles of 60,000 furious Neapolitans.

He took his run-up and coolly slotted the ball into the bottom corner as the keeper dove the wrong way.

1-0 to Liverpool.

"THE KING HAS SPOKEN!" Barry roared. "Against a perfect defense, you need a perfect superstar! Mo Salah, cool as you like, and Liverpool have first blood in Naples!"

The goal did not change the pattern of the game. Liverpool had the lead, but Napoli still had the ghost of Chivu on their side. They continued their patient, pragmatic, counter-attacking football, waiting for their moment.

And in the 21st minute, that moment arrived, and it was a thing of pure, breathtaking beauty.

Kevin De Bruyne, who had been a quiet, probing presence, found a pocket of space in the midfield. He looked up, and for a split second, he saw a run that no one else in the stadium, except for perhaps the man making it, could have possibly anticipated.

Rasmus Højlund made a sharp, diagonal dart from left to right, a single, explosive movement that split the Liverpool defense.

The pass from De Bruyne was not a pass.

It was a brushstroke from a grandmaster, a cosmic slingshot that bent the rules of geometry.

A legendary pass. It was a 40-yard, curling, outside-of-the-boot through-ball that landed, with the softness of a feather, perfectly in the stride of the onrushing striker.

Højlund took one touch to control it and a second to smash it past the despairing dive of Alisson.

1-1.

The stadium detonated. The two new superstars had combined for a goal of such sublime, world-class quality that it was almost art.

"OH! MY! GOODNESS!" Barry screamed, his voice cracking with emotion.

"THAT IS NOT A PASS! THAT IS A POEM! Kevin De Bruyne has just delivered a pass that belongs in the Louvre! A moment of pure, unadulterated, footballing genius, and Højlund provides the brutal, brilliant finish! We are level! What a match!"

The game was now a true clash of titans. Liverpool's relentless attack against Chivu's ghostly defensive masterclass.

In the 29th minute, a clumsy foul by a Napoli midfielder on Florian Wirtz gave Liverpool a free kick on the right side of the pitch, perfect crossing territory.

Trent Alexander-Arnold stood over the ball, a look of intense concentration on his face.

He didn't shoot.

He whipped in a vicious, curling cross, a perfect delivery that was just begging to be attacked.

And rising to meet it, a colossus of red, was the captain, Virgil van Dijk. He hung in the air, a picture of power and grace, and met the ball with a thunderous header.

2-1 to Liverpool!

"THE CAPTAIN! THE COLOSSUS! VAN DIJK SOARS LIKE AN EAGLE!" Barry roared. "A set-piece masterpiece, and Liverpool are back in front! The roof has just come off the away end!"

The clock showed 30:00. Three goals.

Leon looked over at the Napoli bench.

The on-field manager was just standing there, a calm, almost vacant look on his face, as if he were merely a puppet.

The real master was miles away, pulling the strings.

Leon felt a familiar, defiant fire ignite in his chest.

His old coach was playing a game of chess with them from another continent. It was time to stop being a pawn and start being a player.

The only way to fight a ghost... was with a ghost of his own.

He closed his eyes, the roar of the stadium fading into a dull hum. He focused his entire will, his entire being, on the single, most powerful weapon in his arsenal.

['Co-pilot' Mode: ACTIVATE.]

"THE CAPTAIN STANDS TALL IN NAPLES!" the commentator, Barry, screamed, his voice a ragged mess of pure excitement.

"A set-piece masterpiece, and Liverpool are back in front! Chivu's fortress has been breached twice! The ghost in the machine is looking very human right now!"

On the Napoli sideline, the on-field manager just stood there, his face a blank, emotionless mask. But in the mind of his captain, Giovanni Di Lorenzo, a new, cold, and brutally clear instruction was forming, a voice that was not his own.

'Do not panic. Let them have the ball. Absorb the pressure. The space will open behind their fullbacks. Wait for the moment.'

Liverpool, buoyed by the goal, pressed their advantage, but Napoli, under the remote, ghostly command of Cristian Chivu, were a defensive wall of almost supernatural perfection.

Every passing lane was cut off, every run was tracked.

In the 41st minute, Andy Robertson, in a moment of brilliant, desperate defending, launched himself into a perfectly timed slide tackle to deny a lightning-fast Napoli counter-attack, a challenge that earned a roar of approval from his own bench.

The halftime whistle blew with the score at 2-1.

It had been a half of brutal intensity and breathtaking quality.

In the Liverpool dressing room.

"They're a wall," Trent Alexander-Arnold said, toweling the sweat from his face.

"It's like they know what we're going to do before we do."

"It's Chivu," Leon said quietly, and the whole room turned to him. "He's pulling the strings. It's his defensive system. We can't go through it. We have to go around it."

Arne Slot, who had been listening, just nodded, a slow, appreciative smile on his face. "Leon is right," he said, his voice a calm, analytical presence in the room.

"We are trying to punch a ghost. In the second half, we stop trying to fight them. We make them dance. Patience. Ball possession. Quick, short passes. We make them run. We make them tired. We will not force the issue. We will let our quality be the final word."


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