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Now reading: Chapter 92 92: Two Men, One Pitch: Shared Hunger, Divergent from From La Masia: Was Always Destined for Greatness, a Drama novel by DavidAdetola.

Two n.

Two n who have given their lives to football—bled for it, bent for it, sacrificed for it.

n who have tasted glory and swallowed heartbreak, who have smiled under stadium lights and cried beneath them.

Two n whose destinies have been written, rewritten, and stitched back together by this sport.

If football is a god, then these two have been its priests—offering their bodies, their youth, their lungs, their souls.

Two n bound by a shared path yet pulled apart by opposing colours.

Two n whose nas alone can alter a stadium's pulse.

And today?

Today, the match that thousands of readers anticipated had been denied its early introduction—a small price to pay, because what cos now is worth infinitely more.

For on this day—this Champions League quarter-final day—these two n, who share the sa hunger, the sa fire, the sa impossible standard, would inevitably clash.

And their clash did not begin under the roaring floodlights.

It did not begin with the whistle or the anthem.

It started far earlier.

Away from the grass.

Away from the caras.

It began that very morning.

In Barcelona, Spain—inside the sa quiet mansion Mateo had visited just weeks earlier, where he had heard a promise spoken directly from the mouth of his idol—sat one of those n.

Lionel Andrés ssi.

The story now starts at exactly 7:30 a.m.

...

A low, tired grunt escaped him — the kind a man makes when sleep is demanded but life refuses to give it.

Lionel ssi slowly pushed himself upright, blinking against the faint morning light leaking through the curtains. His hand drifted to the vibrating phone on the nightstand, thumb sliding across the screen to silence the alarm. He exhaled, shaking his head gently, the weight of the day already humming beneath his skin.

He turned slightly, letting his gaze fall to the other side of the massive bed.

Antonela was still sleeping soundly, her breathing soft, calm, unbothered by the world outside — a world that would soon roar with his na. Even after all these years, that peaceful sight tugged a small, quiet smile from him. A reminder of the life he built brick by brick while the football world tried to build statues out of him.

Still smiling faintly, he reached for his phone.

Notifications. Dozens.

The usual chorus — friends, distant relatives, old teammates, childhood acquaintances.

"Good luck today Leo."

"You've got this."

"Vamos, Capitán."

He scrolled through them with the practiced ease of a man who had long ago beco numb to ga-day ssages. A few he acknowledged with a simple thumbs-up. Others with a short emoji. He didn't need words today; he had too many already filling his head.

But then… he froze.

Two ssages stood out.

Two conversations he hadn't expected to see alive again.

The first was a group chat that had seen better days — a relic of a golden era.

MSN.

The iconic trio.

The terror of Spain.

Europe's nightmare.

The chat that once buzzed with jokes, banter, voice notes at 3 a.m., photos, and big dreams.

But after Neymar left… it died.

And when Suárez was pushed out at the start of this season… that silence beca permanent.

A ghost chat.

Until now.

ssi's thumb hesitated — then he tapped.

Two unread ssages slid into view.

He didn't even realize he was smiling until he felt his cheeks tighten.

The first was from Neymar — long, chaotic, exactly as expected:

"HERMANO! Don't think I didn't see the first leg! 😭😂 You're still a cheat code bro. But listen… today? Today you play for all of us. For the badge. For the shirt. For the love. I'll be watching. I know you'll deliver.

Love you brother. Go out there and do this. 💙❤️"

The familiar blue and red heart. Barça's colours. Their colours.

Then Suárez's ssage beneath it — short, emotional in that blunt Uruguayan way:

"I'm not wishing you luck, Leo.

If I do, it'll just prove God has favourites.

You don't need luck.

You have us — even if we're not there physically.

Always with you, hermano.

Visca Barça."

ssi's smile widened — soft, nostalgic, almost fatherly.

He typed back:

"Gracias hermanos 🤝💙❤️"

A strong-arm emoji. A heart. Simple, sincere.

The emotion lingered in his chest as he backed out of the chat… only to notice sothing else.

A second notification.

But this one wasn't from ghosts of the past.

This one was from the present — from his team.

The private Barcelona players-only group chat, the one with just the squad and coaching staff.

Usually on ga day, there were maybe three or four ssages.

A short guideline from the coach.

"Rest well."

"Hydrate."

"No heavy activities tonight."

The standard routine.

But what he saw this ti made his eyes narrow in surprise.

Over 30 ssages.

A true shocker.

And ssi paused, thumb hovering, wondering what could have possibly ignited the squad that early on such a colossal day…

Before finally pressing into the chat—

ssi opened the Barcelona group chat with a light tap of his thumb… and instantly felt the shift.

He had expected it — exactly as he predicted — the first few ssages were from the coaching staff. Koeman reminding them of the basics:

"Hydrate well."

"Light breakfast."

"No unnecessary morning strain."

The usual pre–big-match guidelines. Serious. Professional.

But as he scrolled lower…

ssi — still carrying that soft emotional warmth from the MSN ssages — suddenly broke.

A breath.

A small chuckle.

Then a full, helpless laugh burst out of him.

Actual laughter, loud enough that his shoulders shook.

He covered his mouth with his hand, trying to muffle it, but he was laughing so much that the mattress trembled, and from beside him Antonela began to stir in her sleep.

ssi tried to hold himself together.

"Shhh… shhh…" he whispered to himself, biting his lip, but the laughter kept rising like bubbles.

Finally he shook his head, whispering under his breath with a grin:

"This boy…"

Because the ssages weren't from Koeman anymore.

They were from Mateo King.

ssage after ssage — voice notes, s, chaotic energy — all sent in the middle of the night. ssi pressed the first voice note and instantly had to slap his hand over his lips again to stop from laughing out loud. Mateo's voice was hyper, shaky, excited:

"BRO I CAN'T SLEEP. I swear I've tried! I'm walking around my room like a madman. Is it normal?! Soone answer, I'm losing my mind."

Then another:

"I'm READY. I'm READY RIGHT NOW. Wake up at training ti, I don't care. WHO'S AWAKE?!"

And then a final one:

"If we win today, I'm jumping into the sea. I'm not joking. HOLD ACCOUNTABLE."

ssi's eyes watered from how much he was holding back his laughter.

He scrolled further — his absolute favourite part — every single teammate replying with emojis, laughing, joking back at Mateo. The entire squad had been awake for nearly an hour because of him.

And then—

Koeman himself had entered the chat.

ssi braced for sothing serious. But instead:

"Mateo. Go to sleep. Now.

You're too excited.

And you're going to wake up your roommates also we need you fresh for tomorrow so go sleep now it's an order. 😑"

ssi wheezed, cracking up again. Even the typing from Koeman had personality — tired, half-annoyed, but affectionate. The players had responded with dozens of laughing emojis, teasing Mateo, and ssi could tell from the tone…

It wasn't anger.

Not even close.

It was love.

Family.

A team loosening their nerves hours before the storm.

He loved this.

ssi adored seeing the kid so alive, so real, so unfiltered. Mateo was usually mature beyond his age — calm in training, composed, head down, focused. This whole week he had been operating like a grown professional preparing for war.

But monts like this?

Monts where he was simply a 17-year-old boy buzzing with adrenaline?

ssi cherished them.

He sat back, still smiling, a gentle warmth blooming in his chest.

And then a thought crossed his mind.

Did he do this on purpose?

Did Mateo send all these ssages to lift the tension for the team?

Before he could explore that question deeper, he suddenly felt a weight on his legs.

Warm. Heavy. Familiar.

ssi looked down.

A massive head, thick fur, soft eyes staring up at him with sleepy loyalty.

Hulk.

"Hey boy… how are you?" ssi whispered with a grin, bending down to scratch the dog's head.

Hulk let out a tiny bark — a soft, muffled woof — and ssi imdiately put a finger to his lips.

"No, no, shhh… mamá is still sleeping," he whispered. "Let's be quiet, okay?"

Hulk thumped his tail once against the bed fra, and ssi chuckled quietly, rubbing behind his ears.

After a mont, ssi rose, stretching his back and rolling his shoulders with a soft exhale. The calmness he always had on big-match mornings settled over him like a second skin — steady, familiar, powerful.

Hulk hopped off the bed and fell into step beside him as ssi opened the bedroom door.

"Co on," ssi whispered with a fond smile. "Let's go check on the boys."

Today was huge.

A Champions League quarter-final.

The kind of day that should make most players shake with nerves.

But ssi?

ssi had always been different.

The bigger the day, the calr he felt.

Like the storm lowered itself for him alone.

That sa inner tranquility guided him gently through the hallway as he pushed open each of his sons' doors. He checked on them one by one — a habit he had built over the years, a quiet morning ritual that grounded him before every match.

After ensuring they were all sleeping peacefully, ssi headed downstairs, Hulk trotting beside him.

Once in the kitchen, he instructed a staff mber to prepare Hulk's al. He gave the dog a small pat before leaving him with the kitchen team.

From there, ssi slipped into his usual ga-day routine — stretches first to wake the muscles, then light mobility work. A bit of pilates. Breathing exercises with one of his personal trainers. Core activation. Gentle balance work. Nothing intense. Just sharp enough to wake the body and steady the mind.

By the ti he finished, wiped his forehead, and took a sip of water…

The clock on the wall flashed:

8:15 a.m.

It was ti to start heading toward the stadium.

ssi, having completed every part of his calm, disciplined morning routine, returned upstairs to his room. The quiet hum of the house felt different now — that familiar stillness that always ca right before a great match.

He pushed open the door gently.

Antonela was sitting at the edge of the bed, legs folded comfortably beneath her, scrolling through her phone. Morning light fell softly across her face, and the instant she heard the door creak, she looked up with a small smile.

"Buen día," she murmured.

"Buen día," ssi replied, his voice warm, soft in a way it only ever was inside these walls.

Years of living together had shaped them into sothing seamless — two people who moved around each other like a well-rehearsed duo, every gesture understood without words, every routine shared without effort. ssi walked toward his closet, reaching for his towel.

"I'm going to shower," he said gently.

Antonela nodded, already sliding off the bed. "Sí, go. I'll wake the kids."

As she stood up, they passed each other near the doorway — a light graze of shoulders, a small touch of familiarity, almost instinctive. ssi felt her fingers briefly brush his arm, a tiny gesture, but grounding — it reminded him of what mattered before he stepped into the world outside.

He entered the bathroom and closed the door behind him.

The sound of running water filled the room, echoing softly against the tiles. ssi let the warm stream loosen the last bit of stiffness in his muscles, letting his mind settle into its final pre-match clarity.

Ten minutes later, clean, dressed, ntally aligned, he made his way downstairs.

He stepped into the dining room.

"Dad! Dad! Daaad!"

ssi looked up.

Thiago, still in his little school polo shirt, hair slightly ssy from rushing, was staring at him with big hopeful eyes. ssi raised his eyebrows, silently telling him to go on.

"Dad," Thiago said, bouncing a little on his toes, "the match today… can we please go? Please? Pleaaase?"

Before ssi could answer, Mateo popped his head up from his seat, already speaking with mouth half-full:

"YES! YES! YES! Can we goooo? I wanna go!"

Thiago's face scrunched up imdiately.

"Why do you want to go? You just want to go support Bayern! Dad, don't take him!"

Mateo slapped the table. "Shut up!"

ssi didn't even blink.

"Hey. Language."

Mateo sank a little in his chair. "Sorry… but it's Thiago," he muttered. "I don't wanna support Bayern today. I wanna support big Mateo. I'm supporting Barça this ti."

ssi shook his head with the type of patient smile only a parent could master.

"Even so… you don't talk like that to your brother."

Then he added, "And about the ga… ask your mother."

All three heads turned as Antonela entered the room carrying little Ciro, freshly dressed, hair neatly combed, slling like baby shampoo. She balanced him effortlessly on her hip.

"I already told them," she announced before the boys could even start, "they can't go. They both have a test tomorrow."

Thiago imdiately started, "But Mom—"

"No 'but Mom.'" Antonela's tone dropped into that unmistakable mom-command voice. "Eat your food and get ready for school. You're already close to being late."

Both boys deflated at the sa ti, letting out identical groans as they poked their forks into their plates.

ssi hid a laugh behind his glass of water.

And so, the family of five settled into a normal, peaceful morning — the kind that made their ho feel like the safest place in the world. Each child ate the breakfast chosen by their mother and the family nutritionist, while ssi and Antonela quietly shared glances, little routines, the familiar rhythm of everyday life…

...

After eating and settling down from the morning rush, the family of five eventually found themselves gathered in the garage—sleepy faces now fully awake, backpacks zipped, shoes tied, each person ready to head off to their own destination.

"Okay then, bye kids," Antonella said, the soft command in her voice switching into full mom-mode. "Make sure you answer your subjects well, don't rush, read the questions twice, and behave. No fighting with your brothers, Thiago, help your brother if he forgets anything… and please don't leave your lunch in the car again."

The boys rolled their eyes playfully, used to the sa checklist every school morning.

"Sí, mamáaa," they chorused, half-laughing as they moved toward the car waiting for them, the driver already standing by the door.

ssi followed them a few steps, hands on his hips, warmth in his smile.

"Good luck, eh?" he said, leaning in a little. "Do well. Take your ti."

"Thanks, Dad," they said, climbing into the backseat. Mateo stuck his hand out for a fist bump. ssi gave it to him instantly.

And then, as the driver adjusted the mirror and prepared to pull away, Leo added lightly, "When you're done with your exams… you all can co watch the match. By that ti, if everything goes well… we should be around the semifinals."

The reaction was imdiate—three grinning faces lighting up behind the window.

"¡¿En serio?! Thank you, Dad!"

"Really?!"

"We're going!"

ssi laughed softly and reached in, ruffling their hair one by one.

"Go on, go," he said. "Do your best."

The doors closed. The car began to roll out of the garage.

ssi and Antonella stood side by side, watching the vehicle drive down the long stone driveway until it turned out of sight.

"The semifinals… hmm," Antonella murmured under her breath, hands folded loosely in front of her.

ssi didn't answer. He just exhaled quietly, eyes still on the empty path, mind sowhere deeper.

Antonella moved closer, brushing a bit of nonexistent dust from his tracksuit sleeve—one of her little habits whenever she wanted to calm him without saying so directly.

"I already called the nanny," she said softly. "She'll help the kids study and take care of them till I'm back. I'll be at the stadium today… cheering you on."

"Oo… you don't need to—" ssi began.

"Yes," she cut him off gently, smiling, "but I want to."

She lifted his chin slightly and kissed him, slow and warm.

"I love you."

The mont drifted, settled, then broke as they finally separated and headed to their own cars.

After his mont with Antonella, ssi's day continued. And now here he was, seated behind the steering wheel of his Audi RS6 Avant, Argentine reggae—almost a tradition at this point—blasting comfortably through the radio.

But while the beat filled the car, his mind was sowhere else entirely…

There was a reason why he had said semifinals. It hadn't been so casual remark ant to cheer up his kids, nor just a whisper to convince himself. No. It was sothing he genuinely, wholeheartedly believed in. A conviction that had been building, quietly, beneath the surface. ssi had been in a downturn for a while—not just with his club but also with his country. Years of constant, grinding failures, monts where he felt the weight of the world pressing on him. And now, here he was, facing a team that historically had haunted him, a squad that had given him one of the worst nights of his life just the season before. Yet, standing on the brink of this day, he was tranquil, almost eerily calm.

For years, he had been bombarded—by the dia, by fans, even by people close to him—tales of how he was soft, weak-hearted, incapable of being the leader everyone expected him to be. That video of Maradona, his childhood hero, calling him weak, calling him unfit to lead, had haunted him more than he would ever admit. He knew himself: he was naturally soft-spoken, contemplative, soone who led more by example than words. But soft-spoken did not an weak-hearted. His love for the ga, his hunger, his fire—they were there, buried deep beneath the calm exterior.

No, he thought. I can't keep making excuses for myself.

On the surface, he was calm—so calm that anyone watching might have thought him relaxed, almost casual. But inside, his thoughts were anything but. He could feel the clock ticking, the inevitability of ti creeping toward him. He couldn't keep this up forever, especially not now. Age was a reminder he could not ignore. His body was still capable, but he knew the years were slipping. And with the Copa Arica and World Cup looming on the horizon, these might very well be so of his last monts at the pinnacle of the ga—playing for his country, defending his honor, and rewriting the narrative people were desperate to pin on him.

And it isn't just about Argentina, he thought. It's here, too. Barcelona.

As the thought crossed his mind, a flash of soone else erged—Mateo. The young forward, barely seventeen, yet already carrying himself with a confidence and fearlessness that reminded ssi of himself at that age. He saw sothing in the boy that he couldn't quite articulate, a spark that was different from talent alone. Sothing that resonated with the love of the ga itself.

He rembered interviews with Ronaldinho, his own ntor and friend, talking about the sa spark he had once seen in ssi. How he had nurtured him, guided him, pushed him, challenged him—and how that had changed everything. Now ssi understood. This was his opportunity to pass that forward. He had already taken Mateo under his wing in small ways, forming a friendship, a mutual understanding. But this—today—was different. Today, he wanted Mateo to shine. He wanted to empower the boy, to guide him not just as a teammate but as a young prodigy who could carry the team, the hopes of the fans, and maybe even the future of the club.

ssi's mind raced with strategy, reflection, and determination. Leading by example had always been his way—quiet, effective, consistent. But now, he realized that sotis, leading ant stepping forward, speaking, guiding, and showing the way actively. He would do whatever it took to nurture Mateo's talent and ensure the team's success. He would change his approach if he had to. He would embody the leadership that his critics claid he lacked.

And in that mont, a new resolve crystallized. A version of ssi that was sharper, fiercer, and more intentional than ever before was born. Not a change in talent, not a change in skill—those had always been there—but a change in mindset, in presence, in leadership. He would no longer rely participate. He would command, inspire, and elevate everyone around him.

At exactly 8:36 a.m. on April 21st, 2021, a new Lionel ssi had erged. A new goal, a new purpose, had taken root in an already accomplished life. Thanks to this quiet mont of clarity and resolve, the footballing world would soon bear witness to another era of ssi's dominance. A ssi who would make even the proud, often arrogant Argentines finally understand—truly see—what the world had long revered: the genius, the heart, and the unrelenting drive of Lionel Andrés ssi.

...

While ssi was undergoing his quiet state of epiphany inside a five-star hotel in the heart of Barcelona, thousands of kiloters away, the Bayern Munich football team were doing everything in their power to prepare for the single most important ga of their season. The Champions League quarterfinal second leg lood like a storm on the horizon. Not only were they trailing by a goal, but they weren't even playing at ho—every factor seed to conspire against them. To progress to the next round, they needed at least a two-goal margin. Every coach, every player, every staff mber felt the crushing weight of the task ahead. There was no room for error. This wasn't just a ga; this was survival.

Yet, amid all the collective tension, one man felt a pressure unlike any other. While the fans, the institution, and even his teammates carried enormous expectations, this man carried sothing more personal, more internal—a pressure that few could understand, and even fewer could bear. That man was the linchpin of Bayern Munich himself: Robert Lewandowski.

For Lewandowski, this match was more than a re quarterfinal. After missing the first leg due to a minor injury, the pressure had compounded. Sitting on the bench while his team struggled had been agonizing. For anyone who knew Lewandowski or followed his journey, it was clear: he felt as if the weight of the world were pressing down on his shoulders. And it was a feeling he had earned—he had worked for every ounce of respect he commanded in world football.

Last year had been Lewandowski's season of absolute dominance. He had conquered football in a way few ever had, a campaign so complete it left no room for debate. Week after week, he scored, led, and elevated his team to victories that seed inevitable. His record over the season was staggering. He didn't just win trophies—he obliterated them, claiming individual glory alongside collective triumph. Awards poured in: The Best FIFA n's Player, UEFA n's Player of the Year, Goal 50 Best Player, Globe Soccer Awards Player of the Year, Bundesliga Top Scorer, UEFA Champions League Top Scorer, and the Golden Boot. There was scarcely an accolade he did not take ho. For over a decade, he had been grinding, evolving, and perfecting himself—and now, the footballing world had recognized him at the pinnacle of his powers.

Yet, even at the summit, one prize had eluded him: the Ballon d'Or, the most prestigious individual award in all of football. And due to circumstances entirely beyond his control, he had been denied it. The news was everywhere—the dia, the fans, the online sphere—everyone knew. Everyone said that if the award had proceeded fairly, he would have been the undisputed winner. To the public, he shrugged it off, downplayed it, smiled for the caras. He called it fate, chance, or whatever label softened the blow.

But behind closed doors, it was different. In the quiet of etings with his agents, in hushed discussions with club representatives, in calls to French football authorities, he left no stone unturned. He didn't want to be the people's Ballon d'Or winner. He didn't want to be a consolation prize. He wanted the honor for himself, fully, legitimately, indisputably. Every call, every conversation, every negotiation was a testant to his resolve. For Lewandowski, the world's recognition wasn't optional—it was necessary. And this match, this defining mont against Barcelona, was another stage upon which he could assert his greatness, another proving ground to reclaim what had been so unjustly denied.

But despite everything he had done, despite the hours, the sweat, the perfection, he was not able to get his award. All he was told to do was: "do it again." Do it again? What did that even an? Should he casually go out and recreate one of the greatest individual seasons in football history? And to be told that by n in suits—n who had never stepped foot on a pitch in their lives—made it feel like a cruel joke. Lewandowski felt anger simring beneath his calm exterior, a mix of frustration, annoyance, and vexation, but what could he do? The system didn't bend for anyone, not even for him.

So he buried his head in work, in training, in the grind that had defined his life for over a decade. Every sprint, every strike, every calculated pass, every movent on the field was sharpened to perfection. And sohow, against the odds, he began to do the unthinkable: that glorious, one-of-a-kind season from before started to feel less like a fluke and more like a standard.

He wasn't just recreating it—he was surpassing it. Goal after goal, match after match, Lewandowski was proving that his previous feats were not a stroke of luck but the mark of a man operating at the very edge of human ability. And then, as if the universe delighted in irony, fate intervened once more. A worldwide pandemic swept across the globe, suspending the awards season. The Ballon d'Or would not be given. Another year, another cruel twist, another opportunity lost.

And now, in 2020–21, history seed to mock him again. This was a season in which both the Euros and Copa América were scheduled—years where national team performances take center stage in award considerations. Being Polish, Lewandowski already carried a disadvantage in those discussions. Yet another stellar season, another chance to shine, threatened to slip away. But Lewandowski was not a man who accepted fate's whims without a fight. Ability alone had brought him to this level, but ntality—the ironclad ntal fortitude—kept him pushing forward. He refused to give up, even when the odds stacked higher than ever.

But he also knew it was never just about guts. The Ballon d'Or might involve politics, dia narratives, and fleeting impressions, but results were the ultimate currency. German dostic trophies, as much as he dominated them, did little to sway the global perspective. If he wanted his na truly in contention, he needed more than national titles. He needed the Champions League. He needed to prove himself on the world stage against the best, against giants who would dominate international competitions and catch the eyes of journalists, pundits, and fans alike. Winning dostically alone wasn't enough. Champions League glory was his only path to absolute validation.

Now, Lewandowski was in the team bus, the hum of the engine blending with the low chatter of his teammates. The stadium lood in the distance, the familiar structure of Camp Nou waiting to greet them, to test them. He held his phone in one hand, earbuds in, speaking quietly to his wife through a video call, a tether to normalcy amidst the storm of adrenaline and expectation surrounding him.

"Where are you?" she asked, her voice gentle but teasing, the kind only soone intimately familiar with him could pull off.

"Just heading into the stadium," Lewandowski replied, his tone calm but deliberate. "We've finished activation training, just on our way for warm-ups and the final tactical talk."

She let out a small, amused sigh. "Okay… and how was the night? I saw your earplugs still in this morning."

For a woman who had been in a relationship with Lewandowski for years, she knew the rhythms of professional football in a way most outsiders never could. She knew the small battles, the hidden pressures. She knew how, on away trips for crucial gas, the ho crowd could begin their assault long before kickoff—even targeting hotels with noise, clamor, and distractions designed to unsettle visiting players.

Lewandowski waved his hand slightly, a casual gesture, as he reassured Anna. "I'm fine," he said, his voice calm despite the rising tension outside. "I was able to get one of the team managers to sort it out for . And the fans… they've actually been pretty quiet today. By around eleven, most of them had even left."

"That's good," Anna replied, relief threading through her voice. But before she could continue, Lewandowski interrupted, his tone soft but curious. "Where are the girls?"

Lewan and Anna were the proud parents of two beautiful angels: Klara and Laura. Klara, already three, was in school and would return soon, while baby Laura, barely a year old, was still taking her morning nap. That was why Anna hadn't been able to co along for Lewandowski's biggest match of the season so far.

"They miss their daddy," Anna explained, a gentle smile in her voice. "Klara has gone to school, she should be back soon, and as for Laura…" she paused, "she's taking a nap."

Lewandowski smiled into the phone. "You should tell them daddy misses them too."

"I'll send you a picture soon," Anna said, the warmth in her voice making him feel connected even from afar.

"Thanks," he replied softly.

"And what about what you wanted to ask? Have you spoken to the coach?" she asked, her tone shifting from maternal warmth to the professional edge she had mastered over years.

Lewandowski's gaze shifted to the front of the bus, where he could see Hansi Flick seated, discussing sothing intensely with the assistant coaches. His mind, trained by years of professional focus, imdiately registered the gravity of the tactical discussion taking place.

Anna wasn't just Lewandowski's wife. A forr world champion karate athlete, she had transitioned into nutrition and fitness, eventually building her own brand. Today, she doubled as Lewandowski's personal nutritionist and fitness coach. She knew him better than anyone—knew how he recovered, how his body responded under stress, and how badly he wanted to play. She also knew he had fully recovered from the ankle sprain he had suffered in the first leg. Her advice was firm: ask the coach to play from the start.

Lewandowski, however, understood the bigger picture. The team already had a plan, carefully laid out. Flick was navigating his decisions under scrutiny from the board, the club, and the dia. Lewandowski didn't want to disrupt it. "It's okay," he said into the phone, his voice calm and asured. "The coach already said I'd play in the second half. That's plenty of ti."

Anna opened her mouth to continue, but at that mont the bus turned onto the street leading directly into Camp Nou.

A massive wave of sound hit them instantly. Lewandowski's heart thudded as shouts, cheers, and even a smattering of boos rolled over the streets like a living, breathing entity. He glanced out the window, and the sight took his breath away: tens of thousands of fans packed the stands, waving banners, flags, and scarves. The sea of blue and red seed to pulse in unison, a living testant to the passion of the ho crowd. Chants echoed off every corner of the stadium, the air vibrating with energy, devotion, and expectation.

He adjusted his grip on the phone. "We're almost at the stadium," he said, voice tight with focus. "I should probably go."

"Okay then," Anna replied, her tone filled with love and reassurance. "Good luck, babe. Love you."

"Love you more," he answered, a small, fleeting smile breaking through the concentration as the call disconnected.

Lewandowski turned his gaze fully to the stadium, to the fans, to the banners, and the palpable energy of match day. He let out a long, slow breath, a mixture of relief, anticipation, and resolve. Let's do this, he thought, the words a quiet vow to himself, the team, and the mont that was about to define it all.

...

At the away team's locker room in Camp Nou, Barcelona, Spain, the atmosphere was tense but focused.

Hansi Flick stood before his squad, commanding the room with the calm authority of a man who had lived for monts like this. "Rember what I told you," he began, voice steady but sharp, cutting through the murmurs. "Pressure. Pressure. Pressure. Push them, make them uncomfortable, don't give them a second to breathe."

He shifted his gaze to the defenders, his tone growing more precise. "Leave Mateo alone. Forget Mateo. Attack the passing lines. He isn't a threat if he doesn't get the ball. Focus on the midfield. Anticipate, intercept, dominate."

He paused for a mont, eyes scanning the room, then added, "And ssi… no one tries to take him one-on-one. Move as a unit. Block the lanes. Anticipate his runs. Close the space, but don't get reckless. Use your bodies—get inside their heads, frustrate them. But be aware: don't give away free kicks in dangerous areas."

Turning toward the attackers, his voice rose slightly, energized. "Pressure Ter Stegen! If you see a clear shot, take it. Test him. Make him frustrated. Don't let him into the ga pressure him badly make him seem weak attack his confidence. And rember, we play as a team, we fight as a team. You've trained for this. Now go out there and prove it!"

He slamd his fist into his palm and shouted the Bayern slogan, a roar that reverberated through the locker room.

"Mia san mia!" the players responded in unison, their voices echoing off the walls, fierce and resolute.

Lewandowski, who had just finished his warm-up, was seated quietly in the corner. His legs rested on the bench, but his mind was still sharp, analyzing the final instructions. Then, his phone pinged. Curious, he picked it up, and the image that appeared made the walls he had built around his focus crumble in an instant.

It was a picture of his family: Anna smiling warmly beside him, Klara with her school backpack slung over her shoulder, Mateo grinning with mischief, and baby Laura, barely eleven months old, in her mother's arms, yawning but eyes sparkling. The caption beneath it read: "Good luck, papa."

Tears pricked at the corners of Lewandowski's eyes, a rare crack in the armor of the polished professional. For a mont, he felt exposed, raw, utterly human. But as he looked at their faces, sothing remarkable happened—the ntal walls that had fallen rebuilt themselves, stronger, firr, fueled by love, duty, and determination. In that instant, he felt ready. Ready to conquer.

Not long after, it was ga ti.

Lewandowski, still out of the starting squad, watched as the two teams took the pitch. He observed the captains' handshake, the exchange of pleasantries, the ceremonial coin toss, and finally, the kickoff. Every detail mattered to him.

From the sidelines, he analyzed with surgical precision. His only thought: The gaffer is a genius. Flick's instructions had been executed flawlessly. Every Bayern player blocked Mateo's passing lanes, every defender anticipated the teen's movent, fully aware of the hat-trick he had netted against them in the previous encounter. Lewandowski noted the tiny openings, the fleeting monts where he might have struck had he been in Mateo's boots—but he didn't dwell. Who knew if those chances would even exist for him in that scenario?

He kept probing the Barcelona defense, ntally mapping their weaknesses, their hesitations, their lapses. The first half unfolded thodically, Bayern pressing with precision, Barcelona responding with urgency, the rhythm of the match a tense dance.

Then, just before halfti, Bayern's relentless pressure was rewarded. A perfectly tid header found the back of the net, a strike that sent hope surging through their ranks and tension surging through Barcelona.

And yet, nothing in the entire day thrilled Lewandowski more than the mont when the first half ended and the players walked down the tunnel. A single line from the coach, crisp and commanding: "Go warm up," hit him like a lottery win, a signal that his ti would co—and he was ready.

...

The tunnel at halfti buzzed with the low hum of anticipation, players moving in a tight, purposeful formation. Lewandowski was walking toward the locker room, still processing the relentless intensity of the first half, when an assistant suddenly rushed toward him.

"Lewan, Lewan! Take it, the coach said I should hand it to you," the assistant panted, thrusting a piece of paper into his hands with a hurried urgency.

Lewandowski barely had ti to glance at it before a familiar voice sounded behind him.

"What's that?"

He turned, slightly startled, to see Thomas Müller, the very man who had scored the crucial header just before halfti, leaning casually against the tunnel wall.

"Looks like so instructions from the boss," Müller said with a shrug, his tone casual but knowing.

Lewandowski began to unfold the paper, but before he could fully focus, Müller raised a hand.

"Stop. Stop. Stop," he said firmly.

Lewandowski blinked, incredulous. "What?"

Müller only gestured with a tilt of his head, eyes flicking to the side. Lewandowski followed his gaze and froze for a brief second. The Barcelona players were lined up opposite them, moving toward the pitch with asured calm. And there, among them, was none other than Lionel ssi.

Lewandowski shook his head slowly, a mix of exasperation and amusent passing over his face. "Really?" he muttered, glancing back at Müller.

Müller just shrugged again, a half-smile tugging at his lips, as if to say, Welco to the dance.

With a quiet sigh, Lewandowski refocused and opened the paper fully, scanning the instructions Flick had ticulously written. Each word was precise, each directive designed to exploit weaknesses, capitalize on monts, and keep the pressure unrelenting. As he read, the referees appeared nearby, moving through their routines, checking positioning, ensuring everything was in order.

Lewandowski finished reading quickly, his eyes darting over every line, every nuance. He considered tossing the paper aside, but he didn't want to litter the tunnel—or worse, risk anyone else catching a glimpse. With a quick call, he summoned an assistant and handed the sheet over.

"So?" the assistant asked, curiosity plain on his face.

Lewandowski gave a small nod. "Tell the boss. No problems."

The assistant smiled briefly. "Would do," and turned, disappearing into the throng of staff and players.

And with that, the tale of the two n—the calculated, thodical striker with a point to prove, and the genius orchestrating from the sidelines—was ready to be played out.

It would all be answered now on the pitch. Though their stories had unfolded differently, driven by varied purposes and personal motivations, the goal was singular. Among this lineup of twenty-two n, countless stories and ambitions collided: one man seeking vengeance for his club, another bright young star striving to honor the wishes of his idols, a speedster trying to rectify past mistakes, a showboater eager to broadcast his triumph to the world through TikTok.

Different personalities, differing mindsets, all about to clash in the crucible of the Champions League.

And at the forefront, leading their respective teams onto the hallowed turf of Camp Nou, were two n. Both shared the sa drive, the sa focus, the sa hunger—but each for very different reasons. And now, as the second half of Barcelona versus Bayern Munich began, their destinies, their wills, their ambitions would all collide.

A/N

Hello i want to try sothing i haven't done in a while, if we can get 60 power stones in the next 12 hours i would post another chapter (depending on how this turns out i would consider starting it again ) and as a sorry for last week would post another one now .

If you want to read 20 chapters ahead with daily uploads and to support subscribe to my Patreon below There is also a picture of how mateo looks like posted and later there would be votes and all on the site so you wont need to pay to vote but you can if you want to support thanks

patreon/David_Adetola

Thank You your support is greatly appreciated thank you all

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