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Now reading: Chapter 11: Learning The Art from Harbinger Of Glory, a Sports novel by Art233.

Leo pushed open the apartnt door, kicking off his shoes as he stepped inside.

The sll of sothing sweet lingered in the air—chocolate, maybe vanilla.

He spotted Mia sitting on the couch, one leg tucked beneath her as she scrolled through her phone.

"Hey," he greeted absentmindedly, heading straight for the kitchen.

Mia barely looked up.

"Hey. How was school?"

Leo grabbed a cookie from the plate on the counter, taking a bite before answering.

"Boring."

Mia snorted. "Figures."

The cookie was soft, still fresh.

He hadn’t even realized how hungry he was until he bit into it.

But there wasn’t ti to sit around and snack—Dawson was waiting.

Without another word, Leo stuffed the rest of the cookie in his mouth, grabbed his football gear, and shot back toward the door.

"Going out again?" Mia called after him.

Leo nodded, already stepping into his shoes.

"Yeah. Don’t wait up for ."

Mia sighed dramatically. "If you turn into a football-obsessed weirdo, I’m telling Sofia."

Leo smirked, shoving the door open.

"How will I buy what you want for you if I don’t obsess over Football?"

Then, he was off.

The sun was already starting to set as Leo pedaled toward the small pitch near their apartnt complex.

It wasn’t much—a standard artificial turf field surrounded by a tall fence, used primarily by locals for casual gas.

At this hour, it was nearly empty, save for one figure standing near the center circle.

Dawson.

Leo pulled up, skidding his bike to a stop before hopping off.

His legs were still sore, his body still tired from the night before, but none of that mattered.

Dawson turned as Leo approached, a knowing smirk tugging at his lips.

"Took your ti, didn’t you?"

Leo rolled his shoulders. "Had to eat sothing first."

Dawson chuckled, tossing a ball toward him.

"Good. You’re gonna need it."

Leo caught the ball, his grip tightening around it before leaving it to sit at his feet.

Dawson folded his arms as he watched Leo roll the ball under his foot, his brow slightly furrowed.

"Alright, kid," Dawson said, tilting his chin toward the field. "Tell what you see."

Leo hesitated. He looked around the pitch, the empty space, the faded white lines marking out zones of play.

His eyes flickered across the field as if searching for sothing deeper beneath the surface, sothing he couldn’t quite grasp with words.

"I dunno," he muttered after a beat. "Just... space."

Dawson arched an eyebrow. "Space?"

Leo exhaled sharply, trying to find a way to explain. "It’s like—like when I look at the field, I see paths. Ways the ball could move, ways players could position themselves. But I don’t know how to describe it properly."

He rubbed his neck, frustrated.

"It’s not like I know exactly what’s going to happen next, but I can kind of tell where the ball should go."

Dawson studied him for a mont, his expression unreadable.

Then, he gave a slow nod.

"So, you see the ga before it happens," he said.

Leo blinked. "I—maybe?"

Dawson let out a low whistle.

"That’s so talent you’ve got there."

Leo scoffed. "Doesn’t matter if I can’t do anything with it."

Dawson smirked, motioning toward the ball at Leo’s feet.

"That’s what we’re here to fix."

Leo glanced down at the ball, then back up at Dawson.

For the first ti, he felt like maybe—just maybe—soone was willing to help him figure this out.

Dawson clapped his hands once.

"Alright. First things first—we’ve got to break you out of this tunnel vision you’ve got. You’re seeing possibilities, yeah, but you’re still rushing to execute like you’re panicking. We’ll work on tempo. Understanding pace and weight."

Leo nodded slowly, his gaze sharpening.

"We’re not doing anything fancy at first," Dawson continued. "No cones and ladders just yet. We’re starting with rhythm. Ga rhythm."

Dawson jogged a few yards back and tapped his foot against a second ball he’d set aside earlier.

"You’ll be on one-touch and two-touch passing only today. I want you to imagine teammates running routes. I’ll give you scenarios, and you’ll respond—not like a robot, but with purpose."

He pointed to various patches on the pitch.

"This is your half-space. That’s your wide channel. This area—here—is your press trap zone. Know where you are on the field before you receive it. Before."

Leo nodded, trying to soak it all in.

Dawson narrowed his eyes.

"You’ll train your body to move like a trono. Tick. Tock. Pass. Step. Pass. Step. We build the touch until it becos unconscious. Then, we raise the speed. Then the difficulty."

"What if I ss up the pass?" Leo asked, shifting his weight nervously.

"You will," Dawson said without hesitation.

"A lot. But the pass isn’t just about hitting the target. It’s about shaping it right. Backspin for runners, loft for switches, drilled for direct lines."

He stepped forward.

"You’re going to learn how to pass with intention, not just direction."

Leo bit his lip and gave a hesitant nod.

Dawson grinned. "Good. Let’s begin."

.....

Leo wiped the sweat off his forehead as he stood on the small neighborhood pitch, staring at Dawson, who was rolling a ball under his foot.

The sun was dipping lower, casting long shadows over the faded white lines of the turf.

Dawson crossed his arms. "Alright, kid. We will start, but don’t think, just react."

Leo furrowed his brows, scanning the field.

He didn’t know what Dawson wanted him to do.

Dawson sighed. "Not what’s there. What’s possible?"

Leo hesitated, then tried again.

He pictured movents—runs players could make.

Spaces that weren’t occupied but might be if soone were smart enough to drift into them.

He saw passes—lines that cut through imaginary defenders, angles that might work if the right weight was applied.

As he stood still, Dawson nudged the ball forward with his toe.

"You’ve got vision, but it’s blurry. We sharpen it by controlling two things—tempo and weight."

Leo nodded, not fully understanding but ready to start.

Dawson pointed at a line of small white cones he’d set up in a diamond shape.

"We’ll begin with one-touch and two-touch passing. You play the ball like I’m a teammate running through these zones. No hesitation. No extra touches. I’ll call out scenarios—you react."

Leo positioned himself as Dawson took the first pass.

"One-touch. Pressing midfielder on your left."

Leo shifted his stance, eting the ball’s arrival with the inside of his right foot, sending it quickly back to Dawson.

The pass had decent direction but no real intention.

Dawson rolled it back.

"Again. Now think—if there’s a press on your left, where’s the best angle?"

The next ti, Leo opened his body before the ball even reached him and redirected it slightly outward, as if laying it off for a teammate running into space.

Dawson nodded approvingly. "Better. Now faster."

For the next twenty minutes, Leo’s brain worked overti.

Dawson fired off rapid instructions.

"Right foot kill, left-foot release! Defender on your back, shield first! No space, touch it around !"

All until Leo stopped thinking and just did.

Not every pass was perfect.

So skidded too slow; others carried too much weight, bouncing awkwardly.

But with each mistake, Dawson gave a quick correction, and Leo adapted.

The rhythm of the drill started to sink into his muscles.

After a short water break, Dawson set up a rebound net angled slightly to the side.

"Now, we add weight control," he said.

"You’re going to play passes into this net, and you’re going to make move."

Leo frowned. "Move?"

Dawson stepped into position.

"I’m your midfielder. Don’t just hit the net—hit it so the ball cos back to in the right spot."

Leo took the first pass—too soft.

The ball rebounded weakly, forcing Dawson to step forward to receive.

Dawson shook his head.

"Wrong. If I’m breaking a press, I don’t want to co back to the ball. I want it to et in stride."

Leo adjusted. This ti, he drilled the pass lower, skimming it off the turf so it ca back at chest height.

Too high.

Dawson let out a chuckle.

"Unless you want to control it with my face, let’s find the balance."

Leo exhaled and tried again, rolling the ball with controlled force.

It struck the net, rebounded back at knee height—perfect for a midfielder to step into without breaking stride.

Dawson gave a nod of approval.

They kept at it for another hour, Dawson pushing him to adjust his passing techniques.

Driven passes with the laces, curled deliveries with the inside of his foot, and disguised lay-offs with the outside.

By the end of the session, Leo’s legs burned. Sweat dripped down his back, his shirt sticking to his skin.

Dawson tossed him a water bottle. "Not bad for day one," he said.

Leo unscrewed the cap, gulping down the water before wiping his mouth with the back of his hand.

He felt drained, but sothing inside him buzzed with excitent.

For the first ti in his life, he wasn’t just playing.

He was learning.

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