A smile played across my lips—I could hear my na well before I walked out of the tunnel. A low rumble at first, then it built, swelling into a dedicated cheer that I wasn't expecting. This wasn't even the final.
South Korea vs Iran.
The top of the table clash. The decider.
The winner takes the group. The loser settles for second.
Next to us, the Iranian team was a wall of grim-faced focus. Their captain, a burly defender with a beard that looked like it could survive a nuclear apocalypse, stared straight ahead, his jaw set. No smiles. No chatter. Just a quiet, simring intensity.
They were here for a fight. And I had a feeling they wouldn't be going down without one. Then again, I was also not here to play tiddlywinks.
Our starting eleven lined up in the tunnel, the white of Iran and the red of South Korea a stark contrast under the bright lights. Our shoulders brushed as we waited.
I stood at the front, the armband around my arm a constant reminder of my responsibility. I glanced back at the rest of the squad. Kim Jun-hwan, my young partner in cri. Sung-tae, who gave a curt nod. Dae-hyun, the other winger, who bounced on his feet. At the back, Jong-su gave a cheeky grin. We were ready. As ready as we could be.
The stadium PA crackled to life.
“And now, the starting line-ups!”
Nas rolled out, one by one. Sung-tae. Dae-hyun. Jun-hwan. Jong-su, and so on and so forth. The crowd erupted with each cheer.
“… and the captain of South Korea, number 9, Cha Jae-il!”
I stepped out onto the pitch to a deafening roar of applause. It echoed around the stadium. It was the kind of noise that could lift you up, or crush you depending on the occasion. I jogged across the grass, waving to the crowd, my heart pounding in my chest.
We lined-up at the center for the anthem. I stood, straight-backed and proud, as the national anthem played. I closed my eyes, feeling the music thrum along with my heartbeat. Jong-su sang the loudest; he always did.
The Iranian players stood stoically, their faces blank, unreadable. The flag fluttered in the breeze.
Once our tune was over, it was their turn.
The Iranian national anthem, a stirring, patriotic lody filled with pride, blasted throughout the arena, followed by a loud cheer from the Iranian supporters in the stands.
I could hear the jeers and whistles from the Korean side.
There was no love lost between our nations. We were neighbors. Rivals. We'd both had our glory days and our dark monts.
And then ca the handshakes. Their captain, his eyes hard as flint, shook mine with a firm, almost painful grip. I had to smile a little at the thinly-veiled provocation. "May the best team win." He said, in rough, stilted English.
"May the best team win." I responded with a nod, tightening my grip in turn.
I moved on to shake the hand of their keeper, who was as tall as he was wide. The rest of their team followed.
And then I found myself standing in front of their captain.
The ref, a bald, stern-looking man, walked between us, his black kit pristine, his yellow card already in his hand. A warning. "Play fair, boys. Don't make my job harder than it needs to be." His eyes were hard, his voice firm.
And then ca the toss, with as representative, which resulted in winning the kick-off. Nice.
The Iranian players jogged back to their positions. I stood at the halfway line.
It was ti.
The ref brought the whistle to his lips and blew.
We started with a quick series of passes.
Dae-hyun. Sung-tae. . Kim Jun-hwan. Dae-hyun. . Sung-tae. . Back and forth, back and forth. We probed the Iranian defense. They were tight-knit, well-disciplined. Their full-backs were positioned close to their center-backs, leaving their wingers to deal with ours.
Sung-tae slid the ball through a narrow gap between the Iranian players to the feet of Jun-hwan on the right side of midfield. I took a mont to notice their number 4. A lanky center-back with long, powerful strides. His head was shaved down to the scalp, and he had a look of fierce determination etched upon his face.
He tracked my movents across the pitch like a predator eyeing prey.
'That guy's probably going to mark for most of the match. Can't make things too easy for him.' I made a ntal note of him.
Kim Jun-hwan cut inside with a nifty shimmy. Their left midfielder, a slender, bearded man, tried to close him down. But Jun-hwan cleared it towards Sung-tae, who was surging ahead on the left. The ball was as perfect as it could be; the arc of its trajectory t the exact position of his run. The Iranian full-back was too late. He scrambled to get back, his legs churning.
Sung-tae took one touch to bring the ball under control, and then he was off, sprinting down the flank, his legs a blur. He swung his leg back, his body curling, and delivered a dangerous cross towards the center. I was there, but not alone. Their Number 4, the shaved one, had managed to stick to , sohow. He had read the trajectory and the pace of the cross with a good head on his shoulder.
His shoulder nudged into mine, jockeying for position. The ball flew through the air.
Jun-hwan made another run in behind.
Number 4's long legs took him high above , pushing out of position. The ball grazed the side of his head, not quite managing to clear it away from the box, but just enough to put a safe distance and position for another Iranian player to safely collect the ball. I dashed forward, their Iranian defender, Number 12, a thin but fast on his feet winger, tried to get it before .
The ball bounced one last ti, just as we got it—at the exact sa ti. Number 12 sort of panicked as he likely expected us to collide. He was going way too fast. So was I, for what it's worth. I had to improvise.
Before the ball could touch the ground and roll away, I put myself in front of it, shouldering Number 12 and keeping him off of it. With a gentle tap of my foot, I kept the ball afloat, in my control, and then with a second one, I launched it up in a light and controlled manner.
It vaulted over both our heads as I whipped around my Iranian adversary, and caught it mid-air. Number 12 stuck closely, but clumsily. I tapped the airborne sphere one last ti, vaulting it backwards as I made a one-hundred and eight-degree spin, letting it pass by. My montum carried past Number 12.
The crowd cheered in approval.
Number 4, the shaved bastard, was bulldozing towards . With a swift, ankle-breaking elastico flick, I made the ball swerve away from him and—
His hand roughly grabbed a fistful of my jersey.
His body collided into mine. Hard.
We fell in a heap, arms and legs entangled, my head cracking against the ground. A sharp pain flashed across my skull.
The crowd gasped. Then erupted into a fury of shouts.
The ref blew the whistle.
Number 4 disentangled himself quickly from myself, raising his arms up in protest, as if it were who fouled him. It pissed off, but I held my cool. In this field, emotions can't overco your intellect or you'll be nothing but another hotheaded loser who can't get ahold of themselves.
I got back to my feet, rubbing the side of my temple with my fingers, a dull pain throbbing on my skin.
The referee marched up to him, his hand in his back pocket, and with one fluid motion, he whipped out a yellow card.
"Watch yourself. Next ti it won't be so lenient." He pointed at him, eyes narrowing in warning.
Number 4 glowered, his jaw tight. But he nodded, once.
The freekick was outside the box. Close enough for a bold attempt, but not close enough for sothing easy.
Jun-hwan and I jogged over to the ball. Jong-su caught up to us as well.
"Are you alright?" Jong-su whispered, looking at .
"I'm fine."
"Sure?"
"Sure. Don't worry about it."
My head was already back in the ga.
He shrugged, a hint of a smirk playing at the corners of his mouth.
"Should it be you or , captain?" Jun-hwan asked, gesturing toward the ball on the grass.
"You took the last one." I reminded him, eyes narrowed.
Jun-hwan shrugged. "I scored, didn't I?" A small, almost impish smirk graced his lips.
"Don't push your luck, kid."
"Tch, I'm older than you, captain."
I chuckled. and this stoic guy right here got a little closer over ti. Team building and everything.
"Just fake a shot, then give the real one." I pointed with two of my fingers at the ball.
Jun-hwan just nodded. "I've got you."
He perfectly placed himself in a shooting position, while I stood idly to his side.
I looked at Number 4's eyes.
A steely, determined expression.
'Oh I will gladly repay you for that cheapshot.'
The ref blew his whistle to signal the continuation of the ga.
Jun-hwan stepped forward and swung his leg, pretending to kick it. He didn't, but he fooled enough of the defense to take half of them off balance.
I quickly followed through with an accurate strike on the ball. Left foot forward. Right instep. Top right corner, with the curve. My body swiveled, my foot hit the bottom of the ball, driving it upwards, over the wall.
The keeper, who was still adjusting, had to extend himself, making an exaggerated dive towards the top right.
The ball curled beautifully, almost looking like it’d go off-course, but at the last mont dove down.
The keeper’s fingers grazed thin air.
The ball kissed the underside of the crossbar, then ricochetted its way into the back of the net.
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