The banner ca down in a single, cascading sweep.
High above the main stand, fans who had been holding the edges since the final whistle finally let go, and the fabric dropped across half the upper tier in one long, breathless unfurl. The lettering was enormous — CAMPEONES · SUPERCOPA DE ESPAÑA — gold on deep red, catching the floodlights as it settled.
The Camp Nou inhaled. Then it erupted all over again, a second detonation after the first had barely subsided, and the sound of it rolled out across the city like sothing that belonged to the weather.
On the pitch, the podium was being assembled by federation staff moving with the brisk efficiency of people who had done this many tis but understood it mattered every ti. Lorenzo stood slightly apart from the main group, the MVP trophy already in his hands from the individual ceremony monts before, a separate, smaller award that he had accepted alone, in front of the caras, with the particular stillness that made reporters lean forward in their seats as if waiting for him to say sothing historic.
He hadn't said anything. He had simply nodded, turned, and walked back toward his teammates.
Nearby, the Atlético players were forming for the guard of honor, the tradition that required the losing side to applaud the winners through. Diego Costa, characteristically, turned it into sothing between a grimace and a grin, baring his teeth at Mascherano as he passed, waving at Alves with theatrical exaggeration. The crowd whistled and laughed in equal asure. Costa had never learned to lose quietly and had stopped trying years ago.
David Villa walked the line without making eye contact. His gaze was fixed on a point sowhere beyond the tunnel entrance, sowhere private.
When Godín reached Lorenzo, he didn't just walk past.
He stopped, looked the boy in the eyes for one unambiguous second, and extended his hand. Gabi, just behind him, did the sa. No words, just the firm, dry handshake of two n who understood exactly what had happened over two legs and had chosen to acknowledge it honestly rather than pretend it hadn't.
Lorenzo shook both hands without a word.
Sione watched from the edge of the technical area as his players filed through. Burgos appeared at his shoulder. "Let's go, Cholo. The longer you stand here watching, the more expensive your transfer window becos."
Sione let out a short, flat sound, not quite a laugh. "We don't buy superstars, Mono. We survive them." He paused. "Today was a lesson, though. I'll give him that."
He turned and walked toward the tunnel without looking back.
A few yards away, against the advertising hoarding, a conversation was happening that the caras hadn't found yet.
Miranda had been intercepted by Dani Alves before he could reach the dressing room. They were old friends from the Brazilian circuit, and the tone between them was candid in the way that only shared nationality allows.
"Scolari has to be watching this," Miranda said, nodding toward the podium. "We are missing exactly that profile. Hulk brings power, but not this. Not the combination."
Alves shrugged, not dismissively but realistically. "The dual-heritage situation makes it complicated, my friend. ssi and Mascherano have been working on him since the day he arrived. The Spanish federation started making phone calls after the first goal at the Bernabéu. You are already third in that queue, and it is a very long queue."
Miranda watched Lorenzo for a mont. "The last player every federation fought over like this was Leo himself."
"And Leo ended up choosing Argentina." Alves glanced sideways. "So choices make themselves eventually."
In the Atlético section near the tunnel mouth, a different conversation was unraveling with considerably less composure.
Thibaut Courtois was removing his gloves with the specific violence of a man who needed to do sothing with his hands. Burgos, who had doubled back from Sione's exit, stepped in front of him.
"Thibaut. Nobody blas you. Five goals in two legs against that front line is not a goalkeeping failure, it's a tactical problem."
"I'm activating my recall clause." Courtois said it flatly, the way you say sothing you decided ten minutes ago. "I'm going back to Chelsea in January."
Burgos stared at him. "Don't say that publicly. Not tonight."
"I'm not saying it publicly. I'm saying it to you." Courtois pulled off the second glove. "If we aren't going to win anything here, I need to be sowhere I can. Chelsea need a goalkeeper. I want the number one shirt at Stamford Bridge and I'm not going to get it sitting here conceding five to a seventeen-year-old."
Arda Turan, who had caught the tail end of this while pulling off his shin pads nearby, looked up. "You want to go have a fight with De Bruyne? Good luck to you, Thibaut."
Courtois gave him a look. "That's a different situation entirely."
"Is it?" Turan spread his hands. "You are both Belgian, you are both in London, and from what I understand you are both in the sa argunt about the sa girl. I am just saying, maybe resolve that first before adding a locker room."
Burgos rubbed his face with both hands. "Why do I know nothing about any of this?"
"Because you are always watching footage," Turan said simply, and went back to his shin pads.
On the podium, the mont had arrived.
Puyol and Xavi were handed the trophy together by the federation official, the two captains who had carried this club through the years between dynasties, who had been here when it was harder and were here now when it was becoming sothing new. The natural thing, the expected thing, was for them to raise it together.
Instead, Puyol turned around.
He and Xavi looked at each other for half a second, the kind of look that doesn't require words between people who have known each other for fifteen years and then they walked the trophy across to where Lorenzo was standing at the edge of the group.
Puyol placed it in his hands.
The Camp Nou registered what was happening about two seconds after it happened, and the sound that followed was not the explosive burst of a goal but sothing more sustained, a rising, building acknowledgnt that swept from the lower tiers upward like a tide.
ssi and Neymar imdiately pushed Lorenzo to the front of the line. He resisted for exactly one second, then stopped resisting.
He stood at the edge of the podium, ninety thousand faces in front of him, the weight of the silver solid and real in his grip, and raised it above his head.
The fireworks went off simultaneously, red and blue bursts that cracked open over the stadium and scattered light across the upturned faces and the confetti cannons along the periter released in a long, rolling sequence, paper catching the floodlights as it fell.
Lorenzo felt the Cantona Temperant doing what it always did in monts like this keeping the noise at a manageable distance, letting him be present without being overwheld. He thought briefly of the Ezeiza training ground in the Buenos Aires heat, of a coordinator who had decided he wasn't worth the trouble, of the flight back to Barcelona with a torn sock and a bleeding shin and nothing else confird.
The thought lasted about three seconds. Then it was gone.
The first trophy. The season had barely started.
In the broadcast booth, Santiago had been quiet for almost thirty seconds, an unprecedented silence. Inés Valdes let it hold a mont longer before speaking.
"Viewership records for a Spanish Super Cup, broken," she said simply. "In Argentina tonight, the conversation has stopped being about what happened at Ezeiza. It has moved on to what happens next."
Santiago nodded slowly, watching the figure at the center of the light below. "The first trophy of the season is won. La Liga resus at Matchday Three. The Champions League group stage continues. The season is long." He picked up his microphone properly for the first ti in several minutes. "And the Beast is hungry."
[Status: 2013-14 Spanish Super Cup - CHAMPIONS. Final aggregate: 6-1.]
[System Note: First Professional Trophy Secured. Match MVP awarded.]
[Next Target: La Liga Matchday 3. Champions League Group Stage continues.]
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