Leon instantly aborted his deep run, staying higher up the pitch.
On the sideline, he saw Chivu's eyebrow raise a single, questioning millimeter.
The commentator, oblivious to the silent, high-level chess match unfolding, was just enjoying the spectacle. "A cagey opening ten minutes here in Pasadena! Both teams are showing immense respect for each other, like two heavyweight boxers in the first round, content to just feel each other out!"
On the pitch, Leon knew they couldn't just "feel them out." Chivu's trap was designed to neutralize him. He needed to change the game. He jogged past Florian Wirtz, the other new boy.
"Florian," he murmured, his voice low and urgent.
"Change of plan. Forget the False 9. You stay in the pocket, find the space between their lines. I'm going to make runs to drag them wide. The space will be for you."
Wirtz, a player with a footballing brain as sharp as his own, just gave a single, intelligent nod. He understood.
But before they could implement their new plan, Real Madrid, the kings of Europe, drew first blood. In the 19th minute, a clumsy foul by one of Liverpool's midfielders gave Madrid a free-kick in a dangerous, central position, about 25 yards out.
"This is prime territory for a specialist," the commentator noted, his voice dropping with anticipation.
Their young Turkish sensation, Arda Güler, placed the ball with the calm, unhurried air of a master. He took a short run-up and struck the ball with a technique that was pure, artistic genius. He didn't blast it. He whipped it, a vicious, curling shot that flew up and over the wall, dipping with an impossible, physics-defying venom at the last second. Alisson, at full stretch, could only watch as the ball nestled into the top corner of the net.
1-0 to Real Madrid. A moment of pure, undeniable quality.
On the sideline, the two coaches exploded.
"That was a foul on my player in the build-up!" Arne Slot roared at the fourth official, his usual calm demeanor shattered.
Cristian Chivu, from his technical area, just smirked. "Perhaps your players are made of glass, Arne!" he shouted back across the divide, a clear, taunting jab.
The goal, instead of demoralizing Liverpool, seemed to light a fire under them. And at the heart of that fire was Leon. The trap set by his old master was not a cage; it was a challenge. And he was going to answer it.
In the 28th minute, he received the ball on the left touchline.
The space in the middle was a designated kill zone guarded by Camavinga. So, he decided to create his own space. He started to run, not inside, but straight down the line. His first touch took him past his defender.
The second took him past a covering midfielder. He was a blur of red, a flash of white hair against the green grass.
His Vision was on fire, a cascade of flashing symbols and predictive arrows. He saw the lunging tackle from the defender before it even happened, hopping over it with a nimble grace.
He saw the goalkeeper, Courtois, begin to come off his line to narrow the angle. He was running out of space, the byline fast approaching.
And then he did something of pure, audacious, beautiful arrogance. He stopped the ball dead, his studs trapping it an inch from the line.
The defender, who had been scrambling to get back, flew past him, unable to stop his own momentum.
Leon was now one-on-one with Courtois, from an impossible angle. He feinted to cross, and then, with a lightning-fast drag-back, he pulled the ball into the space the keeper had just vacated. He was now facing an open, if very narrow, goal. From a near-zero angle, he smashed the ball with all his might. It rocketed past the keeper's head and bulged the back of the net.
1-1.
"OH MY GOODNESS! WHERE DID THAT COME FROM?!" the commentator screamed, his voice hoarse with disbelief. "A GOAL OF PURE, INDIVIDUALISTIC, UNADULTERATED GENIUS! Leon has just announced his arrival in a Liverpool shirt! He beat three men! He sent the keeper for a hot dog! And he has scored from an angle that does not exist! The apprentice has just landed a thunderous counter-punch on his old master!"
The equalizer sent a surge of confidence through the Liverpool ranks. They were now playing with a swagger.
In the 35th minute, the "perfect storm" attack that Arne Slot had dreamed of finally materialized. Leon, now drawing the attention of multiple defenders, played a simple pass to Mo Salah on the right.
The Egyptian King drove at his man, beat him with a blistering turn of pace, and then looked up.
He saw the powerful, intelligent run of Alexander Isak, who had found a pocket of space in the box. Salah played a perfect, curling cross right onto his foot.
It was a certain goal. The stadium was ready to erupt.
But Isak, the mighty hammer, somehow scuffed his shot, the ball bobbling harmlessly wide of the post.
He just looked at the sky, a look of pure, frustrated disbelief on his face.
Salah threw his hands up in the air. Even the perfect machine could have a glitch.
But two minutes later, the machine recalibrated.
The move started with Leon again. But this time, he didn't run. He played the decoy. He made a darting run to the left, dragging two Madrid defenders with him, creating a huge, gaping chasm in the center of the pitch.
He had learned.
You don't always have to be the one to strike the lightning.
Sometimes, you just have to be the one who clears the clouds.
Mo Salah, seeing the space, drifted inside.
And Florian Wirtz, the other new boy, the German genius, made a brilliant, untracked run right through the heart of the space Leon had created.
The ball was worked to him by a simple pass from midfield. Wirtz took one touch, looked up, and with the composure of a veteran, he coolly slotted the ball into the bottom corner of the net.
2-1 to Liverpool.
A goal born of pure tactical intelligence.
The players ran to celebrate with Wirtz, a joyous, unified mob of red.
Leon, in the middle of it all, happened to glance over at the Real Madrid sideline.
Cristian Chivu was not yelling. He was not angry. He was just standing there, a slow, calculating, and undeniably impressed smile spreading across his face.
He looked at Leon, and he gave a single, almost imperceptible nod.
If you find any errors ( broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.