Football God; Forging a Legacy

Chapter 134: A siege without the King


The roar of the Metropolitano was primal.

On the other side of town, a certain fanbase was surely praying for the downfall of the visitors in blue and red.

There were very few nights when the goals of the 2 big clubs in Madrid aligned, but tonight, Real Madrid and Atletico's goals aligned.

The night sky above Madrid burned red, flares bursting like comets over the stands as drums pounded a war rhythm that echoed through every inch of grass.

This was no ordinary match, it was a siege.

And Barcelona, stripped of their talisman, had come to survive it.

FWEEEE!

The whistle blew.

Immediately, Atletico Madrid pressed with unbridled venom.

Diego Simeone's men snapped at every touch, hunted in packs, and flooded the midfield with grit and chaos. The crowd loved it as every tackle drew cheers, and every interception a roar.

Barcelona, by contrast, simply tried to breathe. Hansi Flick's men moved the ball in triangles, searching for control and calm amidst the storm.

But there was no calm tonight.

Every time Pedri found space, Koke was there.

Every time Raphinha looked up, Llorente shoved him off balance. And every time Lamine Yamal received the ball, two red and white shirts closed him down.

And yet, despite it all, it was the nineteen year old who lit up the night.

With Sam absent from the game, Yamal was simply electric.

In the 12th minute, he took a pass from Gavi, dropped his shoulder, and twisted through two defenders as if gravity didn't apply to him.

The crowd gasped and in the 15th minute, he nutmegged Hancko so cleanly that even some Atleti fans clapped.

In the 22nd minute, he ghosted past Lenglet and forced Oblak into a diving save that rippled the side netting.

He was playing like a boy possessed.

"Madre mía!" One commentator shouted. "The kid is playing like he's chasing ghosts!"

But brilliance without end product is a knife without an edge. Yamal was dazzling, but it was useless in a war like this as Atletico did well to cope with the threat posed by his biding.

They bided their time.

And then, in the 33rd minute, the patience of Simeone's men finally bore fruit as Barcelona's control cracked.

A rare misplaced pass from Pedri gave away possession near midfield.

Instantly, Atleti swarmed; Koke to Barrios, Barrios to Sorloth.

Alexander Sorloth drove forward, shrugged off Cubarsí, and unleashed a curling strike from 25 yards.

BAM!

The ball kissed the far post and flew in.

1–0.

BOOM!

The Estadio Metropolitano erupted.

Red smoke filled the air as Diego Simeone sprinted down the touchline, pumping his fists excitedly with his veins bulging. His players leapt onto each other like wolves who had drawn first blood.

Barcelona's end? Flick's bench was frozen.

Araujo clenched his jaw while Balde kicked the turf in anger, even as Raphinha screamed at the sky.

But in the chaos, Hansi Flick still gestured for calm. "Stay in control" He urged his players.

The first half came to an end with Atletico leading at home.

During halftime, the locker room wasn't loud. There was no shouting, no panic too, just silence. Sweat dripped from Yamal's forehead as he sat with his head down, frustration radiating from him.

Hansi Flick stood in the middle with his hands in pockets; his voice was low and sharp as he finally spoke.

"We are not losing control, not today". He shook his head. They want emotion, but we won't give them that. We'll give them intelligence".

"They want chaos, but we give structure".

He turned to Yamal, his eyes fierce. "Keep running at them. Even if you fail nine times, the tenth will change everything".

"And you, Gavi," he pointed at the energetic midfielder. "Drive them backward, make them foul you".

He addressed a few other players and they all nodded, standing as one. By the end of 10 minutes, the room crackled with quiet defiance.

When the whistle to kickstart the second half sounded, Barcelona surged.

Pedri and De Jong controlled the rhythm, their short sharp passes slicing through Atleti's lines even as Gavi's relentless energy dragged the tempo upward.

Balde also locked in, flexing his dribbling skills from deep as he thundered forward like a storm, linking up with Raphinha who though frustrated, refused to stop running.

And Yamal, oh Yamal… he was a menace.

The boy wonder tormented them.

Every touch drew gasps, and every dribble drew fouls.

He danced past defenders who were ten years older than him, each movement painting courage across the pitch.

But the net refused him with Jan Oblak in goal.

In the 62nd minute, his curling effort kissed the crossbar.

In the 70th, Oblak's outstretched hand once again denied him. And then in the 79th, his low drive was cleared off the line by Lenglet.

Yamal groaned in frustration.

Hansi Flick paced the technical area, no longer as calm as he stared with bloodshot eyes. Beside him, Diego Simeone barked orders at his players, waving his arms wildly as he sensed the storm building.

The final ten minutes of the game were chaos.

Barcelona poured forward in numbers, forcing Atleti into mistakes as they corner after corner, and attack after attack, yet Atletico refused to budge.

They simply retreated, all eleven men now inside their box.

The home fans didn't care. The whole stadium was a thunderstorm of noise, tens of thousands of voices roaring their team on.

In the 90th minute, Barcelona got another corner kick.

Pedri placed the ball at the flag even as every Barcelona shirt crowded the box. The Metropolitano shook under the weight of noise at the moment.

FWEEEE!

The whistle blew, and Pedri hit the ball.

His delivery curled toward the near post, fast and flat.

And that was when…

BZZZ!

Araujo exploded through the crowd, leaping higher than everyone, timing his run to perfection as his forehead met the ball like a hammer striking an anvil.

THUMP!

Jan Oblak was rooted to one spot; the net bulged.

1–1!

For a heartbeat, the world went silent as if even sound needed a second to process what just happened.

Then came the roar.

BOOM!

The away fans went gaga.

Raphinha sprinted straight to Araujo, tackling him to the ground in joy. Yamal punched the air, screaming like he'd scored it himself.

Even Hansi Flick on the touchline let loose as he jumped and pumped a fist in celebration in a rare display of raw emotion.

"Gol de Araujo!" The commentator screamed. "Barcelona rescues themselves at the death! What a game!"

"The captain becomes the savior!"

When he stood up, Araujo looked up into the sea of red and white, his eyes burning with fire with veins standing out on his neck.

He didn't celebrate wildly, he just pointed to the badge on his chest.

When the final whistle came, both teams collapsed. It was a stalemate.

Atleti were furious to have lost two points in the dying breath.

as for Barcelona, they lost 2 points on the road, but they were relieved and proud.

Raphinha and Yamal embraced, while Flick hugged his assistants quietly.

They hadn't won, but they hadn't fallen either. And in the bowels of the Metropolitano, as journalists prepared their post-match takes, one quote from Hansi Flick defined it best.

"We didn't have our king tonight, so we fought like soldiers".

It quickly became headline.

That night, Araujo was the hero and he savored his moment.

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