It had been another dismal week for Leo. The familiar frustration of being overlooked, underestimated and disregarded as a player had weighed heavily on him.
Each session had felt like a cycle—an endless repetition of mistakes, missed opportunities, and the harsh criticisms that followed. Nothing had seemed to click.
But it wasn't just the inability to perform that troubled him. It was the feeling—the sense that no one ever looked his way, no one ever believed in him.
The others had their strengths: their size, their speed, their natural athleticism. They could glide past defenders or win headers with ease. Leo didn't have that.
He didn't have a standout quality that made him immediately visible to others. He was invisible, a silent player on the pitch whose contributions barely registered.
And it had become too much. The way his teammates looked past him. The way Coach Harris yelled at him for every misstep.
After the last few sessions, Leo began questioning everything about himself, his ability, and his future. Maybe this wasn't for me. Perhaps I'm just not good enough.
It was after one particularly soul-crushing day of training that something inside him broke.
Leo had stayed behind at the end of the session, trying to ignore the whispers of his teammates as they joked and laughed. The locker room had felt like a foreign land, one he didn't belong to.
He grabbed his water bottle, but the taste of defeat was worse than any thirst.
As he sat on the grass outside the training ground, staring blankly at the goalposts, Leo felt a strange weight pressing on his chest.
He had been sitting there for what felt like hours, the world around him spinning with self-doubt and frustration.
He wasn't sure when it started, but his thoughts drifted to his earlier moments in training. There had to be something he could do.
He had watched the ball sail past his teammates and felt the pressure of their expectations bearing down on him.
But what if the answer wasn't in running faster or kicking harder?
What if it wasn't about being physical at all? What if the answer was... seeing the game differently? Leo's mind wandered back to an earlier moment in the session.
He remembered a time when he'd made a pass to Charlie, only for Charlie to miss it by inches.
At the time, Leo had felt frustrated—like he was the only one who could see the lane, the perfect space for the ball to travel.
But what if that was the solution? What if he was seeing things others weren't? The thought started small, like a tiny seed buried deep within him, but it began to grow.
Could he—could he—be the one to spot those spaces, those gaps in the defense?
Could he be the one to create those moments, even if his body wasn't as fast or strong as the others?
He closed his eyes, letting the quiet of the moment wash over him.
His breathing slowed, and for the first time in a while, Leo felt something click inside him. What if I focused on the spaces?
He didn't have to be faster than everyone else. He didn't have to win every aerial duel.
But if he could see the spaces before they opened up, before the defenders knew they were there, maybe—just maybe—that could be his strength.
The rest of the evening felt different. Leo lay in bed, his mind buzzing with possibilities, replaying every moment from training, every pass he had attempted.
It wasn't just about finding the right moment to pass.
It was about seeing the game from a different angle—not as a player trying to force his way through, but as someone who understood the rhythm of the game and could anticipate the next move before it even happened.
He fell asleep with the thought of seeing the game differently lingering in his mind.
And when he woke up the next morning, there was something in him that was fundamentally different.
He wasn't just dragging himself to training anymore. There was a sense of purpose—like he had unlocked something inside himself, something he had never known was there.
As the session began, Leo joined the group, a little unsure of what to expect. But today, something was different. His eyes were sharper. His mind was clearer.
The moment the ball was at his feet, it felt as though time slowed down just a little.
His teammates moved in their usual ways, running their routes, positioning themselves—but Leo's mind was already ahead of them, already mapping out the lanes.
The game felt slower, the spaces more visible. He could see the passing lanes with ease, the way the defenders would shift, the way the midfielders would make their runs.
The gaps were there, open and waiting to be exploited.
But even with this new clarity, there was still a problem.
His body hadn't caught up yet. His passes, though sharper and more decisive, still lacked the precision they needed.
They were often too fast, too direct, and too difficult for his teammates to control. Yet the vision—the vision was there.
He made a pass to Charlie, threading it between two defenders. The ball was on target, but Charlie was too slow to adjust. It sailed past him, just out of reach.
"Not bad, Leo," Charlie said, his voice tinged with surprise, though there was no mockery in his tone. He saw it, too. The lane. The opportunity.
As the session continued, Leo's newfound clarity was both a blessing and a curse.
He could see the game in a way he never had before, but his body still hadn't caught up to the mental changes.
He felt the frustration of being able to see what he needed to do but not having the ability to execute it fully.
But there was also something exciting in that frustration—because now he understood.
He knew that with time, he could make it work. He just had to get better at it.
As the session continued, an older man stood on the sidelines, his eyes glued to Leo as the young midfielder continued to experiment with these daring passes.
There was something about the way he moved, the way his mind seemed to be ahead of everyone else.
Leo didn't recognize the assistant coach, but his presence felt important.
The man scribbled something in a notebook, his focus never leaving Leo.
After a few more passes that went astray or were barely touched by his teammates, Leo was pulled from the field.
As he walked off, disappointed yet strangely determined, he noticed the assistant coach speaking quietly with Coach Harris.
"Who's that kid?" Dawson asked, his tone far more serious than before.
Harris glanced at Leo, now walking to the sideline. "Just another kid who hasn't made the cut. He's got no physicality. Doesn't stand out. Hasn't improved much in the last year."
Dawson narrowed his eyes, still watching Leo. "But did you see his passing? The vision?"
Harris shrugged, dismissing the idea. "Yeah, the vision's there, but the execution's garbage. He's too inconsistent, and his lack of speed is a real problem."
But Dawson wasn't so easily convinced. "If he had someone who could mold that talent—someone to push him to execute that vision..."
Harris gave a small chuckle.
"You know as well as I do, Matt, you don't hand over that kind of talent easily. But sure, I'll let you watch him. He's got potential, I suppose."
Dawson stared at Leo for a moment longer. "You might be underestimating him."
a/n: Okay. So i was watching Man Utd play against nottingham yesterday and thought, why dont i create a novel about a kid briniging them back to their glory days. so this is it.