The next afternoon, the wind was gentler than the day before, sunlight stretching golden lines across the concrete pitch.
Leo arrived in his usual rush, bike squealing to a halt, bag over his shoulder.
His shirt clung to him from the short ride, and his cheeks still had a faint red from the cold.
Dawson was already there, casually juggling a ball at midfield like a man who hadn't aged a day past thirty.
"You're late," Dawson called with a grin, though he barely glanced up from his routine.
"I'm two minutes early," Leo retorted, glancing at his phone and tossing his bag aside.
"Which means you're late by my standards."
They met at the center, and after a quick warm-up, Leo launched into the session without needing much prompting.
The difference in him was visible.
His touch was tighter, his timing cleaner.
The passes weren't just imaginative now—they were sharper, faster, even when they didn't connect.
He was seeing the field like a chessboard, and though the execution wasn't always there, it was less of a guess and more of an attempt with intent.
But there was still a hint of hurriedness underneath.
He overhit a through ball on the run.
Mishit a return pass during a rondo.
Groaned under his breath after a misplaced switch.
Dawson caught it all.
"Slow it down," the coach finally said, motioning him over as they took a water break.
"You're trying to sprint while still learning how to walk. Your body isn't in sync with your brain yet. You see more than you can deliver right now, and that's okay."
Leo wiped his brow, chest rising and falling from the sprint drills. "But if I don't figure this out fast, I'll—"
"You'll what?" Dawson asked calmly.
"Flop? Fade out? No. Not if you keep doing what you're doing. You think the game better than half the midfielders I've coached. But football's not just brains. You need the engine to carry that brain. That's what this week's for."
Leo looked up, curious.
"I've been watching you," Dawson said.
"Really watching. Your body hesitates a second too long, not because you're unsure, but because it isn't ready. Your muscles, your core, your balance—it's all still playing catch-up."
"So here's the plan: for the next week, we're putting the ball to the side. We're focusing on your body. Stability. Explosiveness. Mobility. Because if you're going to shine with Wigan's U21s, you'll need to last more than five minutes on that pitch."
Leo nodded, still catching his breath. "So, no more drills?"
"No, we'll still do them. But they won't be pretty. You're going to hate some of it. But trust me, Leo—when your body finally matches your mind, you'll feel like a different player."
.............
The transformation wasn't radical, but it was real.
Leaner shoulders, tighter turns, quicker bursts in the small spaces.
Leo had stopped second-guessing his touches.
His reactions were sharper now, his movement more compact and controlled.
His fitness didn't feel like it was working against him anymore—it felt like it was finally catching up.
Dawson had been patient through it all.
The gym sessions in the morning.
The hill sprints.
The cone agility drills that nearly made Leo puke the first two days.
He'd adapted the regimen day by day, never letting it feel robotic, always tying it back to something tactical, something match-related.
Dawson coached like someone who remembered what it was like to play.
And now, they were back on the pitch.
Same place. Same time. Different player.
Dawson launched a deep diagonal ball toward Leo, who had just made a diagonal run to the left side of the pitch.
The ball curved with intent, a little heavy—but Leo didn't flinch.
He watched it come over his shoulder, timed his steps perfectly, and brought it down with the outside of his boot, barely letting it touch the turf.
As it bounced up waist-high, he lifted it again with the inside of his foot and flicked it back toward Dawson in a perfect looping volley—all without the ball ever kissing the ground.
Dawson whistled, catching the pass on his chest before letting it drop.
"Well then."
Leo stood tall, breath a little heavy, but his face lit with a mixture of pride and disbelief.
He hadn't just reacted—he had controlled it. Intentionally. Cleanly.
"That," Dawson said, walking toward him with a nod, "is the body catching up to the vision."
Leo grinned, unable to stop himself.
For once, he wasn't just seeing the right moves—he was executing them.
And although it was just a small change, for the first time in a long while, he didn't feel behind.
He felt good about himself.
............
Dawson tossed the ball under his arm as the sun began to dip behind the buildings, casting the neighborhood pitch in a soft amber hue.
He turned to Leo, who was panting lightly, shirt damp from sweat and hair stuck to his forehead.
"That's enough for today," Dawson said, voice easy but firm. "You've earned an early wrap-up."
Leo blinked, caught off guard. "Seriously?"
"Seriously," Dawson nodded, heading toward his car.
"You've pushed hard these past days. Let your muscles rest—you'll need 'em."
Leo nodded, watching as Dawson strolled off toward the street, keys in hand.
His steps were unhurried, his posture relaxed.
As he reached his car, he waved over his shoulder without turning around.
Leo waved back, but as soon as Dawson turned the corner, disappearing behind the parked van across the road, Leo glanced down at the ball lying at his feet.
He looked around the empty pitch. Quiet. Still. The kind of silence that felt like it invited you to stay.
And with a grin stretching across his face, Leo scooped the ball up again.
He set out a new set of cones.
Just four this time, spaced wider than usual. He didn't need a strict drill now.
He just wanted to move.
To play. For the first time in forever, it didn't feel like a burden.
The game—the thing that had made him invisible in United's academy—now made him feel alive.
Like the ball understood him again.
He weaved through the cones, switching feet, alternating tempo, letting his instincts dictate the rhythm.
He played a one-two with the wall, turned, and fired a shot toward an imaginary top corner of the makeshift goal.
The ball bounced off the fence, and he chased after it with a wild laugh that echoed through the open space.
He wasn't thinking about scouts or trials anymore.
He was just… playing.
--
Across the street, from the shadow of a bus stop, Dawson leaned casually against a lamppost, arms crossed, watching it all unfold with a smirk tugging at the edge of his mouth.
"He stayed, didn't he?" came a low voice from beside him.
Dawson didn't turn. "Of course he did."
A tall man stepped forward from behind the shelter, the collar of his Wigan Athletic jacket turned up against the breeze.
His posture was clean and composed, but his eyes remained fixed on the boy darting across the pitch.
"Jesus," he said quietly. "He's not just seeing the angles. He feels them."
"Told you," Dawson murmured.
The man—Malachi Reid, Wigan's head of youth scouting—crossed his arms and tilted his head.
"You weren't exaggerating. You were underselling it. When you called me, I expected a rough diamond. But this? This kid wasn't even considered talented at United?"
Dawson let out a quiet chuckle.
"Didn't even have a contract. Coach Harris wrote him off as a nobody.
Told me I was wasting my time."
Malachi watched as Leo spun away from a cone and volleyed a loose ball toward the fence again, his laughter bouncing faintly through the cool air.
"How does that even happen?"
"He didn't stand out physically. He got ignored, like a dozen others. But something's clicked. His brain's firing faster than anyone else on that pitch now."
"And the execution's catching up."
"Exactly," Dawson said.
"We've been working day by day. He doesn't even know how good he is yet."
Malachi watched for another few seconds, then finally tore his gaze away.
"I've seen enough."
"You'll sign him?"
Malachi gave a slow nod.
"Not yet. But the moment he steps on the pitch with our U21s—if he holds his own like this—we're drawing up papers. I'll get the Director on standby."
Dawson finally turned to him, brow raised. "So much for 'checking out a project.'"
Malachi smirked.
"Projects don't look like that when no one's watching."
They both turned back to the pitch again, watching Leo pick up the ball and juggle it as the last rays of sunlight brushed the side of his face.
Alone, unpolished, and entirely in his own world.
But not for long.