After Leo passed the ball to the right-back, he didn't stop.
His feet continued moving, his head scanning the field for openings, even as the game picked up pace around him.
The ball was laid off to the right-back, but Leo had already seen the next move.
The opposing midfielder was closing in, sensing danger and rushing in from behind.
Leo felt the pressure but didn't panic.
With a sudden change of pace, Leo shifted direction, carrying the ball with intent.
The midfielder rushed toward him, but Leo anticipated it perfectly.
At the last possible moment, he flicked the ball with the inside of his foot—just enough to slip it through the tiny gap between the oncoming defender's legs.
The nutmeg caught the midfielder off guard, and the ball sped past him before he could react.
Leo sprinted forward, cutting toward the left with a clear line ahead of him.
The left winger, who was making his own run, met the ball as it arrived just in time.
With a swift, first-time strike, he sent the ball towards the far corner of the goal.
It was a clean shot, one that had the keeper scrambling to dive toward it, his fingertips grazing the ball as it sailed wide.
"Woah, that was filthy!" one of Leo's teammates shouted, a grin spreading across his face as he slapped Leo on the back.
"Nutmegged him, mate!" another player laughed, still in disbelief at how smoothly it had all come together.
Dawson, on the sideline, allowed himself a small smirk of approval, watching the play unfold.
"That's the vision we've been working on," he muttered to himself.
Nolan, however, stood with his arms crossed, an unreadable expression on his face.
He didn't show outward praise, but he was paying closer attention.
"Good pass, good move," he admitted quietly, though he added under his breath, "But let's see how he handles the next one."
The left winger jogged back toward Leo, who was already looking for the next opening.
"Good effort, mate," the winger said, his smile wide. "We'll get it next time."
Leo gave a slight nod, a quiet confidence building within him.
The game felt different now. He wasn't just participating; he was a part of the flow.
The nutmeg had been instinctive, a sign of how much his mind had started to see.
The tempo of the scrimmage rose, but Leo felt strangely detached from the rush of it all.
Not distant — just tuned into something else.
As he jogged into the middle third, his head kept swiveling subtly, catching glances of where each player was and, more importantly, where they were going.
But Leo wasn't just watching.
He was listening.
The shuffle of boots.
The thud of the ball.
The breathless grunts from players pushing through fatigue.
Even the short callouts — disguised communication, urgent cries for the ball, or quick warnings from defenders.
It all painted a picture clearer than sight alone.
He scanned again.
Not for the ball — that would come.
He was scanning for space.
For movement.
For rhythm.
The ball came bouncing toward him from a loose clearance, and the press arrived almost instantly — two players snapping toward him like a trap.
But Leo didn't flinch.
One slight touch with the inside of his foot drew the first player's weight to the wrong side.
A feint with his shoulder made the second bite, lunging in early.
He let the ball roll just a fraction further than expected before nudging it gently behind him with his heel, turning out of the pressure like he'd melted through it.
The pass went backward, calm and safe, but the escape left even his teammates shaking their heads.
"How's he slipping out of those?" one of them muttered, half in awe.
A few more sequences followed — Leo drifting in and out of pockets, occasionally raising a hand like he wanted the ball, only to drop away from it.
Sometimes, he looked right but passed left.
Other times, he didn't even need to move — just his eyes shifting one way fooled the marker into drifting out of position.
Leo played with intention and misdirection, like someone painting strokes only he could see.
Nolan watched from the sideline, arms folded, but his jaw was slightly slack now.
The boy wasn't just composed — he was orchestrating space. Never panicking. Always two beats ahead.
"That's not normal," he muttered.
Dawson stood beside him, his eyes still locked on Leo.
"Told you."
Nolan let out a soft breath.
"He's not flashy. Not loud. But the way he plays… that's a Busquets-type mind. He doesn't need to do everything — just the right thing. I can work with that. I—"
He stopped mid-sentence.
Leo had just received the ball near the center circle, his first touch killing the pace of it perfectly.
One of the opposition midfielders tried to anticipate a sideways pass, stepping into the lane.
But Leo didn't look sideways.
Instead, he opened his hips, dipped slightly — just enough to draw the backline into hesitation — then sliced the ball with the inside of his foot.
A single, deliberate, devastating pass.
It tore between two defenders like a threaded needle, hitting Ezra — who had peeled off his marker — in perfect stride.
Ezra took one touch forward and was in on goal.
The sideline exploded. Shouts from both teams — commands, curses, reactions — but all of it faded for a second as Nolan stared, mouth half-open, then turned slowly to Dawson.
"Jesus," he muttered. "That... wasn't luck."
Dawson's arms were crossed, but the corner of his mouth twitched upward.
"Nope."
Ezra's shot thundered into the side netting, just outside the post, but not a single player cared about the miss.
They were still thinking about the pass.
Even Nolan. Especially Nolan.
And Leo? He had already jogged back into position. Focused. Unfazed.
Nolan watched intently as Leo controlled the ball in midfield once more, his usual composure in tight spaces evident.
The kid was brilliant with his vision, constantly scanning, always a step ahead of the game.
He slipped a quick pass to the right wing, and immediately, Leo took a step back, watching the flow of play unfold with a keen eye. His ability to read the game was beyond impressive.
The opposition's defenders were closing in on him, but Leo, calm as ever, sidestepped and feinted, drawing them in with a little shake of his head and a slight shift of his body.
The defenders fell for it, unable to predict his next move. He laid a quick ball to the winger, and the attack continued, but Nolan's mind was already racing.
He turned sharply to Malachi and Dawson, jaw tight.
"Why haven't we signed this kid yet? Why's he even in this session with the U21s if he's not one of ours?"
Malachi just shook his head and chuckled under his breath like a man who'd been expecting that question all day.
Dawson grinned and pointed to the pitch. "Ask him."
Nolan followed his gesture as Leo took up a supporting position again.
The boy never stopped scanning, always adjusting — an orchestra conductor disguised as a teenager in borrowed boots.
But that's when Nolan saw it.
His eyes narrowed. The rest of the pitch might have been watching the ball, but Nolan's attention had drifted elsewhere — to the moments after Leo made a pass.
The way his posture dipped slightly, like he was catching his breath.
The split-second delay before he changed direction again.
The subtle tightness in his shoulders and the way he occasionally stopped dead instead of drifting into another zone like he should have.
And there it was. A glaring truth wrapped in polished talent.
"He's not physically tuned yet," Nolan muttered, more to himself than anyone else.
"He's thinking two, three steps ahead — but his body can only follow one and a half."
Malachi's head turned slightly at that, acknowledging the observation.
Dawson, still smiling, didn't argue.
"Now you see it."
Nolan nodded slowly.
"Yeah. That's why he doesn't take off after a one-two. Why he doesn't sprint into the final third? You can tell he sees the second phase — sometimes even the third — but the moment his body tries to catch up with his brain, it... stalls."
Dawson crossed his arms. "It's been improving. He's not raw. Just undercooked. The kid's never trained for this level. Hell, he wasn't even training for any level two weeks ago. That intelligence? That passing range? You can't teach that."
"But the engine," Nolan added, "needs upgrading."
Dawson nodded. "Exactly. And that's the only thing holding him back. It's not technique. Not confidence. Just legs."
As Leo received the ball again, this time with an opportunity to strike, Nolan leaned forward in his seat, eyes narrowed.
The opening was clear, just inside the box. The defenders had shifted enough for Leo to take a crack at goal.
Leo's eyes widened as he saw the chance — but as he took the shot, something was off.
The strike wasn't composed.
The ball sliced wide, missing the goal by a good margin, much to the frustration of both the player and the coaching staff.
Nolan's frown deepened. He turned to Dawson, who had been watching the same sequence unfold.