Chapter 477: The Trigger and the Blade II: Stoke Again
Chapter 477: The Trigger and the Blade II: Stoke Again
Three days later, Stoke. Wednesday night. Wind, rain, the bet365 Stadium, and the particular Midlands brand of football that involved long throws, aerial duels, and the sincere belief that thirty-yard passes were an affectation.
This was Pato and Bojan’s night.
I rested the spine Rodríguez, Benteke, Navas, Milivojević. The front four was Townsend on the right, Bojan in the ten, Gnabry on the left, and Pato up front. Neves and McArthur in midfield. The partnership that had dismantled Burnley, reunited against Bojan’s former club.
The conditions were filthy. The rain drove sideways across the pitch, the wind swirling unpredictably, the ball skidding off the soaked surface like a stone skipping on water. The Stoke defenders who had been beaten 5-1 at Selhurst Park in August were playing with the desperate fury of men who remembered the humiliation and had been thinking about this fixture for three months.
Bojan was quiet in the warm-up. More focused than usual. The nervous tic with his boots tying, retying, adjusting was pronounced. He had spent two seasons at Stoke, had loved the supporters, had been devastated when injuries ended his time there. The fans in the Boothen End had sung his name. They had given him something he hadn’t felt since Barcelona belonging. And now he was coming back to score against them. Football’s cruelty was not always directed at the losers. Sometimes the winners suffered too.
Pato scored first, twenty-third minute. The same pattern as Burnley the same telepathic, uncanny, impossible connection. Bojan received from Neves, thirty yards out, three defenders closing. He didn’t look up.
He didn’t need to. His hips turned the fraction of a rotation that Pato had learned to read the way a sailor reads the wind and the ball was played into the channel behind the Stoke left-back. Pato was already running.
Had been running before the pass was conceived, the anticipation so far ahead of the event that it looked like time travel. He collected in stride, rounded the goalkeeper with a touch that was almost lazy, and rolled the ball into the empty net.
Stoke City 0–1 Crystal Palace. Pato. 23 minutes.
Pato pointed at Bojan. The handshake. The trigger and the blade.
Stoke equalised before half-time from a corner a scrappy, contested, wet-Wednesday header that the Potteries had been manufacturing since the days of Stanley Matthews. The kind of goal that made purists weep and pragmatists shrug. It was 1-1, and the Stoke fans were bouncing.
The second half was Bojan’s masterpiece. Playing against his former club, in front of supporters who still loved him, he produced a performance that was equal parts tribute and farewell.
In the fifty-eighth minute, he received the ball on the edge of the box, his back to goal, a Stoke defender tight on his shoulder. He let the ball run across his body the same touch he had produced against Burnley, the same whisper-soft roll and played a reverse pass to Gnabry that was so disguised, so perfectly weighted, that the German simply had to side-foot it past the goalkeeper.
The ball had been travelling towards goal before the Stoke defence had registered that Bojan had released it.
Stoke City 1–2 Crystal Palace. Gnabry. 58 minutes.
Bojan turned to the Stoke fans behind the goal the Boothen End, his old end, the stand where they had chanted his name on Saturday afternoons and bowed. Not applauded, not waved. Bowed.
A deep, respectful, almost formal bow, his hand over his heart, his head lowered. The gesture of a man saying goodbye to people who had made him feel at home during the loneliest years of his career.
The Stoke fans stood and applauded. Not the polite, half-hearted applause you give an opposing player who’s had a good game. A full, sustained, genuine standing ovation, seventeen thousand people acknowledging a shared history that existed outside the scoreline.
For ten seconds, the bet365 Stadium stopped being a football ground and became something gentler a place where two sets of people remembered what it felt like to care about each other, regardless of the colour of the shirt.
I stood on the touchline and watched, and something tightened in my throat. Beside me, Sarah had stopped writing on her clipboard. Kevin Bray had put down his notepad. Even Marcus, in the gantry, had gone quiet in the earpiece.
"Beautiful," Sarah said softly.
"Yes," I said. "It is."
In the seventy-ninth minute, Pato completed his brace. Bojan who else played a lobbed pass over the Stoke defence, a delivery that existed in the ambiguous space between a cross and a through ball, a ball that could only be conceived by a mind that saw football in dimensions other players couldn’t access.
Pato, arriving at the back post, met it on the volley the connection clean, the ball flying past the goalkeeper’s dive with a force that shook the net.
Stoke City 1–3 Crystal Palace. Pato. 79 minutes.
Five goals in three starts together. The trigger and the blade. Two former wonderkids who had been broken by expectation and rebuilt by each other.
On the bus home, Pato and Bojan sat together at the back, sharing earphones, watching something on Pato’s phone, communicating in small nods and half-smiles. They didn’t need to speak. They had said everything on the pitch.
Emma called. "Bojan’s bow made me cry," she said.
"You cry at everything."
"I cry at beauty, Danny. There’s a difference." A pause, the sound of her shifting on the sofa. "When are you home?"
"Two hours."
"I’ll wait up. I made pasta."
"You can’t cook."
"I boiled water and added sauce from a jar."
"That doesn’t count."
"It absolutely counts. Hurry home."
I smiled, put the phone down, and watched the motorway lights slide past the window. Two matches.
Four points. Old Trafford conquered again not with a 3-0 masterclass this time, but with the quiet, mature, authoritative performance of a team that didn’t need to shout anymore.
And Stoke illuminated by two men who had found their second act in a football club from South London that nobody had expected to be third in the Premier League.
The December gauntlet was underway. Five matches still to come before New Year’s Day. But tonight, heading south through the English darkness, the DB11 waiting at Beckenham to take me home to Dulwich, to Emma and her terrible pasta and her beautiful warmth, I allowed myself a moment.
The villain had returned to Old Trafford and left with a point. The blade had scored twice at Stoke. And somewhere in the directors’ box at the Theatre of Dreams, I wondered if Sir Alex Ferguson had been watching, and if the old man had given that same slow, imperceptible nod.
I liked to think he had.
[Season Status December 5th.]
[Overall: P31 W26 D3 L2. GF: 74. GA: 27.]
[Premier League: P15 W10 D3 L2. Points: 33. Position: 3rd.]
[Pato-Bojan: 5 goals in 3 starts. The trigger and the blade.]
[Walsh villain record hostile aways: P5 W2 D3 L0. Unbeaten. Old Trafford: P2 W1 D1. 4 from 6.]
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Super Gift.
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