Chapter 741: Draw
The restart died. Two minutes. Three. Stewards moving, the ref with both arms out, and the game just stopped.
@KenitraKid - the whole country has stopped breathing. i can hear my neighbours praying THROUGH THE WALL
@VatreniForever - SUBAŠIĆ RAN 80 YARDS TO CELEBRATE. THE MAN IS 33. WE ARE NOT NORMAL 🔥
@notsteveparish - genuinely why is our head coach at a World Cup quarter final wearing a Palace training top
@AtlasLionsUK - Walsh signed Kovačić. Walsh coached Kovačić. Kovačić has just killed us. you cannot write this
@GaryLineker - Whatever happens now that is the finest football match I have watched in thirty years.
@rachidcasa - my father is 71 years old and he is standing on a chair
And I stood in the middle of it and felt absolutely nothing.
Because I was already working.
"Mustapha. Mustapha. Look at me."
"Danny, he was off, he was..."
"Board. Now. Names."
He stared at me like I’d spoken Latin. Two minutes ago he’d been crying. And I watched him take whatever was going on in his chest and put it in a box and sit on the lid because that’s the job, and he’s done the job twenty years.
He got the board.
The pen didn’t work.
Biggest night in the history of Moroccan football and the man was shaking a dead biro at a whiteboard like it had personally insulted him.
"Ya latif..."
"Mustapha."
"It is not... Danny, it is not writing..."
"Mustapha." I took it off him, cracked it against the dugout, gave it back. "Breathe. Names."
That’s when Kovačić came out of the pile.
He came out grinning. Shirt half off his shoulder, hair everywhere, laughing at something somebody had yelled at him.
Then he straightened up and turned round and found me on that touchline through the smoke.
And I watched it happen to his face.
The grin went. The shoulders went. And he stood in the middle of a pitch he’d just conquered, with his own people still screaming his name behind him, and he couldn’t hold my eye for two seconds.
He looked at the grass.
Good lad. Cruel lad. Mine.
"BOSS!"
Ziyech. Halfway line, chest heaving, dragging himself back on pure temper. "BOSS! SIR!"
He wasn’t asking me. He was telling me. Give me the ball. Give me every ball. I am the only man left out here who can do anything. He’s thought that since he was fourteen and nobody’s ever talked him out of it, and God help me, that night I wouldn’t have wanted them to.
"GO ON THEN! GO!"
Ninety seconds. Eleven dead men. And a lad in green who still believed he could win a World Cup quarter-final on his own.
He dragged them up the pitch, hollering himself raw, and stood over a free kick 40 yards out and 40,000 people were on their feet before he’d even placed it, and the old man was standing again, both hands white on that rail, because that’s what he does.
Ziyech swung it. A head. A scramble. "CLEAR IT..."
Thud.
A Croatian boot hacked it off the line.
Peep. Peeeeeeeep.
120 minutes. 3-3.
Nobody left. Nobody sat.
40,000 people who should have been wrung dry came up and made a sound with nothing left in it no side, no colour, just noise for 22 men lying wrecked across the same forty yards of grass.
Fwump. Modrić got up off his bleeding knees, crossed the circle, took my exhausted kid by the arm and pulled him upright and said something in his ear I’ll never know. Sofyan nodded. Modrić held onto that arm a second longer than he had to.
Subašić went the whole length of his box to lift Ziyech off the floor.
Rakitić and El Ahmadi swapped shirts on their knees, too far gone to stand up for it.
In a café in Kenitra, forty men were standing on plastic chairs and not one glass of tea had been touched in twenty minutes.
In a barber’s shop in Zagreb, the barber was still holding the clippers. The lad in the chair had half a haircut. Neither had moved since the whistle.
And in a front room in Croydon, a man I have never met and never will turned his television up so loud the neighbours started banging on the wall.
Up in row 9, Emma wasn’t screaming any more. Both hands flat over her mouth. She caught me looking, and she didn’t smile.
She just nodded. Once.
Then the referee walked into the centre circle with a coin, and Saïss went to meet him, and so did Modrić.
Every man on that pitch turned to watch. Both benches. 40,000 people stopped roaring all at once, like a tap being shut because everybody in a football ground on this earth knows what that coin decides.
He flipped it.
Saïss’s head dropped before it landed, and Modrić pointed straight down the pitch. At the goal in front of the far corner. At the 40,000. At the flares and the smoke and the drum.
Their end.
And that corner made a sound I’ll still be hearing when I’m eighty. Not a cheer a shriek because 40,000 Croatians had just been handed the right to stand eight yards behind a goalkeeper’s shoulder and howl into the face of every Moroccan who walks up to that spot.
And ours our 40,000, the drums, the zaghrouta, the old man on his rail were a hundred yards away. Wrong end. Behind halfway. Close enough to see every kick.
Too far to do a single thing about any of them.
He flipped it again. Modrić called it again.
Croatia go first.
Six shootouts in ten go to the team that goes first. Nine managers out of ten will take it every time they’re offered. Because the second team isn’t taking penalties the second team is answering them. Every man who walks up for us from here walks up already behind. Already chasing. Doing sums in his head instead of looking at the goal.
A man kicking to win scores nine times out of ten.
A man kicking to survive barely scores six.
Same player. Same ball. Same twelve yards.
We’d lost that coin twice in ten seconds and it cost us more than the last twenty minutes of football had.
Up in the press box, forty men who write for a living had all stopped writing.
Except one. A bloke from a London paper had two headlines open on his screen, side by side, and his cursor was hovering between them.
WALSH: THE GAFFER WHO MADE HISTORY
WALSH: WHAT WAS HE THINKING?
Then the green end started to sing.
Not a chant. Not a drum. Voices. Forty thousand of them from a hundred yards away, rolling down the length of that pitch in one slow wave because if they couldn’t stand behind the goal, they’d damn well make sure their boys could hear them anyway.
Skhh. Skhh. Saïss came back through it with his jaw set and his right calf locked so hard the muscle stood out like rope.
I walked out onto the grass and didn’t let one man see my legs going.
Halfway there I saw them. Four rows below the rail two stewards and a medic in a yellow jacket going up the steps against the flow, a folding stretcher between them, the crowd parting round a knot of people bent over something I couldn’t see.
It happens. Every time. In ’06, when Germany and Argentina went to twelve yards, the hospitals took in three times the heart cases they take on a normal night.
Nobody writes that down.
I looked for a green scarf on that rail and I could not find it, and there was no time there was no time and I had to turn round and pick five men to walk sixty yards into hell.
They came in around me. Wrecked. Magnificent. Frightened.
And I didn’t look at the cards. Not first.
I looked at their bodies.
Because you don’t need a system to know who’s going to miss. More than half the men who miss tell you before they walk. The dropped head. The hand over the face. The eyes that go anywhere on God’s earth except the goal.
It’s protection. Turning away from the thing that can hurt you. Most human instinct there is, and it will lose you a World Cup.
Boussoufa had his back to that end. Not turned by accident. Turned. Sixty yards from a goal he couldn’t make himself look at.
Two of them wouldn’t meet my eye and I clocked exactly which two.
And one of them a lad who hadn’t kicked a ball all night wasn’t looking at the pitch at all. He was looking at the cameras. And I knew what he was thinking, because I’d have been thinking it at his age: if we go through, I’m in a World Cup semi-final squad, and my agent doubles my money on Monday.
I didn’t hate him for it. He’s twenty-two and he’s got a mother in Fez.
I just knew he wasn’t taking one.
Sixty yards away, Dalić was pointing at Sofyan and saying something to his assistant behind his hand.
I didn’t need Croatian for that one.
"Boss."
Sofyan. Right at my shoulder. Grass in his hair, blood dried down one shin, one hand clamped on the back of his own thigh because it was already going into spasm as he stood there.
"I go first," he said. "Give me the first one."
And the card came up before I could open my mouth.
[SOFYAN AMRABAT. 121 MINUTES PLAYED.]
[CONDITION: 4%.]
[COMPOSURE 14 → 5.]
Five.
Five out of twenty. The number was telling me in letters a foot high that not one other soul in that stadium could see that my boy was going to miss.
Then I looked at his eyes.
And his eyes weren’t on me at all.
They were locked, dead level, absolutely still, on a goal sixty yards away with three thousand people screaming behind it.
Not blinking. Not looking away. Hand shaking on his own leg, chest heaving, face grey as ash and staring straight down the barrel of the thing.
Every man who ever buried one under that kind of pressure did exactly that.
"Amrabat’s asking for the first one."
"He can’t take that. Look at him, he can barely stand..."
"If he misses this, that’s four years, Chris. That’s the whole thing. Four years."
"...you didn’t have to say it."
"I know."
The number said he was gone.
His body said he was the only man out there who wasn’t.
And in sixteen years of this, I have never once had to choose between them.
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