Become A Football Legend-Chapter 291: Pressure

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Chapter 291: Pressure

The silence sharpened.

"17 years," he said. "17 years without a trophy."

He looked around the room, making sure every player felt it.

"When do you think it happens... if not now?"

No one answered.

They didn’t need to.

"We need a goal," he continued. "And we will get it—but only if we are sharper."

He pointed toward Johnson.

"Be more direct."

Toward Solanke.

"Move quicker. Anticipate."

His hand cut through the air again.

"The ball has to move faster. You are giving them time to settle, time to organize."

Then his voice dropped slightly.

"And listen—don’t give them another one."

That part was firm.

Serious.

"Do not let them go two up."

He held the moment.

"If it stays one-nil into the 80th... 85th minute..."

He tapped his chest.

"...we are still alive."

His voice rose again.

"But only if you stay in the game."

He stepped back slightly, taking one last look at his team.

"This is the night," he said.

"The night you change that history."

A pause.

Then quieter—

"But only if you take it."

The room shifted.

You could feel it.

Focus returning.

Belief rebuilding.

* * *

In the tunnel, both teams gathered again, forming two lines beneath the bright stadium lights that spilled down from above. Frankfurt stood composed, quietly confident, while Tottenham carried a sharper edge now, a sense of urgency threaded through their posture.

The referee checked his watch.

The players stepped forward.

And together, they walked back out into the roaring San Mamés night—

ready for the second half.

* * *

The teams emerged from the tunnel to a fresh surge of noise, the second half ready to begin under the bright lights of San Mamés. The referee glanced at both captains, checked his watch—

—and blew the whistle.

Frankfurt got the second half underway.

Ekitike tapped it back immediately, and the ball began to circulate through the backline. Koch took a touch, moved it across to Theate, who passed it on again, Frankfurt calmly working it backward as Tottenham stepped up to press once more.

The ball rolled to Trapp.

And instantly—

pressure.

Solanke sprinted toward him, closing him down fast, angling his run to cut off the easy outlet.

"Good press from Solanke!" Fletcher called. 𝗳𝗿𝐞𝕖𝘄𝗲𝕓𝗻𝚘𝚟𝕖𝐥.𝚌𝕠𝕞

Trapp shaped his body as if he was about to launch it long, drawing Solanke in that extra step—

then shifted it sharply to his right at the last second, sending the striker past him.

"Lovely composure from Trapp," Bale said. "Doesn’t panic."

He played it out to Kristensen, who moved it quickly inside to Skhiri, and Skhiri turned under light pressure before feeding it forward into Larsson, now positioned just ahead of the halfway line.

Tottenham’s midfield began to compress again.

But Larsson didn’t hold it.

One touch—

then a flick forward.

Into Lukas.

"Here he is again," Fletcher said, his tone rising slightly.

Lukas received it cleanly and immediately drove forward, pushing the ball ahead of him as he accelerated into space. In front of him stood Bissouma, holding his ground, body low, arms slightly out, trying to contain rather than commit.

Lukas kept going.

Step after step.

Touch after touch.

He could feel it.

Bissouma wasn’t diving in.

"He can’t tackle there," Bale pointed out. "He’s on a yellow—he has to be careful."

So Lukas pushed.

And pushed again.

Driving straight at him.

Bissouma retreated, trying to delay, trying to hold the line until help arrived—but that hesitation, that fraction of doubt, gave Lukas exactly what he needed.

Bentancur began to close from the side.

And that was the trigger.

Lukas glanced up.

Saw the movement.

Knauff.

Already making the run.

Curving just behind the Tottenham back line.

And without breaking stride, Lukas struck the ball with the outside of his right foot, slicing it diagonally across the pitch in a perfectly weighted switch.

"What a ball—!" Fletcher exclaimed.

The pass flew over the midfield line and dropped toward the far side, where Knauff brought it down cleanly on his chest, cushioning it into his path.

Now it was him—

against Udogie.

One-on-one.

Knauff slowed for half a second, squaring up to the defender before nudging the ball forward and bursting down the flank, using his pace to create just enough separation.

Udogie tried to recover.

Tried to stay tight.

But Knauff had the angle.

He didn’t hesitate.

He drove a cross into the box.

Low and fast.

"Danger here—!"

Ekitike attacked it.

Exploding into the space between the defenders, rising as the ball came in.

Romero rose with him.

Both went for it.

Both committed fully.

The contact came—

A glancing header.

The ball flew toward goal—

"Ekitike—!"

It clipped the top of the bar.

Just enough.

A sharp metallic sound as it skimmed across the surface—

and out.

"OOHHH!" Fletcher shouted. "So close! Inches away from two!"

Bale exhaled sharply. "That is a huge chance. That’s a massive chance at the start of the second half."

Ekitike landed and immediately grabbed his head, disbelief written across his face as he turned away from goal.

He knew.

That should have been it.

Behind them, the Frankfurt fans had already begun to celebrate—only to fall into a collective groan as the ball went out for a goal kick.

On the touchline—

Postecoglou erupted.

Arms thrown wide, shouting instructions, his voice cutting through the chaos as he turned toward the pitch.

"What are you doing?!" he barked.

He pointed sharply toward midfield.

Then at Bissouma.

Then at Sarr.

"You two! Together! Together!"

His voice rose again.

"Double him! Double him!"

He gestured aggressively toward Lukas.

"That’s where it’s coming from! Stop it!"

Fletcher picked up on it immediately. "Postecoglou not happy at all—he’s demanding more protection in midfield."

"And he’s right," Bale added. "They’re giving Lukas too much room to carry the ball, especially with Bissouma holding back on that yellow."

Postecoglou shook his head, still visibly frustrated as play reset.

Because that chance—

that moment—

had said everything.

Frankfurt were not just defending their lead.

They were threatening to end the game.

The warning from Frankfurt didn’t slow Tottenham down—it sharpened them.

From the restart after that missed header, Spurs pushed even higher, their urgency now unmistakable. Bentancur began dictating the tempo more aggressively, constantly showing for the ball, constantly demanding it, while Sarr drifted between the lines, trying to find pockets of space that Frankfurt’s midfield screen was beginning to struggle to close as quickly as before.

"Tottenham have come out with real intent here," Fletcher said as the ball moved quickly from side to side. "You can feel the pressure building."

And it was.

Wave after wave.

Johnson stayed wide on the right, stretching Kristensen, while Udogie did the same on the opposite flank. Crosses came in—some cleared by Koch, others gathered by Trapp—but the pattern was clear. Tottenham were tightening their grip.

Still—

Frankfurt had their moments.

And when those moments came, they came through Lukas.

In the 49th minute, Skhiri slipped a pass into him just inside Tottenham’s half. Bissouma stepped forward again, cautious now, measured, but Lukas didn’t slow. He shifted the ball from his right to his left in one quick motion, then slipped it straight through Bissouma’s legs with a perfectly timed touch.

A clean nutmeg.

"OOHH!" Fletcher reacted instantly. "He’s done him there!"

Bale laughed under his breath. "That’s outrageous. That is confidence."

Lukas didn’t stop—he burst past him, driving forward again, but this time Bentancur arrived early, stepping across to halt the run before it could turn into something more dangerous.

Still, the message was clear.

He was growing into the half.