Β©Novel Buddy
The System Makes Me a Player-Chapter 52
Kelvin went silent for a moment. The realization was setting in. ππΏπ²ππ πππ»πΌπ―ππ.ππΌπΊ
With Erick, every play was a war. The tension, the rivalry, the emotional pressure... all of it influenced the match. Erick reacted with intensity, with anger, with wounded pride.
But Oliveira was different. He was cold. Technical. A pure defender β no ego in the play, no provocation. He didnβt play to humiliate. He played to do the job. It was like facing a wall β rigid, calculated, but soulless.
The difference was subtle, but crucial.
The game resumed.
Kelvin positioned himself wider, sometimes switching places with Felipe to confuse the marking. He wasnβt going to force the direct confrontation with Oliveira the same way. He was going to test his patience.
Rodrigo got the ball in the middle and turned quickly, finding Ian on the right. Ian passed to JoΓ£o Vitor, who advanced and crossed it low. Kazana pulled the defender, and Kelvin cut in from behind.
But Oliveira read the play β closed the space and cut it off again. The ball went out for a throw-in. Kelvin smiled.
"Youβre paying attention, huh?"
Next play, Kelvin dropped deeper. Received the ball almost at midfield. Faked like heβd drive forward, but held. Lured Oliveira into making a mistake. And he came. But before that, Erickβs presence appeared behind Oliveira and... Kelvin didnβt flinch. Oliveiraβs presence was strong β but it wasnβt Erick.
A quick touch to Ian, then a fast one-two. Oliveira was forced out of position. At that moment, Kelvin was already moving β sprinting into the empty space behind.
"Now!", Felipe shouted, launching it.
The ball was perfect.
Kelvin controlled it with his chest, set it up, and finished first-time, across goal.
GOAL.
Levi didnβt even have time to move. The ball hit the net, and the coach blew the whistle hard.
"THATβS IT, KELVIN!", he shouted, excited. "That kind of reading! Intelligence! Movement! Thatβs how you dismantle a strong defense!"
Kelvin looked at Kazana, who gave a thumbs up with a slight grin.
The switch had flipped.
It wasnβt about power. It wasnβt about flashy dribbles. It was about reading the game, breaking the structure, understanding the opponentβs pattern. Oliveira was strong, technical, well-positioned... but too cold. And that was his weak spot. Against instinctive and creative players, heβd suffer if he didnβt adapt.
For the rest of the training, Kelvin was a different player. Stopped trying to do it all alone. Started using short passes, quick one-twos, diagonal runs. He used Oliveira as bait, pulled the marking, and created space. Twice, he left Kazana one-on-one with the keeper β one goal, one off the post.
Oliveira watched from afar.
Every play from Kelvin now seemed less about individual brilliance and more about strategy. That didnβt annoy him β on the contrary. The defender wasnβt driven by vanity or personal duels. He didnβt play to humiliate or be applauded. He was the type of player who saw the pitch as a puzzle: positioning, coverage, timing. It was all calculation.
But at that moment... he felt his math was failing.
He could see what was happening. Kelvin had changed.
βHe stopped trying to beat me,β Oliveira thought. βNow he wants to deceive me.β
It was subtle, but deadly.
Before, Sanuβs winger came straight at him, always seeking the duel. Now, he floated. Left the marking zone, dropped back like a midfielder, drew attention and β suddenly β the pass came. Oliveira felt like he was being pulled by a magnet out of his comfort zone. And for someone methodical like him... that was dangerous.
In the last play, Kelvin didnβt even touch the ball. He just made a diagonal run and called for a pass that never came. But the movement pulled Oliveira, who followed on instinct.
"Damn", he muttered, realizing it too late.
The opened space left Rodrigo free to break through. A pass from Felipe broke the line. Dante tried to cover, but Kazana was already in the box. He shot across, low.
GOALKEEPER SAVED!
But Oliveira didnβt even celebrate.
He was already turning away, thinking about what he had done.
βHe pulled me out of position again. Without even touching the ball.β
Oliveira didnβt show frustration on his face. But inside, he was replaying every step.
βIf I mark man-to-man, he floats and opens space. If I stay in line, he cuts behind. Heβs testing me like Iβve never been tested in any training.β
The coachβs final whistle blew. Cheers and laughter echoed among the starters. Kelvin and Kazana high-fived, Rodrigo smiled satisfied, Levi complained about the heat.
And Oliveira?
Silent.
He walked to the edge of the pitch, grabbed his water bottle, and sat in the goalβs shadow. There, just for a moment, he allowed himself a fraction of doubt.
Kelvin had learned to wait, to hide, to appear at the right moment. He was the kind of forward that dismantled a system without making noise.
But Oliveira wasnβt the kind of player to accept being dismantled.
He sat there, head lowered, until a shadow fell beside him.
"You read the game well today", It was Dante.
Oliveira looked up. Nodded, expressionless.
"But Kelvin got under your skin, didnβt he?"
Silence for a few seconds.
"No", he replied. "He pulled me out of my comfort zone. Thatβs different"
Dante raised an eyebrow.
"What are you gonna do?"
"Study him"
Dante laughed.
"Youβre weird, you know that?"
"And thatβs exactly why he wonβt get past me next time"
On the other side of the field, while everyone else was leaving, Oliveira stayed a few minutes longer. He grabbed his phone, opened his notes app, and typed:
βKelvin. Tendency to float between lines. Starts plays by dropping deep β seeks quick one-twos. Acceleration only comes after second pass. Uses Kazana as distraction and Felipe as lateral support. Must force him into dead zones. Right side of the field, on his weak foot. Without space to face forward, he loses 70% of impact.β
Saved. Put the phone away. Took a deep breath.
It wasnβt anger. It was just strategy.
Kelvin had won that afternoon. But Oliveira... was already building the counterattack.







