Chapter 82: Stoppage Time Fever.
The roar had barely died down when the whistle pierced the night air again.
Blackpool tapped the ball forward from the restart, but the DW Stadium was transformed, every clearance from the visitors now met with a chorus of whistles and every touch of blue swallowed under the chanting storm of red and white.
"Five minutes of added time left for play," the commentator’s voice carried over the broadcast, the tension evident.
"And Wigan are not settling for a point. They want this, and they believe it’s theirs."
Leo, granted the freedom he wanted, was everywhere.
He snapped into tackles, tracked back, and then in the very next breath, was the one carrying the ball forward, arms outstretched, urging the fans to lift their voices even higher.
"Look at him go, now. He’s taken control of this match and he’s doing it well!"
The first wave came down the right as Leo slipped a clever ball between two defenders, releasing Darikwa down the channel.
The cross that followed was whipped in hard, Fletcher rising again, but this time the header skimmed just wide of the far post.
Groans turned into renewed applause, the fans clapping them back into position.
"Nearly! Oh, that was close! Fletcher, almost with the brace to win it."
The Blackpool coach, sensing the shift in momentum, told his men from the touchline to be calm and defend, taking the safe approach, but Wigan pressed the restart.
Immediately after beginning with the goal kick, Wigan, spurred on by their fans, won the ball back, with Leo intercepting a loose pass in midfield and bursting forward.
He waited for no man, cutting across the approaching Blackpool player as he drove at the heart of Blackpool’s defence, and suddenly the crowd was on its feet.
"Leo again, twisting, turning, still Leo!"
The teenager went on, slipping the ball behind the Blackpool defence, but a desperate boot nicked the ball away.
Still, the ball didn’t go too far as it fell to Max Power, who took it in stride, sending the ball back into the box, until the rebound rolled loose, and Leo, first to it, lashed from distance.
The strike thundered against a defender’s thigh, cannoning back out, but the noise inside the DW only grew.
"They can smell blood now! Blackpool are hanging on!"
The fans behind the goal pounded the hoardings, chanting Leo’s name, singing for Fletcher, for the badge.
It was a siege.
The clock ticked, but Leo refused to slow.
His shirt clung damp to his back, but his legs kept pumping.
Another interception, another dart forward.
The visitors were staggering now, clearing lines without aim, with their supporters being drowned by the storm as Wigan won another corner.
The stadium lifted once more as Leo trotted over, chest heaving, but eyes sharp.
This time, no fancy curl at goal, he drove it flat, nearpost, where Thelo Aasgaard flicked on.
The ball whistled across the six-yard box, inches from a tap-in, but no one got to it.
"Agonisingly close again! How are Blackpool surviving this?" the commentary came again as the Blackpool keeper smothered the ball.
"Chance after chance! You have to say, it feels like something’s coming..."
The DW shook as chants thundered through the stands again. And still, Leo came.
Always Leo.
And as the clock ticked into the final breaths of normal time, the DW, a cauldron of noise, was about to get what they wanted, because every clearance Blackpool made seemed to fall straight back to Wigan, and every second the ball was at Leo’s feet, the noise somehow grew louder, like the entire stadium believed he would conjure something.
And then he had it again.
The youngster picked it up just beyond the halfway line, blue and white shirts peeling wide, but none daring to call for it.
The fans rose as one, sensing the moment as Leo drove forward, head up, the Blackpool defenders retreating step by step, their line sagging under his advance.
"Here he comes again, Leo Calderon, carrying Wigan forward!" the commentator bellowed.
From outside the box, he shaped to cross, swinging his body like he was about to whip it in, and Dougall lunged, throwing himself sideways, legs raised in anticipation.
But Leo’s eyes had already read it.
At the last heartbeat, he slipped the ball under Dougall’s legs with a devilish touch and let it roll perfectly into his stride.
Gasps shot through the stadium.
"Brilliant... oh, that is outrageous!"
And without hesitation, Leo let fly.
His left foot cracked through the ball, sending it arrowing towards the near post.
But just as it looked like it might trouble the keeper, Marvin Ekpiteta threw himself in front.
The ball smacked against his body and spun away, but in that same instant, a chorus of shouts erupted.
"Handball! Handball!" the fans behind the goal screamed, arms waving furiously with the Wigan players already sprinting towards the referee, pointing, gesturing.
Leo himself had stopped mid-run, hands raised in appeal, and the whistle blew.
Sharp. Decisive.
The referee pointed straight to the spot.
"RAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!"
The stadium exploded.
The noise was deafening, uncontainable, as if the entire DW had been waiting for this very eruption.
"Penalty to Wigan! The referee didn’t hesitate! He’s given it right away!" the commentator roared.
Leo was instantly swarmed, Fletcher ruffling his hair, Cousins, who had come on for Mclean, slapping his back and Broadhead, pulling him into a half-hug, while Dawson on the touchline was pumping both fists uncharacteristically.
The fans behind the goal were wild, almost surging against the barriers.
The Blackpool players, on the other hand, stormed forward, surrounding the referee, arms out, shouting.
Ekpiteta, red-faced, insisted it had hit his chest, but when the replay came on the big screen, the groans from the away end told the truth.
The ball had caught his forearm as he twisted, just enough to leave no doubt.
"It’s clear on the replay, he’s unlucky maybe, but that’s a penalty all day. And now, in stoppage time, a chance for Wigan to win it!"
Max Power scooped the ball up, walking quickly towards the spot, but halfway there, he slowed as a thought flashed across his face.
Then he turned, tossing the ball gently towards Tendayi Darikwa.
"You take it," Power said with a grin.
Darikwa caught it, eyes flashing, a smile tugging at his lips.
He held the ball close for a moment, then tucked it under his arm and strode to the penalty spot where the referee was busy pushing Blackpool players out of the area, waving them away with stern gestures, while the rest of the stadium held its collective breath.
Darikwa placed the ball down, carefully, deliberately.
He adjusted it twice, then stepped back, his chest rising and falling in a steady rhythm.
Behind the goal, the Wigan fans were shaking, waving scarves, screaming encouragement.
"This... this to win it for Wigan, in the very last seconds..." The commentator’s voice was thick with drama.
The whistle blew, and Darikwa stepped forward, powering through the ball, smashing it low to the keeper’s left.
But the Blackpool goalkeeper guessed right, diving and pushing it away with strong hands.
Gasps of heartbreak tore through the stadium, the away end already up in celebration.
But it wasn’t over.
The rebound dropped right back into Darikwa’s path, and without breaking stride, he swung his right boot, meeting it clean on the volley as the ball rocketed past the scrambling keeper and into the net.
GOAL.
This time, the eruption shook the ground.
"HE’S DONE IT! DARIKWA ON THE SECOND TRY! WIGAN HAVE TURNED IT AROUND!" the commentary cracked with sheer noise.
Darikwa didn’t even think.
He tore away, ripped off in a sprint, and leapt straight into the crowd, swallowed by a wall of fans.
Arms wrapped around him, hands reaching from every angle as his mates chased after him, joining the madness, all swallowed into one great heaving pile of limbs and screams.
The stadium was an earthquake, fans leaping, hugging strangers and scarves flying, and after what felt like minutes, Darikwa climbed back out, grabbing his soaked shirt from the corner flag where he had dropped it in his run, and wore it.
Then, he tucked the match ball under his shirt, sucked his thumb, and pointed to the stands where the cameras panned instantly, and there was his wife, tears in her eyes, clutching their children in the upper stand.
"Look at that. What a moment for him, what a moment for Wigan Athletic," the co-commentator breathed as Darikwa jogged back to the centre circle, still holding the ball under his shirt.
He laid it gently onto the kickoff spot, but Blackpool’s shoulders sagged.
They barely jogged forward.
Their eyes were down, legs heavy.
And as soon as the restart was tapped, the referee lifted the whistle to his lips.
One shrill blast. Full-time.
The DW detonated.
Players roared, fists pumping, embracing each other while the fans thundered in delight.
Dawson pumped another fist, shaking hands with the Blackpool coach before walking onto the pitch, arms in the air and already swept up in the moment.
"What a game!" the commentary came with a laugh.
"What a finish! From 2-1 down in the eighty-fifth minute... to 3-2 and winners at full-time. Wigan Athletic, heart, belief, and that never-say-die spirit, have turned this into an unforgettable night!"