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Limitless Pitch-Chapter 77 – Broken Lines
Chapter 77: Chapter 77 – Broken Lines
The Neo Química Arena was a cauldron at full boil, a roaring beast of noise and fury. From the steep, packed stands came the deafening roar of forty thousand Corinthians fans, their voices merging into a tidal wave of sound, as if they had waited a decade just to drown Palmeiras in sheer, unrelenting noise. Flares erupted behind the home goal, their crimson glow cutting through the night, casting the air in thick, swirling red smoke. The stadium pulsed with movement—flags waved like sabers, their edges flickering under the floodlights, while the deep, menacing rhythm of drums thundered through the concrete, a second heartbeat syncing with the frantic energy of the crowd.
Thiago stepped onto the pitch and felt it immediately.
The venom in the air.
The weight of the moment.
This wasn’t just any final.
This was Corinthians.
And this was their home.
The second leg of the Campeonato Paulista final had begun, and Palmeiras were stepping into the lion’s den.
Palmeiras wore white tonight—clean, sharp, almost too pristine under the glare of the floodlights. But they looked tense, their movements stiff, their passes just a fraction off. Thiago could sense it immediately—in the way Rafael’s usually crisp deliveries arrived half a second too slow, in the way Nando hesitated on his first touch, his body angled defensively as if bracing for impact.
Corinthians?
They didn’t hesitate.
From the first whistle, they pressed like a pack of wolves, their hunger palpable. One, two, three men collapsing on the ball at once, suffocating space before Palmeiras could breathe. Their midfielders hunted in pairs, snapping at Rafael’s heels, clipping at Nando’s shins with sharp, tactical fouls. Thiago, hugging the left touchline, barely touched the ball in the first five minutes, his runs met with immediate pressure, his every movement shadowed.
Then came the first cut.
6th minute.
A throw-in for Corinthians deep on their right flank. Quick hands, a fast restart—Palmeiras were slow to react, their midfielders still scrambling to recover shape. The ball found Corinthians’ wiry number 17, a winger with electric pace and a predator’s instinct. Under pressure, he spun in one fluid motion, his hips swiveling as he left Vinícius stumbling, the palmeiras fullback’s desperate lunge meeting only air.
Thiago sprinted back, his lungs already burning, but the gap was already there—exploited with surgical precision.
One touch to steady himself.
A low, driven cross into the box, the ball skimming the turf like a blade.
Their striker dummied it at the near post, a clever feint that froze the center-backs—and the trailing midfielder, charging from deep, met it full-on.
Thump.
The strike was low, brutal, arrowed into the bottom left corner. The net bulged.
1–0.
The stadium cracked open. Red flares erupted anew, their smoke curling into the night sky. The drums pounded, their rhythm primal, and a chant rippled through the stands like thunder, shaking the very foundations of the arena.
Palmeiras tried to reset, but their nerves were frayed.
14th minute.
Thiago finally got on the ball.
Rafael, fighting through the press, found him with a rare, successful pass through the middle. Thiago took it cleanly, his first touch instinctive, the ball glued to his boot as he turned. The Corinthians fullback closed fast, his breath hot on Thiago’s neck.
A feint—Thiago’s shoulders dipped, selling the cut inside.
Then, explosion.
He accelerated down the line, his legs pumping, the defender scrambling to recover. Just enough space.
He whipped a low, vicious cross across the face of goal—the kind that begged to be buried.
But Nando hesitated. A second too late on the run.
The ball was cleared.
And Corinthians, ruthless as ever, struck on the counter.
Their number 10 dropped deep, a false nine pulling Palmeiras’ defensive midfielder out of position like a puppeteer. Then—a quick one-two, another triangle of passes, the ball zipping between them with hypnotic precision. Thiago was sprinting back, his muscles screaming, but it was like chasing shadows.
The ball flew diagonally over the top, a lofted dagger.
Palmeiras’ left-back misjudged the bounce, his timing off by a fraction.
Corinthians’ striker pounced.
One touch to kill it dead.
Another to nudge it past the sprawling keeper.
2–0.
Thiago bent over, hands on his knees, his chest heaving.
Not even fifteen minutes gone.
22nd minute.
Palmeiras nearly hit back.
This time, Rafael wriggled free from his marker, his footwork slick under pressure. He found Thiago again, wide left, but the pass was slightly behind, forcing Thiago to adjust mid-stride. Without breaking rhythm, he cushioned it with his heel, the ball rolling perfectly into his path.
The fullback came in harder this time—no subtlety, just brute force.
Thiago cut inside, his body a coiled spring, then dropped his shoulder, slipping between two men like a ghost. For a heartbeat, space opened. The stadium held its breath.
He fired low, aiming to sneak it past the near post.
The keeper reacted—a strong right hand, fingers stretching, pushing it wide.
Corner.
But it didn’t matter.
Because Corinthians smelled blood. ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom
29th minute.
It started with a Palmeiras mistake.
Rafael, trying to dribble out of pressure near his own box, was stripped by two midfielders closing like a vice. The ball spilled loose, and Corinthians’ attacking midfielder pounced, his touch immediate, decisive.
Their winger—the same one from the first goal—darted inside the box, his movement dragging defenders with him like moths to a flame.
And then, the cut-back.
Not to the top of the box.
But to the penalty spot.
And there, waiting, unmarked, was their number 8.
He didn’t blast it.
He passed it into the bottom corner, the ball rolling with cruel inevitability.
3–0.
Thiago didn’t hear the crowd this time.
He didn’t have to.
It was in the air—thick with noise, with smoke, with the weight of humiliation.
This wasn’t a final anymore.
It was a dissection.
The final minutes of the half were a blur. Thiago dropped deeper, desperate to get on the ball, but every touch felt like trying to carve a statue with bare hands. Space didn’t exist. Every pass was shadowed, every run met with a body.
He made one last surge before the whistle—beating two men on the left with quick, dancing feet, then floating a high ball toward Nando. But the striker was swallowed by center-backs, his leap contested, the chance snuffed out.
Corinthians weren’t just winning.
They were daring Palmeiras to respond.
And Palmeiras had no answer.
The whistle was a mercy.
Palmeiras jogged into the tunnel trailing 3–0, their shoulders slumped. Eneas, the coach, didn’t say a word yet. Rafael’s jaw was clenched, his knuckles white. Nando walked with his head low, hands on his hips, his boots scuffing the grass.
Thiago?
He just stared forward.
Not defeated.
But something else entirely.
His chest burned.
Not from the scoreline. Not even from the failure.
But from the space.
The space between who he was—
And who he needed to be.
He would close it.
Even if it took everything.
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