Cherreads

Chapter 215 - The French

Join that Discord or Patreon if you want to.

Discord Link: https://discord.gg/s2DVMbqSf4

https://www.patreon.com/c/Sinbad_

.

November 17, 2015 — Wembley Stadium

Moments before kickoff

The hallway lights buzzed low and steady above the tunnel. Cold tile. Warm breath. Studs tapping in uneven rhythm.

France lined the left side.

England the right.

No one spoke.

Not yet.

Pogba rolled his shoulders back, jaw set. Benzema stood just behind him, arms crossed. Griezmann shifted weight from one boot to the other, blinking slow. Varane kept looking ahead. Straight through the tunnel. But his eyes kept darting back.

Toward one player, Tristan.

He wasn't doing anything special besides talking to Vardy.

But every French player was watching him.

How could they not watch him when their entire game plan was built on stopping him. When everyone pretty much declared him that best?

Across the tunnel, Vardy leaned in.

"You think Kante's gonna take it easy on us?"

Tristan didn't look over. Just murmured back, "Not a chance."

"Rude little bastard," Vardy said. "We pay his wages."

A small smile tugged at Tristan's mouth.

Kanté was a few steps ahead — arms folded, bouncing slightly on his toes. Focused. Sharp. But when Vardy called out—

"Kante!"

"You better be gentle tonight," Vardy said. "Friendly, remember?"

Kanté blinked once. "No."

Tristan raised an eyebrow. "No?"

"I came to win," Kanté said a little shyly before getting his courage again. "I'm going to beat you."

Vardy scoffed. "That's how you talk to your captain?"

"I play for France now."

"Traitor," Vardy muttered.

Kanté looked at Tristan. "You should pass quickly. I will take the ball."

Tristan stared back smiling. It was always good to see Kante being confident which would lead him to being a pain in the ass during that game but he liked seeing his friend be happy.

 "You can try." He replied back taking in the challenge. It be a challenge facing Kante but hey he pretty much knew all of his tricks but at the same time so did Kante.

That got a little twitch at the corner of Kanté's mouth. Close as he ever got to a grin.

Then he turned back toward his team like he hadn't just threatened to dismantle England's midfield.

Vardy nudged Tristan. "Remind me why we like him?"

"Because he's not usually like this."

"Guy gets one national team call-up and forgets who fed him last week."

Tristan just pulled his sleeve back down and stepped forward as the stadium lights poured down the tunnel. "Let him have his fun, we can bully him when he comes back to the club."

.

The official stepped forward. Flag in hand. A whistle hung around his neck, silent for now.

Cameramen shuffled in. A floor manager gave the cue. Lights blinked on.

And then — movement.

Both teams stepped forward. Shoulder to shoulder with their mascots, boots thudding lightly as they entered the tunnel of noise and light. Wembley opened up in front of them.

The camera cut to the booth.

"Evening all, welcome to Wembley," the first voice said — calm, familiar. Clive Tyldesley. "A packed stadium. A high-profile friendly. But it won't feel friendly once the whistle blows."

Alongside him, a lower register cut in — more blunt. "No chance," said Danny Higginbotham. "You've got England undefeated all year. France unbeaten in five. This is two heavyweights — ivalry we love and hate." 

The camera panned over the lineups now emerging into the stadium, flares of camera light flashing along the rows.

The England players stepped into line on the pitch, arms behind their backs. Tristan blinked up at the crowd cheering. 

"Can France stop him?" Clive asked. "That's the question."

Danny didn't blink. "They've got one shot. And his name's Kanté."

The camera caught Tristan sharing a brief handshake with Varane. A nod from Griezmann. Pogba didn't look his way at all.

"But let's not pretend this is just about Tristan Hale," Clive continued, voice threading through the roar. "This is England vs. France. Two teams who haven't always needed a trophy on the line to go to war."

Danny nodded. "Bit of history here, yeah?"

"You could say that," Clive replied. "France knocked England out of Euro 2004. Zidane with two goals in stoppage time. Since then? England haven't had much joy in these fixtures. But that was before Tristan Hale. Before this team found its spine."

The players lined up now. Mascots still holding hands. Flags unfurling in the breeze.

Wembley responded.

"Stand up, if you hate the French!"

"Stand up!"

"If you hate the French!"

"Ah. The English welcome committee in full voice."

Danny grinned. "They're loud tonight. Feels like a World Cup, not a friendly."

Danny added, "France want to make a statement. No Benzema at the World Cup last year, no silverware in the last nine years. This is a team full of talent — Pogba, Varane, Griezmann, Lloris. But of course that main attraction as always will be number 22.

The anthem faded.

"England haven't lost in over a year," Clive said. "France think they can be the ones to end that. But if you're this England team — you've heard that before."

"Every match this year," Danny said. "And every time — they answered back."

The referee called the captains forward.

The camera zoomed out, hovering high over the pitch now as the formations came into focus.

ENGLAND — 4-3-1-2 Formation

🧤 Joe Hart (GK)

🚀 Nathaniel Clyne (RB)

🏰 Chris Smalling (CB)

🏰 Phil Jones (CB)

🚀 Ryan Bertrand (LB)

🛡️ Danny Drinkwater (CDM)

🛡️ Marc Albrighton (RCM)

🛡️ Raheem Sterling (LCM)

🎯 Tristan Hale (CAM)

⚽ Wayne Rooney (ST, Captain)

⚽ Jamie Vardy (ST)

FRANCE — 4-3-3 Formation

🧤 Hugo Lloris (GK, Captain)

🚀 Bacary Sagna (RB)

🏰 Raphaël Varane (CB)

🏰 Eliaquim Mangala (CB)

🚀 Patrice Evra (LB)

🛡️ N'Golo Kanté (CDM)

🛡️ Paul Pogba (RCM)

🎯 Blaise Matuidi (LCM)

🏃‍♂️ Antoine Griezmann (RW)

⚽ Karim Benzema (ST)

🏃‍♂️ Anthony Martial (LW)

"Well now — that's a curveball from Roy Hodgson."

Danny leaned forward in the booth. "Yeah, I was expecting a flat 4-4-2. But he's tucked Sterling inside, brought Tristan forward as a ten… that's a diamond."

Clive nodded. "A 4-3-1-2 on paper. But don't be surprised if Tristan drifts wide to link up with Bertrand or cuts deep to build from the back."

Danny added, "It's a bold one. You've got width sacrificed, more numbers in midfield. He's banking on Tristan controlling the tempo — everything going through him."

Clive: "It's a vote of confidence. Give your best player the keys and let him drive. Something we know Hodgson has a struggle. It looks like he's finally giving that key to Tristan."

The referee whistled once. Rooney and Lloris stepped forward with the match official. A quick handshake. Coin flipped.

Lloris called heads.

It was tails.

Rooney pointed toward the home end. England would kick off.

Wembley responded.

Cheers rolled like thunder down the stands.

As the teams jogged to their positions, Tristan stayed back a half-step longer. Eyes scanning the field. Not the players — the shape.

4-3-1-2.

Not a 4-4-2 with a leash. Not a system built to box him in, flatten the angles, and tell him to stay in the lane like a kid with training wheels.

This was different.

This was what he was used to at Leicester.

This was freedom — with responsibility. He could drift left or drop deep, run the tempo or thread the needle. He was the hinge between midfield and attack. The space-maker. The link. The threat.

For once, Hodgson hadn't tried to cram him into a role. He'd asked him what he thought. They talked about Leicester's shape. About how he found rhythm between Drinkwater and Albrighton. How that triangle worked. How the front two pulled defenders off and left him room to work.

And then Hodgson actually listened.

Not just nodded — actually listened.

That surprised him.

Now it was here. On the pitch. He rolled his shoulders back. Glanced toward the sideline where Roy stood, arms folded, watching quietly.

Finally.

Tristan turned and walked toward the center circle.

Time to prove the trust was worth it.

The whistle echoed off Wembley's roof.

And across the world — televisions blinked on. Remotes dropped. Conversations paused mid-sentence.

Somewhere in Madrid, Cristiano Ronaldo leaned back against a leather sofa, arms folded, the screen reflected in his eyes.

In a quiet Barcelona apartment, Lionel Messi shifted forward on the couch.

His wife had gone to bed. The kids were asleep. Only the blue light from the screen moved now, dancing along the floorboards.

.

Munich.

Madrid.

Turin.

New York.

All across the globe, coaches and captains and upstarts and legends watched Wembley come alive. 

Tristan stepped into the half-space, let the pass run across his body, and turned before Pogba even reacted.

The crowd surged.

"He's got it early," Danny said, watching Tristan drift into the left half-space. "Look at the shape already — Bertrand's flying wide, he's picking it up in the middle."

Clive: "And look who's shadowing him — N'Golo Kanté. You won't find tighter man-marking in world football right now."

Tristan rolled the ball under his studs. Slow. Casual. Kanté didn't blink.

One second.

Two.

Then came the shift.

Tristan exploded — right foot, then left — body feint, shoulder drop, space opened like a curtain. He skipped past Kanté. Clean.

"Oof. That's lovely," Danny breathed.

Tristan didn't force it. He slipped the ball into Sterling's feet and jogged off into the next pocket.

Then minute seven.

Ball on his foot again — this time wide on the right. Kanté still glued to his back.

Tristan spun, rode the pressure, and launched a switch — a forty-yard pass slicing the air, flat and falling. Bertrand met it first touch on the opposite wing.

"Ridiculous," Clive said. "That's not a pass you see everyday reminds me a bit of Beckham when Tristan made his debut. It's been a while since anyone compared that lad to the former Captain.

This time the crowd caught on.

"TRIS-TAN HALE!"

"TRIS-TAN HALE!"

The noise was turning. France still held their shape — but the rhythm had shifted.

And Pogba felt it. He'd been watching Tristan. The way the crowd buzzed every time he touched it. The spotlight tilting.

He's not doing anything I can't do. That's what Pogba told himself.

So he picked it up.

Minute twelve.

Deep in midfield, just over the halfway line. Took a touch. He glanced up. Griezmann moved wide. Benzema drifted central.

I can do this.

He jinked past Sterling. Easy. Then tried to slither between Smalling and Jones like he was Messi or Tristan.

Bad idea.

Jones didn't bite. He stepped in — firm — clean. The ball popped loose.

Straight to Tristan.

One touch. Then a second — left-footed. Quick glance. Pinged it over the top.

The pass fell like it had GPS.

Rooney caught it on the bounce. One. Two. Defenders closing in. He didn't panic.

Vardy peeled off the shoulder.

Square pass.

First-time volley.

Back of the net.

WEMBLEY ERUPTED.

1–0.

The roar hadn't even settled before England were on top of Vardy in a blur of shirts and limbs.

Arms wrapped around him. Sterling yelled something into his ear. Rooney clapped him twice on the back. Drinkwater jogged in grinning. Albrighton gave him a shove. Even Smalling came running from the back, shouting across the pitch like the game had just ended.

Clive chuckled over the noise. "Well — they'll celebrate that one like it's more than a friendly."

Tristan finally jogged over — slower than the rest. He pulled Vardy into a one-armed hug, then turned to slap hands with Rooney and point across the pitch toward Bertrand.

"Wembley is bouncing," Clive said. "And it's that midfield diamond setting fire to the grass right now."

France reset.

Tense. Annoyed.

Pogba kept his head down, jaw flexing with every breath. His boots tapped short, sharp steps as he walked back into position like a man trying to stay calm. Tristan didn't miss it — the way he rolled his shoulders, shook out his wrists. Like he was trying to release pressure without letting anyone see.

A few yards ahead, Kanté barked something in French, sharp and low. He waved an arm toward the front three — pointing, stepping forward, demanding more. Press higher. Don't wait. Push them back.

"France haven't been bad," Clive said, voice carrying above the hum. "But when you give a player like Tristan Hale just a second too long…"

"…he turns you inside out," Danny finished. "That ball to Rooney — that wasn't luck. That was planned. That was vision."

The whistle came again. France kicked off. And just like that, the game shifted.

Gone was the cautious rhythm of the first twenty minutes. Now France hunted in packs. Martial sprinted at Clyne like a man on a mission. First touch — heavy — recovered — chopped inside and drilled a low shot across goal.

Hart had to scramble, diving low to his left to push it wide.

"Dangerous from Martial! England backing off a bit too much there."

Corner.

Matuidi trotted over. Curled it in high — too high. Jones cleared with his head.

But France didn't let go.

Cabaye, Pogba, Matuidi — all pressing in waves now. Griezmann drifted into the ten space, dropping between lines, trying to do what Tristan had been doing all night. Pulling strings.

Thirty-first minute.

Matuidi again, this time deeper.

One-two with Cabaye. Laid it off to Evra with space.

"Overlap on the left," Danny noted. "England far too narrow here."

Evra took it. One look up. One touch.

Whipped it across the face of goal — low, fast, fizzing across the grass.

And then —A blur of blue.

Karim Benzema ghosted past Smalling like a whisper, angled his run perfectly.

Outside of the boot — flicked it near post.

The net snapped.

Goal.

1–1.

Wembley groaned. The French section went ballistic. Flags waved, fists pumped, camera flashes burst like sparks in the dark.

Griezmann turned and sprinted straight to the corner, both fists raised in the air like he'd scored it himself. Pogba chased after him, shouting "ALLEZ!" while slapping Benzema on the back. Even Evra threw his arms out wide, nodding hard, shouting to the sky.

Clive's voice carried through the replay, tight with respect. "That's what makes Benzema so dangerous. You don't see him — until you're picking the ball out of your net."

"One run. One touch. But give credit to Evra — that's a perfect delivery," Danny added, slower now. "England got caught ball-watching."

The French bench stood applauding. Deschamps gave a tight, satisfied nod before pulling Pogba aside near the sideline and muttering something in his ear.

Back on the pitch, Benzema was still talking to Griezmann, motioning with his fingers — run here, I saw the gap, that kind of pass — like they were solving an equation together. Pogba joined in, nodding, waving a hand like, "Keep doing that."

Tristan jogged slowly back toward the center circle. He wiped a hand across his face and shook his head once. Not out of anger. Out of annoyance — with himself.

He'd tracked back just late. Not enough to stop the triangle. Not enough to help Bertrand on the switch.

He glanced toward Jones, who gave him a quick thumbs-up like it wasn't his fault. But Tristan knew — in that pocket between the lines, that one missed second could mean everything.

He tapped Drinkwater's shoulder.

"Stay tighter to Cabaye," he muttered.

Danny called out, "Sterling, inside!"

He pointed. Adjusted. Shifted.

The crowd noise dipped, replaced by murmurs. The kind of low hum a stadium makes when the home team has just been punched in the gut and everyone's waiting to see how they respond.

"That's the first real test of the night for England," Clive said. "They've had things largely their way — but now France are starting to smell blood."

Tristan stood over the ball at kickoff again. Rooney nodded at him, tapped his boot.

 "We go again," the captain said simply.

.

Kickoff again.

1–1 on the board. But momentum? All France.

Benzema had sparked something. Not just on the pitch — in the air. Wembley still buzzed, but it wasn't sharp anymore. It was low. Uneasy. Like 80,000 people holding their breath.

And Deschamps knew it. From the sideline, he jabbed a finger at the midfield line, motioning them forward like he was pulling a leash tighter. Push up. Press higher.

Tristan stood near the center circle, watching the adjustment. It wasn't subtle.

"They've switched," he muttered to Drinkwater. "Matuidi's playing tighter."

Drinkwater gave a small nod, already tracking Pogba's position. "They're shadowing you now," he said. "All three of them."

Tristan smirked faintly. "Good."

The ball rolled again.

Thirty-fourth minute. France came back down the right — Griezmann cutting inside, skipping past Sterling with a slick chop. Jones stepped up, clipped the ball, but it only slowed the move. Pogba collected the loose touch, popped it into Benzema's feet. He turned. Fired low.

Hart got down. Quick. Saved.

"Sharp hands from the England number one," Clive said. "That could've been two in five minutes."

From the corner, Tristan jogged toward the near post to help defend. He glanced over his shoulder — Kanté was already there. Like a shadow with boots on.

Ball in — floated to the edge of the box. Matuidi volleyed it first time.

Blocked by Smalling.

Cleared by Vardy.

Relief rippled through the stands.

Thirty-seventh minute. England finally broke the pattern.

Rooney dropped deeper, dragging Mangala with him. Albrighton drove wide on the right. A one-two with Clyne opened a pocket.

Ball zipped across to Sterling — who took it well, cut inside — then slipped a low ball toward Tristan, who peeled just behind Pogba.

Touch.

Shift.

But Kanté was already there.

Contact.

Not a foul — just a hard, annoying toe-poke tackle, the kind that stopped momentum in its tracks.

Tristan stumbled but recovered.

"Of course it's him," Danny muttered. "Kanté again. You'd think Tristan owed him money the way he's hounding him."

The camera caught Kanté's face as he got back into position.

Wembley grumbled.

Just waiting for the next flicker.

Fortieth minute.

England reset deeper now. Jones to Drinkwater. Back to Smalling. France didn't press recklessly — they waited in that tight mid-block and dared England to play through.

Tristan dropped again. Touched it once. Then turned, sharp.

He accelerated past Pogba, then beat Matuidi to the angle.

Varane stepped early — too early.

Tristan slipped past — one more stride — and then found Rooney on the run.

Lloris was quick. Closed the angle. Forced Rooney wide.

Shot came in — low and tight.

Saved.

"Close again! England nearly answer back just before half," Clive said. "But Lloris does his job."

Tristan exhaled. Deep. Walked back slowly.

On the French bench, Deschamps made a note on a scrap of paper. One of his assistants pointed at a tablet showing Tristan's movement map. It looked like a spider had skated across the pitch.

Forty-third minute.

Final push before the break.

France again.

Griezmann collected it off Cabaye, turned quickly, chipped one toward Benzema — who twisted in the air, flicked it over Jones — and volleyed.

Wide.

But not by much.

Wembley made that sound — the collective gasp and groan. Every seat creaked.

"One more chance each," Danny said. "That's what we're looking at."

Tristan got the ball off the goal kick, jogged it forward with short touches. One look at the clock — 44:12.

He saw Bertrand, made the signal. Triangle on the left again.

Bertrand to Sterling. Back to Tristan.

Kanté lunged.

Too early.

Tristan rolled it under his foot, stepped away, and flicked it inside for Albrighton.

Cross came in. Deep.

Rooney rose.

Got a head to it.

But no power. Straight to Lloris.

Half-time whistle.

Boos from the away section.

Applause from the home stands.

And as the players jogged toward the tunnel, Clive said it plainly.

"Half gone. One apiece. But this isn't over. This has been a showcase of midfield firepower, and there's more to come."

Danny leaned forward. "If I'm Deschamps, I'm not changing a thing. But if I'm Hodgson? I'm thinking Kane. That youngster deserves to play with that way. Rooney does look tired and France will look to target that."

The players emerged from the tunnel to a wall of sound. No new anthems, no ceremony this time — just pure noise. Stomping feet. Whistling fans. A few shouts already ringing out from the South Stand.

England were the first to reappear.

Tristan jogged out with Vardy and Rooney, chewing his lip as he scanned the shape ahead. Same eleven for now. But Hodgson was at the edge of his technical area, sleeves rolled, talking to Barkley and Walcott behind him.

France followed — no changes yet. Just the same swagger. The same bounce.

Tristan could feel it.

France weren't playing like it was a friendly anymore.

Clive's voice settled back in over the broadcast. "No substitutions just yet, but keep an eye on the touchline. Hodgson's already talking to Barkley and Walcott. We might see early moves."

"They need it," Danny said bluntly. "First half — England were bright. Then faded. France looked like the better side by the break. Hale needs help."

.

The whistle blew.

And the second half began.

Kickoff again.

Minute 47.

Kanté was back on Tristan like glue. France were man-marking him tighter now, dragging Pogba higher too. Every time he dropped deep, they swarmed.

Drinkwater shifted right. Albrighton tucked in. Bertrand tried an early overlap.

But France read it.

Matuidi cut out a pass, fed Griezmann, and France launched a quick counter. Benzema peeled left. Martial sprinted down the far side.

Hart came off his line, clearing with a thumping kick into touch.

Wembley buzzed — that electric kind of tension.

Minute 49.

Tristan dropped lower now, playing almost like a regista. His first touch drew in Pogba. He feinted right, pulled the ball across his body with the inside of his boot, then pinged it straight through the lines — a laser to Rooney.

Rooney couldn't hold it.

Sagna recovered.

Back the other way.

France passed it around the back for a moment. Slower. Tactical. Deschamps pacing now.

Hodgson glanced down the line.

And made his move.

⏱️ 50' — Substitutions for England

🔁 OFF: Wayne Rooney

🔁 OFF: Raheem Sterling

🔁 ON: Harry Kane

🔁 ON: Ross Barkley

Clive raised his voice over the cheers. "And there it is — double change. Kane for Rooney. Barkley on for Sterling. Bit more pace. Bit more verticality."

"Also gives Hale a proper midfield partner," Danny added. "Barkley's not just energy — he'll take some heat off Tristan."

Kane nodded as he crossed paths with Rooney. A slap on the back. A word of encouragement. Then he jogged into position, stretching one last time.

England reshaped.

Tristan pushed slightly higher now, floating between Barkley and Vardy, with Kane dropping deeper to link play. A loose 4-3-1-2 became more like a 4-3-2-1 — a shapeshifting diamond.

Minute 51.

England won the ball after a Cabaye miscontrol. Bertrand passed inside to Albrighton, who fired a grounded pass into Tristan in the middle.

Kanté was already there — biting, snapping.

But Tristan didn't stop.

He let it roll across his body, flicked it off his heel — and spun into the channel Kanté had just vacated.

Trap set. And sprung.

"Oh that's clever!" Clive gasped.

The crowd rose. Not a full roar — but a thrum of anticipation.

Tristan galloped forward, open grass ahead. Pogba tried to recover. Varane stepped up.

But Tristan slid Kane through — right channel.

Kane took a touch. Dragged it left.

Shot came across goal — but wide.

Rooney would've slid in. Kane missed the angle.

Groans across Wembley.

Tristan exhaled hard, clapped once. "Next one," he muttered.

And the next one came fast.

Minute 59.

Kane dropped deep. Pulled Sagna out of shape. Barkley fed it into Tristan's feet.

Kanté came again. Shoulder-to-shoulder.

Heavy challenge.

The ball popped up.

Bounced.

Tristan lunged.

Won it back.

Turned.

Pogba was coming.

Varane was calling for help.

Tristan didn't pause.

He chopped left. Froze Pogba.

Then back inside — sent him sliding the wrong way.

And then — boom.

Top of the box. Right foot. Quick. Controlled. Low.

Past Lloris.

Bottom corner.

GOAL.

2–1.

"TRISTAN HALE!" Clive's voice cracked with the moment. "He just ripped the game open with a scalpel!"

Danny shouted, "That's what you call elite! That's the moment the world was waiting for — and he delivers again!"

Wembley lost its mind.

Shirts lifted. Flags waved. Fans spilled into each other. Arms thrown around strangers. Faces stunned, ecstatic.

On the pitch, it was chaos.

Sterling leapt onto Tristan's back. Barkley shouted something unintelligible. Kane ruffled his hair. Vardy smacked him in the chest.

Tristan didn't say a word.

He just pointed — to the sky.

Then to the bench.

And somewhere, far from London — Neymar looked livid.

Watched Tristan again.

Then again.

Phone in hand.

Typed something.

Paused.

Deleted it.

Back on the pitch, France didn't wait.

The moment the ball hit the net, Deschamps snapped into motion — no hesitation.

⏱️ 63' — France Substitutions

🔁 OFF: Anthony Martial

🔁 OFF: Yohan Cabaye

🔁 ON: Mathieu Valbuena

🔁 ON: André-Pierre Gignac

Clive caught it on air. "Double change for France — and a clear message from Deschamps. He's not playing for a draw."

"Fresh legs," Danny said. "But also a shift in shape. Gignac gives them a proper number nine. Benzema might drop off now, with Valbuena playing tighter inside."

And that's exactly what happened.

France switched into a 4-2-3-1. Valbuena roamed in the half-spaces. Pogba started driving with more intent. And suddenly, England had to weather a storm.

Valbuena picked it up between the lines, jinked past Bertrand, and sprayed a pass out wide to Griezmann. Clyne held the angle, showing him down the line, but Griezmann chopped inside anyway and let fly.

Low. Driven.

 Hart palmed it clear with his right hand.

The rebound dropped to Pogba.

He hit it on the bounce — laces through leather. Clanged off the bar.

The sound echoed like a warning bell.

Clive's voice cut in, tense now. "They're getting closer."

Danny didn't answer. He didn't need to.

Wembley felt it. That pressure. The long breath in.

Gignac won a free kick thirty-five yards out. Valbuena stood over it. The stadium dipped into hush.

The delivery came bending in — wicked angle, wicked pace. Smalling jumped. Missed.Jones got a shoulder to it — barely — just enough to deflect it wide.

Corner. France surged again.

Minute 71.

Griezmann to Pogba. Pogba to Matuidi. Matuidi to Valbuena.

This time, a quick one-two with Benzema split England's midfield open.

Valbuena threaded it through. Gignac pounced.

Clean strike.

Low and rising.

Hart threw himself full-length — fingertips only.

Pushed it around the post.

Clive: "England holding by inches."

Danny: "That's why you keep Hart in there. That's why he wears the gloves."

Minute 74.

Hodgson called over Walcott. Fast. Urgent.

⏱️ 75' — Substitution for England

🔁 OFF: Marc Albrighton

🔁 ON: Theo Walcott

England shifted again. Now Barkley drifted central with Drinkwater sitting deeper. Tristan and Walcott floated just behind Kane. It looked more like a 4-2-2-2 — or chaos. But it was pace. Width. A release valve.

 That valve worked.

Drinkwater intercepted a poor pass from Mangala, popped it up to Barkley, who carried it thirty yards through contact and laid it into space.

Walcott — fresh legs — burned past Evra like a jet.

He squared it.

Tristan didn't even take a touch. He stepped over. Let it run. Kane was there.

One touch. Bang.

Blocked.

Varane threw his body across the six-yard box like a grenade was going off.

Still 2–1.

Minute 80.

France pressed again.

They'd stopped caring about possession now. It was direct. Violent. Rushed. But dangerous.

Valbuena launched a cross to the back post. Gignac rose above Clyne — header down.

Hart saved it again.

Then pounced on the rebound.

"Joe Hart might be Man of the Match," Clive said. "Forget the glamour — he's done the dirty work tonight."

England couldn't hold the ball.

France surrounded Tristan every time he touched it. One. Two. Three players collapsing around him.

So he started playing backward. Safe. Smart. Slowing it down.

Kanté lunged again. Clipped Tristan's heels.

Free kick. Right on the halfway line.

Tristan stayed down for a second. Not injured. Just tired.

He sat up, looked around Wembley, took it in.

Then stood.

Slowly.

Minute 89.

France made one last push.

 Griezmann broke past Bertrand. Cut in.

Fired from distance.

The shot bent. Curled. Dipped.

Top corner?

No.

Off the bar again.

It rattled like a drum.

Wembley roared. The kind of roar that wasn't celebration — it was survival.

Three added minutes.

England sat deep. Kane dropped to the halfway line. Even Walcott tucked in now.

Tristan tracked back — shoulder to shoulder with Pogba — and stripped him clean. A little toe-poke. No celebration.

Minute 92.

France threw numbers forward. Lloris near the halfway line now.

Matuidi lofted one last cross.

Headed out by Jones.

Tristan took it down. Didn't rush. He kept it.

Turned. Waited. Shielded.

Whistle in the ref's mouth.

Full-time.

2–1.

Wembley erupted again — louder than at the first goal.

The final whistle had barely faded when players started shaking hands. Bodies sagged. Boots dragged. But the noise — that stayed. Wembley rang with it. The whole stadium still humming like it hadn't processed what just happened.

Clive's voice carried over the shots of players trading shirts and clapping fans. "Full-time here at Wembley. England 2, France 1. And if this was a friendly… someone forgot to tell the players."

Danny added, "That was a war in midfield. Tristan and Kanté — that's the kind of duel you replay in your head for days."

Tristan took his time walking across the pitch. Sweat stuck to his neck, hair matted from the effort. His pulse still thundered in his chest. But he smiled.

Kanté was already waiting near the halfway line. Arms crossed, jersey damp, expression unreadable — except for that little twitch at the corner of his mouth.

"Good game," Tristan said, voice low, holding out his shirt.

Kanté nodded. "You too." He peeled his off and handed it over.

They swapped jerseys.

"Get some rest," Tristan said. "We've got Newcastle next."

Kanté's shoulders dropped slightly. A huff of air. "I'm not tired."

Tristan smiled again. "You will be."

Kanté didn't argue. He just held the shirt up once, gave a small nod, and turned toward the tunnel.

And just like that — England's number 22 stood alone on the grass, jersey in one hand, the crowd still chanting his name in waves.

.

Started working on a mha fic about Inasa Yoarashi. Posted the first chapter on the discord. Gonna build up a few chapters before I start posting it on here. 

More Chapters