Chapter 78: Half Of Football.
The game continued to swing, chances flowing at both ends as the first half wore on.
Blackpool broke down the right, a deep cross aimed at Yates, but Wigan keeper Jamie Jones read it well, stretching out his gloves to pluck the ball before it could cause danger.
Almost instantly, Wigan turned defence into attack as Broadhead spun into space, feeding McClean, whose low cutback fizzed across the box.
The fans glanced over in the direction of the ball, and there was Keane with the ball coming at his feet and the goal opening up.
"Here it is! Keane—" the commentator’s voice cracked with anticipation, only to drop as the ball curled just wide of the far post.
Agony rippled through the home stands, hands on heads, groans mixing with frustrated laughter.
But the Blackpool fans, tucked away in the corner, leapt to their feet in delight, waving their flags and singing louder, seizing on the miss as if it were their own goal.
And then, almost cruelly, their joy doubled.
From the restart, Wigan switched off for a moment, allowing Blackpool to win a corner.
The delivery whipped in hard and low, chaos erupting in the six-yard box.
Legs and bodies clashed, the ball pinging back and forth before Jerry Yates got the faintest of touches, directing it into the path of Shayne Lavery.
Lavery pounced, and with a simple prod, the net bulged, and Blackpool had the lead.
"GOAL! Blackpool strike first at the DW! Against the run of play, it’s Lavery who makes the difference, and look at those travelling fans!"
On the broadcast, a banner slipped onto the screen, showing the expected goals.
Wigan’s bar towering, Blackpool’s sitting low, yet the scoreline didn’t care.
0–1.
The Wigan players groaned, shoulders sagging as they trudged back.
Only Darikwa clapped his hands firmly, shouting, "Heads up, lads, heads up! Plenty left!"
His voice cut through the murmurs, dragging focus back onto the pitch.
On the bench, Cousins shook his head, a scoff slipping out.
"Soft. That was soft," he muttered, tossing the analysis tablet aside.
Dawson, a few steps ahead on the touchline, stood silent.
Hands tucked behind his back, his eyes tracked the players like a man measuring more than just minutes.
The restart brought renewed fire from Wigan.
They pressed higher, snapping at every Blackpool touch.
Two counterattacks sparked for the visitors, but this time, the Latics were alive to it with Tom Naylore sliding in to stop one break and Darikwa timing his interception to perfection on the other.
The crowd responded, noise rising again, urging them forward.
And then came the moment.
With just minutes to go before halftime, McClean picked up the ball near the halfway line and drove.
He surged past one, then another, his legs pumping, his chest straining, carrying the ball into the box.
The roar grew louder, fans already halfway out of their seats.
"He’s still going, McClean—look at this run!" the commentator yelled.
As McClean drew back his leg to shoot, a Blackpool defender slid across, sweeping his ankle.
The referee’s whistle darted to his lips, but just before he blew, Broadhead pounced on the loose ball, swinging his left foot as the strike ripped past the keeper and slammed into the net.
"GOAL! Broadhead levels it for Wigan! What a response right before halftime!"
The DW erupted.
A wall of sound burst around the stadium as Broadhead sprinted towards the corner flag, only to glance back, see McClean still on the ground, and pull him up before embracing him.
The celebration became theirs to share, arms around each other as teammates piled in.
On the touchline, Leo couldn’t contain himself.
He pumped his fist hard, a wild "Hell yeah!" escaping his chest, his voice lost in the roar as the other subs clapped, some grinning, some just relieved.
Two minutes were added on, but neither side carved anything clear.
The referee’s whistle soon echoed across the pitch, sending both teams jogging off level at one apiece.
The scoreboard glowed: Wigan 1–1 Blackpool.
And the commentary signed off the half with a fitting summary.
"Well, we said it would be a battle, and what a half it’s been. Blackpool strike first, Wigan answer late. We’re set for a real contest here at the DW. Don’t go anywhere, as we will soon be back with the second half."
Both sets of players made their way towards the tunnel, amid the chants from their fans, before disappearing down the line.
.....
Inside the home locker room, it smelled of sweat, ointments and damp grass.
The usual cocktail at halftime.
Some players slumped into their seats, heads down, while others stripped off their shirts and reached for water bottles.
The sound of heavy breathing filled the room, broken by the occasional muttered curse at missed chances or soft defending.
Dawson stood in the middle, arms folded, watching them settle.
He didn’t speak immediately, letting the players catch their breath before beginning.
"Alright... let’s talk about that half."
A few heads lifted. Fletcher leaned forward, McClean wiped his face with a towel, and Darikwa sat upright, listening closely.
"We’ve made it harder on ourselves than it should be," Dawson said, his tone calm but sharp.
"That goal we conceded? Scrappy. Avoidable. Ball’s bouncing in the box and no one puts a boot through it. That’s basics, lads. Clear your lines, then we reorganise. Instead, we switched off and they punished us."
His eyes swept the room as a couple of players nodded, guilty but accepting.
"But," Dawson’s voice softened, "that’s not the full story. Because for thirty-five minutes of that half, we were the better side. Kept the ball well. Moved it quickly. Created chances. Keane’s miss? Unlucky, but that move, the passing, the movement, that’s what I want to see."
He paused, pacing slowly now, pointing towards the tactics board even though he didn’t touch it.
"Listen, Blackpool are happy to sit back and wait for a mistake. That’s their game. So what don’t we do?"
"Force it," Broadhead answered quietly.
"Exactly." Dawson clicked his fingers.
"We don’t force it. We don’t panic. You saw what happened when we stayed patient. McClean drives forward, Broadhead follows up, bang, one-one. That’s us. That’s composure. That’s how we break them."
Some of the tension in the room loosened as the players leaned back, listening more intently now.
"Now," Dawson said, straightening up, his voice carrying more weight, "I don’t want lazy tracking. I don’t want anyone jogging when we lose it. If they break, you get your backside back, and you get into shape. Simple as that. Do your job, trust the man next to you, and we’ll choke them out."
He let that hang, then glanced at the scoreboard image flickering faintly on the small monitor above the door.
"One-one at home. We’ve got this game where we want it. All we need is a bit more edge in front of the goal. Be clinical. First chance that comes in the second half, bury it. Don’t give them a second invitation."
His tone softened again at the end, almost encouraging now.
"You’re doing great. You’ve put yourselves in the right position. Now finish the job. Push ahead, take the lead, and don’t look back."
Dawson gave a single nod, then turned towards the door.
He pulled it open, pausing only for a beat, before "Five minutes. Rest up. Then we go again."
And with that, he stepped out, leaving the players in the half-lit quiet to be in their own worlds.
...
Outside and after what seemed to be an eternity to the fans, he tunnel spat the players back out into the light as Wigan and Blackpool filed onto the pitch once more, greeted by a wave of cheers rolling down from the stands.
The floodlights glared brighter now, bouncing off the blades of grass that had already been carved up in the first half.
"Here come the teams again, back out for the second half at the DW Stadium. It’s still Wigan Athletic one, Blackpool one. And just a reminder—no changes at the break from either side. Same players, same shape. But..." one of them chuckled, "that doesn’t mean the same game. Expect adjustments, especially from Wigan after Dawson’s talk at halftime."
The camera panned across the pitch where McClean jogged into his familiar spot on the left, shaking his arms loose.
Keane pulled at his socks and gave a short nod to Broadhead, both men exchanging a quiet word before Blackpool’s defenders began marking out their lines.
Darikwa, the captain on his return, gave his backline a sharp clap of the hands, motioning for focus.
"Physically, nothing’s changed," the other commentator added, "but tactically? You can bet Dawson’s asked for sharper pressing and more care in possession. Blackpool got their goal from chaos in the box. And Wigan won’t want to gift another like that."
The noise from the home stands swelled, claps and chants picking up again, as though the fans themselves were trying to drive the game back into Wigan’s hands.
The referee stepped into the centre circle, glanced at both goalkeepers, and raised his whistle to his lips.
And just like that, the second half was alive.