Harbinger Of Glory-Chapter 203: Eerily Familiar!
While the referee crouched beside Ben Amos for a brief check, the camera drifted toward the technical area and caught something unexpected.
There, Tiehi was already stripped and standing next to Dawson, with the latter pointing towards the pitch and muttering what seemed to be instructions to the former.
Meanwhile, on the broadcast, the co-commentator’s voice cut in, surprised.
"Surely not already? We’re only seventeen minutes in."
"Well, time isn’t really a necessity for changes now, James," the main commentator said as Nolan conveyed the change to the fourth official. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖
"Dawson isn’t one to sit on his hands when it’s going wrong. He’s seen enough. Norwich are running straight through them, and he’s decided to act now rather than wait for halftime, when by then, things would have already been much worse if things are to go on like this."
The camera lenses in the stadium followed Lang in the number 19 shirt as the fourth official raised the board.
There was a flicker of confusion on his face at first, but no attitude from him after that.
He simply jogged toward the touchline while applause from the travelling fans rained down, a bit scattered but supportive.
Tiehi stepped forward as Lang approached.
They met just past the white line and exchanged a firm double high five.
Tiehi gave a short nod and moved on while Dawson stopped Lang with a hand on his shoulder and leaned in close, speaking low enough that only he could hear.
"I’m sorry," Dawson said first, direct and without pretence.
"You’ll understand why as it unfolds. And when it’s done, you’ll see it clearly."
Lang swallowed, glanced back at the pitch where Norwich were circling again.
"I get it," he replied quietly. "Let’s just win it."
Dawson squeezed his shoulder once before letting him pass, with Nolan tossing a puffer jacket to the player as he made his way down the bench seats.
On the pitch, Tiehi jogged into position and immediately called out towards two of the veterans on the pitch!
"Cousins! Max!"
Cousins drifted over, slightly winded, while Max Power joined them, raising his brow to question the call.
"Gaffer wants a double pivot," Tiehi said quickly as he glanced at Ben Amos, who was now on his feet beside the referee.
"You and I are sitting just past the defence. I’ll handle the dirty work, but the gaffer wants you to break lines when we win it. Look inside early and search for Mclean or Fletcher."
Cousins nodded, scenarios already forming in his mind!
"I’ll take the first outlet I see," he said after a moment, to which the Tiehi nodded before he turned to Max.
"He says you go box-to-box as you’ve talked about. That’s all he said. Said you’d understand."
Max gave a firm nod.
"About time," he muttered, before jogging a few yards forward as Amos prepared to restart.
Up in the gantry, the commentator tracked the shift.
"It looks like a tactical adjustment from Wigan. Tiehi adds steel in midfield, and that should allow Cousins and Power to operate with more freedom. They’ve been overrun so far. The question now is whether this settles them."
Across the pitch, on the Norwich bench, the assistant coach leaned toward David Wagner.
"They’ve changed things up," he said. "Do we tweak anything?"
The assistant coach looked at Wagner questioningly, but the latter kept his eyes fixed on the players rearranging themselves.
"Not yet," he replied after a moment.
"Let’s just keep pushing with the same intensity until we go to halftime first. Something has got to give eventually," he finished, to which the assistant nodded and stepped back.
By the twenty-first minute, Wigan finally managed to pin the ball near the halfway line after a scrappy clearance trickled out for a throw.
It felt minor, almost ordinary, but after the opening barrage, it was something to hold onto.
Joe Bennett wiped his hands on his shorts and launched the throw toward Whatmough, who had stepped toward the touchline to receive.
But just as the commentator had just begun to note the visitors’ improved shape, a flash of yellow and green darted across the frame.
Josh Sargent ghosted in from an offside position, reading the throw before it reached its target.
He cushioned it on his chest with surprising softness, and the home crowd surged to its feet in anticipation.
Before Bennett could recover, Sargent rolled into a Cruyff turn, dragging the ball behind his standing leg and spinning away in one fluid motion that left the fullback grasping at air.
A ripple of delight spread through Carrow Road as Sargent accelerated into the space ahead of Whatmough, head up, shaping to slip the ball through the gap he had just created.
What he saw instead was green turf opening in front of him and then, without warning, Tiehi arriving like a closing door.
The challenge was clean and fierce.
Tiehi’s foot hooked around the ball and swept it clear in one motion, his momentum carrying Sargent tumbling over the challenge.
A roar exploded from the stands, arms raised in appeal, but the referee waved play on with a firm gesture.
The loose ball spun toward the touchline, free for any man to lay claim to it!
And Bennett chased it hard.
He bolted towards it almost immediately, while the Norwich right back mmatchedhim stride for stride.
The crowd leaned forward as both players committed at once, boots swinging through the ball in the same instant.
In the next instant, it ricocheted high and awkward, spiralling back toward Wigan’s box.
"What commitment from both sides," the commentator exclaimed, voice climbing with each bounce of the ball as it rolled towards the edge of the box.
And there, it met Whatmough, who stepped out of the defensive line without hesitation and met it on the last drop, striking through it on the volley with a clearance that sliced diagonally toward the right wing.
It wasn’t elegant, but it carried purpose and urgency in getting the ball far away from the Wigan box that had now become a hotspot!
And then it found James McClean.
He should have been on the left, but there he was hugging the right touchline, chest puffed as he brought the ball under control.
The Norwich left back hesitated, unsure whether to close tight or jockey him inside, and that split-second doubt was enough for the Wigan winger to get his thoughts right.
With a sharp intake of air, McClean drove forward with the ball tight to his boots, head dipping slightly as he gathered speed.
The away end rose instinctively behind him, as his stride lengthened until he got into the final third.
It was only then that the Norwich leftback, now with some backup, squared up, arms out, but McClean shifted his weight and cut inside with a sharp touch that left the man stranded like a training cone on a cold morning.
A sharp intake of breath rippled across the stadium, but Mclean did not slow, and he did not overthink it either.
From just outside the edge of the area, he whipped the ball into the box with his weaker foot, a vicious, instinctive delivery that cut through bodies and panic alike.
The gantry erupted as Fletcher lunged first, stretching to meet it on the half-volley.
But the shot was blocked almost at point-blank range, with the ball ricocheting upward before dropping again into a crowd of legs.
The commentator’s voice fractured into quick bursts as the ball bobbled dangerously.
"Still alive, still there—"
Fletcher swung again and saw it deflect wide of him before it began rolling free at the top of the area.
And in that moment, McClean was glad he hadn’t stopped moving because he arrived at the edge of the box just as the rebound spilt outward and struck it clean with his left, shaping his body around the ball like he was trying to go with it and sending a curling effort arcing toward the far corner.
The strike was pure, and the bend on it was even more cruel because, as Norwich’s Angus Gunn lunged towards the ball, he realised there was no reaching it, and he was right as the net rippled behind him in the next moment, and the moment it did, the away fans detonated voices cracking as they screamed into the Norfolk air.
McClean, still moving, sprinted toward the corner, arms wide and was swallowed almost immediately by a wave of white shirts piling onto him.
"OHHHHHHHH!!! WIGANNNNN!!!!."
"Against the run of play. Unbelievable," the commentator shouted over the noise.
"This feels familiar. Earlier this season, Norwich pressed Wigan relentlessly at the DW, only to lose 2–1 by the final whistle. And here we are again at Carrow Road, and we are seeing similar scenes. What a goal from James Mclean!"
Carrow Road stood in disbelief, hands on heads, while the small pocket of travelling supporters shook as if the stand itself might come loose.
Eventually McClean emerged from the huddle, hair tousled, chest heaving, eyes blazing with something between defiance and joy as he thumped the badge once before jogging back toward the halfway line.
Wigan had weathered the storm.
And with one breathless surge, they had struck first.







