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Chapter 70 - The Goal That Stunned Germany

"I am speed personified."

"Then I am speed perfected."

In DC × Sonic the Hedgehog Issue #1 (titled Chaos Crisis, Part One), the ultimate speed-ster showdown exploded onto the page. It became one of the best-selling comic issues in history—nerds, casuals, diehards, even people who hadn't touched a comic book in years, all of them emptied their wallets for one singular promise:

Speed. Running.

Running has always been the closest thing to flying without leaving the ground. Muscles pumping in perfect harmony, lungs on fire yet alive, the wind ripping across your face, your body turned into nothing but rhythm and purpose. When you run, you are more than yourself—you're a hero. Running is freedom, it is beauty, it is the purest form of being alive.

And even if this essence was trapped inside paper panels or flickering through a screen, the allure of speed carried across. It's the same reason why the main event of every Olympic Games is always the 100-meter sprint. Nothing else—not swimming, not gymnastics, not weightlifting—captivates in quite the same way. The world tunes in, almost double the viewers of any other event, just to watch humans reach their absolute peak, a test of who can touch divinity for a few seconds.

That thrill, that rush, that primal heartbeat—speed was addictive. And now, in Munich, on a Champions League night, that intoxicating fascination had bled into football.

Bayern vs Barcelona had quickly ceased to be a clash of two Giant clubs after one single clash. It had transformed into something else entirely: Mateo King vs Alphonso Davies.

Two human jets colliding, two players who reduced football into its rawest element—running.

The crowd of 75,024 sat stunned, spellbound, their mouths slightly parted, every heartbeat syncing with the sprinting duels unraveling before them. A stadium built for chants and roars now hummed with awe, because two professionals had hijacked all attention, all fascination.

And yet—among all the enthralled faces, there was one man who felt only regret.

Aleksander Čeferin, president of UEFA, sat in his polished VIP seat, but his eyes weren't shining with wonder. They were narrowed, calculating, heavy with the weight of missed opportunity.

He saw it in the stiff postures of the executives around him—men normally immune to football's chaos—now leaning forward, eyes glued to the grass like transfixed children. If they were captivated, then what about the millions watching at home? He already knew the answer. He had seen this once before.

The Barcelona–Paris quarter-final, Mateo vs Mbappé, had shattered expectations. The hype, the views, the electricity of the world watching two young phenoms collide—it had been a broadcaster's dream. But that duel, for all its brilliance, was only a mirage. Mbappé and Mateo were both strikers. Their battle was theoretical, indirect, carried out through goals and counters, never a true collision of wills.

But this? This was different. Striker vs defender. Predator vs gatekeeper. Two of the fastest alive, colliding head-to-head in real time, over and over, with the outcome always decided in the space of a heartbeat. It wasn't abstract. It was primal. It was war.

And Čeferin could only mutter inwardly, 'Fuck. I missed the chance'.

While the world felt fascination, he felt only the bitter sting of lost promotion, lost spectacle, lost history.

Because the second meeting between Davies and Mateo was about to begin.

And unlike that fictional clash of Wally West and Sonic the Hedgehog, here, in the cold steel of the Allianz Arena, under the pressure of the Champions League, a true winnerwould be declared.

And with dribbling to rival Neymar, the control of Iniesta, and a skillset stitched together from the gods of football themselves, the outcome already felt written in stone.

The world was about to see exactly who ruled —

and the way it would be shown to them could not have been any more clear and brutal.

The 27th minute.

By now Bayern Munich's relentless pressing had taken on the feel of a storm, wave after wave of red shirts surging forward, suffocating Barcelona in their own half. Every Barça player looked rushed, harried, their touches shortened, their passes cut to the bone. The ball barely lasted five seconds in blaugrana feet before another German tackle or interception came flying in.

And yet… amid the chaos, three men stood untouched by nerves.

Sergio Busquets, who floated around the pitch as though the pressure were nothing more than background noise. Pedri, shockingly composed for someone so young, treating each red shirt like a puzzle piece to be shifted with his vision. And, of course, Lionel Messi — the only player who seemed to view Bayern's press as a minor inconvenience rather than a suffocating grip.

"Barcelona can't breathe out there," Guy Mowbray's voice snapped across the commentary. "Bayern are chasing in packs, closing every angle—yet Busquets, Messi, Pedri… they're still standing tall."

"Yes, and watch the body language," Tony Jones added. "The veterans and the boy wonder — those are the only sparks holding Barcelona together."

And then, late in the 27th minute, that spark became fire.

It began with Pedri, who had just been bundled over by Leon Goretzka, sliding desperately across the turf but refusing to surrender. Even while falling, his boot stretched, dragging a pass forward — a gift willed into existence. The ball spun loose, rolling right into Messi's stride.

The crowd roared. Bayern's fans leaned forward, expecting the swarm to engulf him. But Messi, glancing at Pedri still sprawled on the grass, felt a flash ignite inside him. That's true. I'm not alone.

One Bayern player came charging in — a blur of red. Messi answered with a casual sidestep, sending his opponent sliding the wrong way. The press had devoured everyone else in blaugrana, but Messi… Messi lived outside the plans.

And that was the truth that haunted Bayern's coaches. They had spent the buildup dissecting Mateo King — crafting schemes, assigning markers, planning traps. But Messi? No plan. No tactic. No assignment. Why bother? Everyone knew by now — players, coaches, fans, the entire world — tactics crumbled at the feet of Messi.

So instinct took over. Attack him. Get the ball off him. That primal scream rang in Bayern heads. The moment he skated past the first challenge, two more players abandoned their posts, converging recklessly on him. They knew leaving gaps was suicide, but a free man elsewhere seemed less dangerous than a one-on-one marked Messi.

And yet it wasn't nearly enough.

With a flick of his boot, Messi split the pair — one shimmy to the left, another dart to the right — and suddenly he was free again.

The stands erupted. The Barcelona section behind the goal leapt as one, shrieking his name. Even neutrals gasped.

"He's gone! He's gone!" Mowbray cried, voice cracking.

"Still Messi! That's genius!" Tony's words were half shout, half worship.

Two players weren't screaming from the stands, though — they were right there on the pitch. Mateo King, mouth wide open, and Alphonso Davies, a grin splitting his face as he sprinted back.

"Fuck, Messi is insane!" Mateo yelled mid-run, shaking his head in disbelief.

Davies couldn't resist firing back, laughter in his voice even as his muscles coiled. "Are you telling me?!"

For one second, the two of them — rivals yet fans — locked eyes, sharing that same helpless awe. Then both snapped back to reality, bodies tightening. Because when they looked forward again, Messi wasn't admiring anything. He was charging, already past the halfway line, already dragging the game into his orbit.

And though Mateo and Davies had just geeked out like starstruck kids, their feet were no less ready.

Davies planted his boots, lowering his center of gravity as he squared himself against Mateo. His voice cut through the noise, sharp and defiant, as he barked,

"You aren't going anywhere."

Mateo slowed his jog just a fraction, his eyes never leaving the Canadian. His reply came with a sly grin, almost mocking:

"Don't you have to mark Messi?"

Davies didn't flinch, didn't blink, still locked in.

"Yeah, leave a gun to go face a nuke nah I'm good here, beside its not my job."

That earned him a low chuckle from Mateo, who tilted his head with a predator's calm.

"You know," he said, voice curling into menace, "you are fast."

For the first time, Davies' eyes twitched, just a flicker of surprise. He wasn't expecting that acknowledgment, not in this tone, not in the middle of this chaos. Still, he didn't dare peel his gaze away.

Mateo's grin deepened, something darker slipping across his face, a villain savoring the stage.

"Too bad… speed alone can't stop me."

And then—bang. The duel began.

Both men exploded forward, boots shredding turf, the raw sprint matching stride for stride as the Camp Nou roared. Messi had almost reached the Bayern defensive third, Alaba and Pavard converging on him, but neither commentator could ignore what was happening off the ball.

Guy Mowbray (commentary, rising):"And now look! Mateo King has taken off! Davies has gone with him—what a race this is! My word, this is lightning meeting lightning!"

Tony Jones (cutting in, voice rattling with adrenaline):"Messi's still on it though—he's got Alaba and Pavard breathing down his neck! Griezmann's peeling wide left, he's available—but what does Messi want here? Three beaten already, what's two more right?"

The answer came in the most Messi way possible. Instead of forcing the duel, instead of carrying the ball into the trap, he slipped a dagger between lines, a through-ball that felt almost sacrilegious in its precision.

The commentators screamed.

Mowbray:"Ohhh and he's passed it! A through ball! But isn't that exactly where King and Davies are sprinting?!"

Jones (shouting over him):"Yes, yes it is! Messi knew! He KNEW! He's dragged the defense and now he's set the stage—King and Davies, it's theirs to fight for!"

The fans responded in chaos—half of the stadium erupting in anticipation, half holding its collective breath. Even Bayern's bench stood, Flick's assistants yelling instructions, hands gesturing frantically.

Mateo tore toward the ball, his body low, his smirk still there. He could feel Davies at his shoulder, closer than anyone else had ever managed.

As expected, Mateo thought, a predator pleased that the chase had not ended too quickly.

And then came the twist. Instead of driving straight into the ball, Mateo cut—just a subtle, razor-sharp angle to the right. The crowd gasped. It bought him the first touch, yes, but the price was steep: in that slice of movement, Davies gained the inside track, surging ahead, his long strides chewing grass.

The Canadian's smirk returned, wide, triumphant. His mind was already buzzing with certainty.

Yes. I've cut him off. He can't burst past me now. If he tries to push it forward, I'll sweep it away. If he slows, I'll box him in. He'll be forced to pass back—there's no lane, no space. Messi's covered, Griezmann's locked, the rest of the pitch shut down. He has no way through. He's mine.

Davies' chest swelled, pride rushing through him as the plan unfolded perfectly in his head. This wasn't just a defensive stand—this was the moment he would cage Barcelona's new fire.

Then Davies saw it.

That same look.

The look that had already traumatized defenders across Spain and would go on to haunt countless more across Europe.

Mateo King—smirking.

Davies' chest tightened for half a second. His legs still buzzed with confidence, his lungs still burned with speed, but his heart knew this boy in front of him was no ordinary forward.

"I told you," Mateo said, voice low and cutting, eyes locked like daggers, "speed wouldn't be enough."

Before Davies could even process those words, Mateo struck.

A blur of step-overs—lightning quick, ball flickering side to side. The Canadian's body reacted on instinct, legs shifting, shoulders twitching, his mind screaming don't fall for it. He bit down hard, focusing every fiber of his being on Mateo's rhythm.

But then Mateo stopped. Just stopped the dance, exploding forward in a surge.

Davies' heart leapt. He shuffled back instantly, perfectly timed, cutting off the lane. A grin crept onto his face. Got you.

He thought, all that flash—nothing more. You're not going past me.

And out loud, steady and smug, he said:

"It's over."

He lunged, foot shooting forward to take the ball clean off Mateo.

And that's when the boy's smirk stretched into something darker. A smile.

"Yes," Mateo murmured under his breath, eyes glinting, "it's over—"

—for you.

He wished he could have said it out loud, but there was no time.

Because everything happened in a blur.

Mateo yanked the ball back at the last split-second, Davies' foot stabbing into nothing but grass. And then, impossibly, outrageously, Mateo hooked his foot under the ball and flicked it upward.

A rainbow flick.

The ball arced, impossibly smooth, impossibly disrespectful, sailing over Davies' head. The Canadian's jaw tightened as his eyes followed it, neck snapping up. For a heartbeat the stadium itself gasped, a sound that seemed to swallow the night air.

Even Bayern fans were on their feet, hands gripping heads, unable to believe what they were witnessing.

And in the commentary box—

"OOHHHHHH!" Guy Mowbray practically exploded, his voice breaking.

"WHAT—WHAT HAS HE JUST DONE?!" Tony Jones bellowed, both men standing up as if dragged out of their seats by the sheer audacity.

Davies felt the ball's shadow glide over him. He turned, wild, panic flashing. Shit… shit.

No. It wasn't over. He wouldn't let it be over. He told himself, I'll chase him. He's with the ball now—he can't be faster than me with it. He can't.

But even Mateo knew Davies would think that.

As the Canadian twisted his body, preparing to spin 180 degrees and launch into the chase, Mateo was already past him, already surging. And in that perfect, vulnerable moment—mid-turn, balance hanging by a thread—Mateo slammed his shoulder lightly into Davies'.

The contact was subtle but brutal. Davies' footing, already weak from his twist, vanished. His body tipped, spiraling.

And as he fell, the noise of the stadium crashing down on him, he heard the boy's voice.

Cold. Brutal. Uncaring.

"Stay there, bro."

The last thing Davies saw was the back of the number 36 shirt pulling away, growing smaller and smaller, leaving him on the ground as the game raced forward without him.

The commentary box nearly shook with the roar of the stadium.

Tony Jones screamed:

"OH MY WORD—RAINBOW FLICK! MATEO KING HAS JUST HUMILIATED ALPHONSO DAVIES! HE'S GONE! HE'S GONE! LISTEN TO THIS CROWD! WHAT HAVE WE JUST WITNESSED!?"

Guy Mowbray cut in, his voice almost cracking from the excitement:

"Davies is down! The only man who could catch him—gone! Mateo King is flying! Look at him move! It's just Neuer now! Neuer versus King! The greatest goalkeeper of his generation against the hottest young goalscorer in the world! This is unbelievable!"

Even the Bayern fans—loyal, proud, used to decades of domination—were on their feet, hands pressed to their heads in disbelief. The Barcelona section? They were no longer just fans; they were an orchestra of ecstasy, screaming, waving scarves, collapsing over each other as they realized what was unfolding.

And then—it was silence in Neuer's head.

The German giant, Manuel Neuer, the man who had defined a position, who had redrawn the very role of a goalkeeper, looked forward and saw the 17-year-old prodigy tearing down on him like a storm unleashed. Others were running—Kimmich sprinting back, Alaba shouting, even Griezmann and Messi pushing up behind—but Neuer knew it was down to him no to them.

He braced, taking those long, deliberate strides forward, spreading himself wide, making his frame vast and intimidating. He had done this thousands of times. Against strikers older, stronger, celebrated. He knew how to use everything—his body, his reputation, his aura. He wasn't just a goalkeeper; he was a shadow, a ghost that haunted forwards. His very name forced hesitation. One doubt, one split-second pause, and that was all he ever needed.

And now? He thought he had it. Mateo King may have been dazzling Europe, yes—but at the end of the day, he was still 17. Still a child. Surely, the aura of Manuel Neuer would weigh on him.

But the moment Mateo hit the penalty box, Neuer saw the look. The posture. The fearless fire in the boy's eyes. In that instant, he knew. His name meant nothing. His stature meant nothing. His decade of glory, his medals, his legend—meaningless.

"Damn it," Neuer muttered under his breath as Mateo bore down on him.

Still, Neuer was Neuer. If his reputation failed, his ability never did. His arms spread like a titan, his stance low and wide, his body arching into the perfect wall. His eyes burned into the ball, reading, anticipating, ready to pounce.

Too bad for him—Mateo wasn't here for elegance anymore. He wasn't here for artistry. He wasn't here to dance past another man like he had done with Davies. No. Against Neuer, it was pure brutality.

Mateo stormed into the box without breaking stride, his body a blur, his intent murderous. No hesitation. No change of angle. No disguise. Just raw, violent certainty. He drew his leg back, muscles coiling like steel. And then—

"BANG!"

"GOAL! GOOOOOOAL! OHHHHH MY WORD, IT'S IN! IT'S IN! THIS KID! THIS KID! THIS KID! WHO IS THIS CHILD?!"

Tony Jones' voice was on fire, his tone cracking with disbelief, as if he'd just witnessed a miracle explode out of nothing. Guy Mowbray overlapped him, almost screaming, his words tripping over each other:

"WHAT HAVE WE JUST SEEN?! MANUEL NEUER—LEFT FOR DEAD! WHAT IS THIS? WHAT IS THIS BARÇA PRODIGY?! WHERE DID THEY FIND HIM? WHO LET THIS BOY INTO THE THEATRE OF GIANTS?! JUST SEVENTEEN YEARS OF AGE AND HE HAS RIPPED THROUGH BAYERN'S HEART!"

The Allianz Arena was chaos. The German voices were guttural, howling, a thousand gasps folding into an avalanche of shock, while the small cluster of Barcelona supporters high in the away end erupted like a volcano, their screams piercing the Munich night. Blue and red flags swung wildly; bodies toppled over one another in delirium.

Neuer, arms still outstretched, frozen in his futile attempt, turned his head slowly, eyes wide, watching the ball ripple against the net. His disbelief mirrored the silence that briefly choked the Bayern stands. The great goalkeeper, the monument, the wall of Germany—beaten clean, beaten mercilessly.

Guy Mowbray roared again:

"TWENTY-EIGHT MINUTES! TWENTY-EIGHT MINUTES AND THE GERMANS ARE FALLING TO A CHILD! MATEO KING—REMEMBER THE NAME, WORLD! REMEMBER THE NAME!"

Mateo, who had unleashed that thunderbolt, did not waste a second. His body seemed to vibrate with every step as he burst away, chest heaving, his arms flailing with raw adrenaline. His legs, heavy with the violence of the strike, wobbled beneath him as he sprinted—he even stumbled once, crashed onto his hands, then sprang up again without breaking stride. His emotions were spilling out of him, like an untamed storm—he was laughing and screaming at once, his face wild, as though he couldn't quite believe what he had done either.

He ran, cutting through the heavy Munich air, not towards the opposition fans—not this time. No, he turned, eyes laser-locked on the far corner where the away faithful stood. His family in spirit. His true home.

The Barça section was unhinged. Scarves spun, shirts flew, hundreds of voices fused into one colossal roar, chanting his name before they'd even realized it. Mateo's arms opened wide as if to embrace them all. He slid onto his knees, grass ripping against his skin, his fists pounding the sky. He was theirs, and they were his.

Then came the avalanche—Pedri, the architect, sprinting first, throwing himself onto Mateo's back. Messi followed, face alight with something between pride and wonder, wrapping an arm around the boy. Griezmann, Jordi Alba, Busquets—they piled on one after the other until Mateo was buried beneath a wave of blaugrana.

The roar of celebration was endless. The echoes bounced off the steel of the stadium, swallowed by the stunned silence of the home crowd.

From Pedri's unwavering pass, to Messi's threaded dribbles, to Mateo's rainbow flick, to the unstoppable strike—all of it, every beat of beauty, had taken only a minute. Sixty seconds. Yet it felt like an eternity stretched across the footballing heavens.

And in that eternity, Mateo King was in nirvana.

At seventeen years of age, in Munich, against the most ruthless of champions, he had broken the silence.

1–0. Barcelona were leading.

The stadium was still shaking, still trembling under the echo of his goal, the sound of it rolling across the night like thunder that refused to fade. His teammates crashed into him—Pedri, Messi, Alba, even Pique from the backline sprinting the full length of the pitch just to throw themselves into the arms of their youngest brother. They grabbed him, pulled at his shirt, smothered him in shouts, in laughter, in disbelief. The Barça players knew history was happening, and they wanted to feel it with their own hands, their own skin, their own hearts.

But Mateo—Mateo felt something deeper.

The author knew what this was. The author had carved the passes, sculpted the flick, orchestrated the shot, yes. The author had painted the scene, placed the boy inside the stadium, inside the storm. Yet in that moment the author felt himself stepping back, receding into the stands of imagination. For though Mateo might only be ink and invention, tonight he was flesh and blood, sweat and pulse. The boy had leapt from the page, had taken flight, and for all the scaffolding of creation—this, this feeling, belonged to him.

It was his.

The intoxicating rush poured through him like liquid fire. The roar of the crowd wasn't noise or a simple sentence written down—it was oxygen. Every scream, every chant of "Mateo! Mateo!" filled his lungs, filled his chest, until it felt like his heart could explode. His body trembled—not from fear, not from nerves, but from joy so pure it was almost violent. His legs gave way once, twice, as he stumbled toward the corner flag, yet he rose each time like a man pulled by destiny itself, a smile tearing across his face even as tears broke at the edges of his eyes.

Messi's arms wrapped around him. Alba's hands pushed against his chest in laughter. Pedri's voice cracked as he screamed into his ear. And in the corner, in that sacred corner where the away section burned blue and red, the Barcelona fans stretched their arms toward him like worshippers reaching for a miracle. They cried. They sang. They lived in him, for him, through him.

The author knew he had written this moment. But Mateo felt it. Mateo owned it. No pen could steal the weight of his teammates' embrace. No page could contain the tears of supporters who had traveled across borders just to scream his name.

This was not the author's.

This was not the system's.

This was his.

Mateo King. Seventeen years old. Scorer of the opening goal in Munich. And as he tilted his head upward, sweat dripping into his eyes, chest heaving with the raw violence of life, he saw the scoreboard tick over to the 29th minute.

And then he thought, clear as lightning:

"Let's go get more moments."

A/N

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