The atmosphere in the San Paolo had shifted from celebration back to something more complicated - the particular emotional state of a crowd that had equalised but hadn't forgotten that they had been behind. The 1-1 scoreline felt like a moral victory in the stands. On the pitch, both sides knew it was simply a reset.
Hamšík's free kick was already playing on the replay screens. The Italian local commentary was reaching the register reserved for special moments - something about the pride of the South, about the temple being restored, about Hamšík being the living continuation of a legacy. Lorenzo heard it without listening to it. He was watching Benítez, who had stopped looking at his tablet and was speaking quietly and precisely to Jorginho on the touchline during a brief stoppage.
On the Barcelona side, Martino stood without expression. Pautasso said something beside him, low enough that the cameras couldn't catch it.
"Valdés is starting to show the seams on the near post," Pautasso said quietly. "The gap in the coverage - it happened against City as well. Touré's header, now Hamšík's free kick. Both found the same zone."
Martino watched the pitch without looking away. "I watched the U-21 final. That German keeper - Ter Stegen. The reach, the distribution, the way he reads the second ball." He paused. "We have the spear. We need to build the fortress around it. This winter at the earliest, next summer if not."
Pautasso raised an eyebrow. "Ter Stegen? He's at Gladbach."
"Not for long." Martino turned back to the match. "Keep it between us for now."
Fweet—!
The restart produced thirty minutes of grinding, physical attrition. Jorginho and Behrami were no longer just pressing - they were disrupting, tactical fouls breaking the Barcelona passing rhythm at regular intervals, the referee's whistle a constant interruption. The San Paolo crowd provided continuous noise, willing every tackle, every clearance, every loose ball into Napoli blue.
In the 39th minute, the tension broke.
Jorginho, seeing Xavi about to release a vertical pass into the final third, dragged a leg through the back of his standing foot. Not a lunge - a deliberate hold, the kind of foul designed to kill a moment rather than win a ball.
Xavi went down.
The whistle went. The bench protested. The referee gave a verbal warning to Jorginho and pointed to the spot where the free kick would be taken - ten yards inside the Napoli half.
"Home protection," Santiago said in the booth. "Jorginho left his studs in and the official treated it as a misunderstanding."
Xavi stood up, dusted his shorts, and walked back to join Iniesta over the ball.
Benítez had parked eight men at the edge of the area - a layered wall of blue jerseys between Reina and the Barcelona forwards. Iniesta rolled the ball, and Xavi took a two-step run-up - the rhythm of a man who has taken a thousand of these, who knows his own mechanics the way a pianist knows a piece he has played for thirty years.
The ball arced high and descended into the area with precision.
Under its flight, Lorenzo read the timing. He drove his shoulder into Jorginho, creating the leverage point, then used his full frame to hold Behrami off. The Klinsmann timing was precise - not launching early, not waiting, arriving at the exact apex. He rose a full half-head above the crowded box.
He didn't aim for goal. He snapped his neck and flicked the ball horizontally - a redirected header, changing the trajectory ninety degrees.
"THE HEADER RELAY!" Inés called.
The ball dropped to Piqué, who had the habitual striker's instinct of arriving in the box without being asked, the left-back's run disguised behind a defender's body. Piqué cushioned with his chest and nodded it down to Neymar cutting across the face of the area.
Neymar bypassed Ghoulam with a velvet touch and fired low toward the near post.
Reina dived - the La Masia reflexes, the correct read. He parried it clear with his right hand. The ball spun back into the six-yard box.
The San Paolo held its breath.
Both sets of players lunged for the rebound. Messi surged forward. Hamšík, dropping all the way back into his own box, reached out a desperate leg and intercepted, but the deflection sent the ball looping upward toward the far post, out of anyone's control.
Jorginho turned. Ghoulam turned. They were both too late.
Lorenzo was there. Behrami was still pulling at his shirt from behind, but the momentum was already committed. He watched the ball descend - looping, dropping at an awkward height, too high for a volley from the ground and not dropping cleanly enough for a standard header.
He twisted mid-air. His supporting leg pivoted. His left foot came around in a side-volley motion, the Šuker precision meeting the ball at the exact centre of the instep, the hip rotating through the contact rather than the ankle doing the work alone.
THUD.
The sound of clean contact - pure, sharp, the kind that feels right from the first millisecond.
The ball flew across the face of the goal and found the top-right corner before Reina, still off his line from the first parry, could begin to react.
SWISH!
2-1.
The Stadio San Paolo fell into silence for the second time. 44th minute. One minute before the halftime whistle.
"GOAL!! LORENZO!! THE TIME BOMB HAS GONE OFF!!" Santiago was on his feet, voice cracking. "He won the header, he stayed in the play, he read the deflection, and he finished with a side-volley that no goalkeeper in this stadium could have saved! One goal, one assist in the first half!"
Inés adjusted her glasses. "The side-volley under contact, from a looping deflection, finding the top corner - the technique required there is extraordinary. He adjusted his body weight mid-air while being fouled and still produced a finish with that placement. Barcelona go into halftime leading 2-1, and Lorenzo has one goal and one assist."
Lorenzo stood near the corner flag - arms wide, the noise of sixty thousand Neapolitans who had just been stung again washing over him without moving him. Messi and Neymar arrived behind him.
The halftime whistle went. Barcelona walked into the tunnel with a lead. The Vesuvius Legion was bleeding.
[Status: Leading (2-1). Halftime. Champions League MD3 - San Paolo.]
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