The tunnel swallowed them whole.
Boots clattered against concrete, muted by the low hum of conversations too low to make sense of. A few players wiped sweat from their brows. Others tugged silently at the collars of damp shirts. No arguments. No shouting. Only the heavy breathing of a squad that knew they had been second-best for most of the half.
Demien walked among them, steps unhurried, body language steady.The ones who had doubts — and there were more than a few — they could feel it.The way authority wrapped around him like a second skin now.
Inside the locker room, the air shifted. Cool, stale, heavy.
Water bottles cracked open. The sounds of Velcro peeling from shinguards. No voices. No music. Only the kind of silence that weighed down on the lungs.
Demien let it breathe for a moment longer. Then crossed to the magnetic board without a word.
Snapped the old setup clean away with two swipes.Marker uncapped. Smooth. Controlled.
He turned slowly to face them — not pacing, not posturing.
Just standing there. Heavy. Inevitable.
"We're pressing like amateurs."
The words landed like stones. No theatrics, no raised volume.Just fact.
He drew two new lines across the board. Midfield and defense spaced closer together now.
"Shape first," Demien said, voice level. "Pressure second."
A few heads lifted. A few shoulders straightened.
His gaze flicked across the room.
"Cissé."The midfielder's eyes locked onto his.
"You sit deeper. No more chasing shadows."
A clipped nod from Cissé.
"Bernardi."The Argentine wiped his hands down his thighs but didn't look away.
"You control transitions. No more blind pressing."
Another nod.
Demien turned the marker slowly in his fingers.
"Evra."
The fullback leaned forward slightly, towel slung around his neck.
"You trigger the press only after the second pass."
A beat.
Then Giuly.
Captain. Hot-blooded. Proud.
Demien didn't soften the edge in his voice.
"You wait. You bite after the second pass, not before."
Giuly's jaw worked once, clenching — but he nodded.
That was enough.
Demien recapped the marker with a soft click and set it down.
He turned to Michel at the doorway.
"Zikos for Cissé."
Michel moved immediately, signaling toward the bench crew.
No committee. No debate.
The players rose, wordless, pulling on fresh shirts and adjusting tape.The weight in the room had shifted.
It was subtle, but real.
The second half began under a bruised sky, the late afternoon sun folding itself behind heavy clouds.
Demien stood at the edge of the technical area, arms loose behind his back, watching every movement, every misstep.
This time — Monaco's lines held.
Tighter.Sharper.Patient.
No wild chasing. No frantic gaps opening like wounds across the pitch.
Bernardi anchored midfield properly now, offering himself short, recycling possession instead of forcing transitions that weren't there.
Evra waited for his moment — letting Lugano step forward foolishly, then snapping into them when the space opened.
Giuly hovered just out of reach of the passing lanes, shadowing, stalking, waiting for the second pass before igniting the trap.
Demien's breathing slowed, syncing with the rhythm unfolding before him.
They weren't polished yet.But they were listening.
They were starting to feel the shape he wanted them to live in.
Twenty minutes ticked past — the pressure rising with every Lugano hesitation.
Then — the mistake.
A soft, lazy pass across midfield.A midfielder receiving it flat-footed, too casual.
Bernardi read it early.
A flash of boots.A crunch of studs.And the ball popped loose.
No hesitation — Bernardi stabbed it forward into space.
Giuly peeled inside, his first touch carving a path straight through Lugano's backpedaling line.
Morientes saw it. Drifted.
Giuly's through-ball slid between two defenders, delicate as thread through a needle.
Morientes didn't need to think.One touch to settle.One more to bury it low across the keeper.
The net bulged.
The crowd let out a ripple — confused whether to cheer or simply gasp.
1–1.
Demien allowed himself a small fist-clench at his side — nothing theatrical.Then dropped his arms again and resumed scanning the field.
No time for celebration.Not yet.
The tempo shifted.
Lugano, rattled, tried to push forward — but Monaco smelled blood now.
Not by charging recklessly.
By hunting, systematically.
At the seventy-eighth minute, another careless Lugano pass floated toward the left flank.
Evra was already moving before it left the boot.
He intercepted cleanly, chesting it down with no wasted motion, then surging forward into the gap.
Pršo made the clever run — not forward, but diagonally, dragging two defenders with him.
Evra spotted it, curled a ball into his stride.
Inside the box, Pršo didn't shoot.
One touch.A smart, simple cut-back toward the penalty spot.
Morientes again.Waiting.Smiling.
He tapped it home with a soft flick of his ankle.
2–1.
No dramatics.No explosion of noise.
Just inevitability.
The bench rose as one — polite applause, scattered cheers.
Demien stayed rooted.
Face blank.Eyes sharp.
Final ten minutes.
Demien signaled Plašil over.One hand gesture — fresh legs. Calm heads.
Plašil replaced Giuly, tightening the midfield further, shifting Monaco into a low block that strangled any Lugano rhythm.
Passes grew desperate.
Crosses floated harmlessly into Roma's hands.
Every minute felt heavier for the visitors.
Monaco killed the game not by dominance — but by suffocation.
The final whistle blew sharp and clear, cutting across the tension like a knife.
2–1.
Victory.
But as the players applauded the stands, a different noise began to rise.
It wasn't triumphant.
It wasn't grateful.
Booing — thin at first, then sharper in waves.
Low, confused, angry.
The supporters in red and white leaned over the rails, muttering, shaking their heads.
"It's not Monaco football anymore…""What are they trying to play now?"
Demien heard every word.
Tucked his hands behind his back.
Said nothing.
He simply turned toward the tunnel, walking at the same steady pace he'd kept since the first whistle.
The game was won.
The war for their hearts had barely begun.