EnglishShortStories.com

The Smallest Player

Story

Aarav was the shortest boy in his class, and by a fair margin the shortest player on the team.

"You'll get knocked over," his classmate Rehan said during warm-up, not unkindly, just stating what seemed obvious. "Bigger boys play forward. You should try being a goalkeeper."

Aarav didn't say anything back. He just laced his boots tighter and jogged to the sideline.

Coach Vikram had picked the team for Saturday's match against Lotus Public School, a team known for big, fast strikers. When the list went up on the notice board, Aarav's name was there — but at left midfield, not on the bench like he'd expected.

"You sure, Coach?" Aarav asked quietly, after practice. "Lotus has that one striker. He's huge."

"I'm sure," Coach Vikram said, not looking up from his clipboard. "Size isn't the only thing that wins a match."

Aarav wanted to believe that. He just wasn't sure he did.

Saturday came fast. Lotus Public School's players walked onto the field looking like they were a year older than everyone else — taller, broader, already talking among themselves like they'd won before the whistle even blew.

In the first ten minutes, Aarav touched the ball twice and lost it both times, muscled off it by players who simply outweighed him. He started drifting toward the edges of the play, taking up less space, the way he often did in crowded places.

At half-time, the score was 0-0, but it didn't feel like a fair 0-0. It felt like they were barely hanging on.

"You're playing small," Coach Vikram said to Aarav directly, crouching down to his eye level. "Not your body. Your decisions. You're hiding."

"They're bigger than me."

"They are," Coach Vikram agreed. "So stop trying to out-muscle them. Use the space they can't reach. You turn faster than any boy on this field. Use that."

Aarav thought about this the entire second half, even while running.

The next time the ball came to him, instead of trying to hold it against a bigger defender, he turned sharply, the way he did during practice drills nobody else seemed to take as seriously as he did. The defender, twice his size, simply couldn't turn as quickly.

Aarav slipped the ball forward to Dev, who scored. 1-0.

Ten minutes later, Aarav received the ball near the box, surrounded by bigger bodies on every side. He didn't try to push through them. He spun low and fast between two defenders, found a gap exactly his size, and slipped a pass through that put Karthik clean through on goal. 2-0.

The Lotus players looked rattled now, unsure how to handle someone who didn't play like they expected him to.

Final whistle: 2-0.

Walking off the field, Rehan jogged up beside him. "Okay. Maybe not a goalkeeper."

Aarav laughed, properly, for the first time all day.

That evening, lacing his boots off for the day, he looked at them for a moment longer than usual — not because they were new or special, just because of what they'd done that afternoon, despite, or maybe because of, exactly the size they were.

Worksheet

A. Multiple Choice Questions

  1. Why did Rehan suggest Aarav play goalkeeper instead of midfield? a) Aarav asked to play goalkeeper b) Aarav was the shortest player on the team c) The coach told Rehan to suggest it d) Aarav was bad at passing
  2. What position did Coach Vikram assign Aarav for the match? a) Goalkeeper b) Striker c) Left midfield d) Defender
  3. What did Coach Vikram mean when he said Aarav was "playing small"? a) Aarav was too short to play well b) Aarav was making less confident decisions than he was capable of c) Aarav wasn't trying at all d) Aarav was breaking the rules
  4. What strength did Coach Vikram tell Aarav to use in the second half? a) His height b) His shouting voice c) His speed and ability to turn quickly d) His strength in tackles
  5. What was the final score of the match? a) 1-0 b) 2-0 to Aarav's team c) 0-0 d) 3-1 to Lotus Public School

B. True or False

  1. Aarav was the tallest player on his team. (True/False)
  2. Lotus Public School's players appeared bigger and more confident before the match. (True/False)
  3. Aarav lost the ball twice in the first ten minutes of the match. (True/False)
  4. Coach Vikram told Aarav to try harder to physically overpower the bigger players. (True/False)
  5. Aarav helped set up both goals in the second half. (True/False)

C. Short Answer Questions

  1. Why did Aarav doubt Coach Vikram's decision to include him in the starting line-up?
  2. What happened to Aarav during the first ten minutes of the match?
  3. What advice did Coach Vikram give Aarav at half-time?
  4. How did Aarav use his speed and agility in the second half?
  5. How did Rehan's attitude towards Aarav change by the end of the match?

D. Long Answer Questions

  1. Explain what Coach Vikram meant by "Size isn't the only thing that wins a match," using examples from the story.
  2. Describe the difference between Aarav's behaviour in the first half compared to the second half.
  3. Why do you think the story focuses on Aarav looking at his boots at the end, rather than ending right after the final whistle?

E. Vocabulary Activity

Match the word with its meaning.

  1. Margin
  2. Muscled off
  3. Rattled
  4. Agility
  5. Trust

a) The ability to move quickly and easily b) Physically overpowered by someone stronger c) The amount by which something is greater or smaller d) To believe confidently in someone or something e) Feeling nervous, confused, or shaken

F. Reflection Corner

  1. What lesson did you learn from this story?
  2. Have you ever felt smaller or less capable than people around you, the way Aarav did?
  3. If you were Aarav, what would you have said to Rehan after the match?

G. Discussion Corner

  1. Why do people sometimes assume size or strength is the most important quality in sports or life?
  2. How can someone discover and use their own unique strengths, even if they are different from others around them?
  3. What is the difference between confidence and simply being the biggest or loudest person in the room?

H. Creative Activity

Writing Activity: Write a short paragraph about a time you felt smaller, younger, or less experienced than people around you, and how you handled that feeling. If you haven't faced this yet, write about how you imagine you would handle it, using ideas from Aarav's story.

AGE NOTE: For ages 8-10, simplify Long Answer Question 1 to "What did the coach mean when he said Aarav was playing too small?" and use simpler vocabulary words like "agility" with extra explanation. For ages 11-14, use all sections as written, including the full Discussion Corner.


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