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Now reading: Chapter 10 10: What Schalke Has Been Missing from Football: Maxed Out The Wrong Stat, a Action novel by Shadownarch.

The ball climbed.

From the sideline it looked like a pass played too wide, directed toward the left channel, away from where the danger was, away from where Benedict had tid his run. Raúl's eyes followed it with the mild disappointnt of a man who had expected more. Forty tres out, ball in open space, no pressure between Mateo and the top of the box. The correct decision there was to carry it, or to weight it through the centre, not to play it out to the left flank and let the shape reset.

Wasted, he thought briefly.

Then the ball reached the top of its arc.

It didn't continue left. At the apex, the precise point where the backspin caught the air, the trajectory bent. Not the exaggerated curve of a set-piece specialist winding up from a dead ball. A controlled late movent, quiet and deliberate, the rotation pulling the flight path back across itself and downward.

Downward, and right.

Toward the near-post channel at the edge of the B Team's box, exactly where Benedict had tid his diagonal run to arrive, not at the launch point of the ball, but at its landing point, twenty tres on, at the mont it dropped out of the sky.

The two centre-backs had tracked Benedict's body. They hadn't tracked where the ball was going to be. When the flight bent they were a half-step wrong, and that half-step was the entire margin, Benedict had the angle, had the stride, and the ball fell into his run as if placed by hand.

One touch. Right foot. Low to the far corner before the goalkeeper moved.

Fweet-!

The whistle confird it.

The training ground produced the particular silence of a group of people taking a mont to agree on what they had just seen.

It lasted about three seconds.

Benedict wheeled away, turned to find Mateo, pointed at him with both hands. Ben Kehi was already clapping - the sharp, involuntary kind, not the polite kind. Lloyd Angelo, the defensive midfielder who'd barely featured in the move, was nodding slowly at the turf with the expression of soone privately revising an opinion.

On the sideline, Jennings, who had just been walked through like a turnstile and then watched the resulting pass arc over his entire defensive structure, sat down and found sothing to study on the toe of his left boot.

Daniel stood with his hands on his hips and looked at Mateo in the centre of the pitch.

Is this actually my player?

Two seasons grinding through the German Third Division with a squad that had individual quality but no real engine in the middle. No player who could accelerate the team's thinking, who could make the ball travel faster than legs. He'd watched Ben Kehi develop into sothing genuine but still constrained by what surrounded him. He'd cycled through attacking midfielders who could hold and recycle but couldn't find the decisive pass - who managed situations instead of changing them.

One training session. One afternoon. First day at the club.

He turned to look at the B Team substitutes on the sideline. Several were looking at the ground. Not embarrassed exactly - more the private recalibration of n who had been confident they understood the level around them, and had just received a piece of evidence that made that confidence feel slightly approximate.

He'd take it.

"Farfán."

Raúl said it quietly, still watching the pitch.

Farfán had gone still at so point during the delivery - he wasn't sure when exactly, only that he'd stopped moving since the ball left Mateo's foot. He was a winger by nature and formation; he'd spent his career on the right side, receiving balls in behind, making runs into space. He understood passing from the receiving end, he knew what a good delivery felt like when you were the one running onto it, and he knew what it ant to a striker to have soone in midfield who could find you in stride rather than asking you to check back.

What Mateo had just sent over the top, the curl, the weight, the landing point tid to Benedict's run, that was the kind of pass that made a forward's job feel effortless. You just had to run, and the ball arrived.

Farfán had played seven years of professional football and could count the midfielders who gave him that feeling on one hand.

"He's good," he said. The words ca out quieter than he intended.

"Good," Raúl repeated, and left a pause around the word that said he found it technically accurate but incomplete.

He'd joined Schalke for straightforward reasons - a fair contract, an organised side, a dignified way to finish. The competitive hunger he'd had at twenty-five, the feeling that every match had sothing essential in it, had faded to sothing more like professional satisfaction. That was just ti.

But he watched Mateo on that pitch and found himself thinking, almost against his will, about what it would an to have a player like that in the sa midfield. Not now - not yet. The basic skills were rough, the positional understanding was still being built from scratch. But the passing. The geotry of it. The ability to find people in motion rather than in position.

A player like that made strikers better. Made the ga look different.

He hadn't thought about sothing like that in a while.

He looked at Farfán. "Ask Daniel about the footage."

Farfán walked over to the staff mber with the cara at the edge of the technical area. The staff mber hesitated, training footage was technically internal, and he said so.

Daniel arrived at Farfán's shoulder.

"Give him whatever he wants." His tone was entirely matter-of-fact. He'd already worked through the logic: a Schalke first-team starter was asking to see footage of his U18 midfielder. The correct response was to make that frictionless.

Farfán took the recording with a nod.

Daniel wound the session down a few minutes later. Several of the apprentice players had part-ti shifts starting at five, and he'd already extracted everything useful from the afternoon.

Mateo ca off the pitch last. Unhurried. He found Farfán waiting near the technical area, jacket on, a water bottle in his hand.

"That move in the press," Farfán said. "The ball-switching. That's not sothing you see at U18 level."

Mateo considered it. "It ca naturally," he said.

Farfán looked at him for a mont with the expression of a man who suspects there's more to that answer but decides the pitch isn't the place to push it. "I'll see you around," he said. "And if you need anything, how the club runs, training schedule, anything - co find . Easier than figuring it out alone."

He left without ceremony, jogging back toward the first-team building.

Mateo turned and found Raúl still at the fence.

The older man walked over without hurrying, with the particular lack of urgency of soone whose presence doesn't require announcing. He stopped in front of Mateo and looked at him directly.

"Do you know what this team has been missing?"

Mateo waited.

"Soone who makes the ball do the work before anyone has to run." A brief pause. "Not next month. Maybe not this season, probably. But you'll get there." He held Mateo's gaze for a mont. "When you're ready, make sure the people making decisions have seen you. Don't wait for them to find you."

He put a hand on Mateo's shoulder - briefly, the gesture of a man making a point rather than offering comfort and walked away without looking back.

Mateo stood on the empty training pitch in the declining afternoon light. The Schalke crest faded on the dormitory wall. The distant sound of the first team sowhere across the complex.

One afternoon. Four passes that had changed his morning, changed his afternoon, changed where he was standing. A skill he hadn't owned when he'd woken up that day.

And an attribute panel still grey in almost every column that wasn't Passing. First touch still unreliable. Off-ball positioning still a project. Defensive output approximately theoretical.

He turned and went back inside to get his boots.

There was a lot of work to do.

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