He'd been on the pitch since five.
By nine o'clock the solo session had given everything it was going to give. The reset had cleared the fatigue from last night, which was its own kind of useful, but four hours of work on an empty stomach had a way of making itself known regardless of what the system did to his muscle soreness. His stamina was 88, not infinite. The hunger was a separate thing entirely - low and insistent, the specific complaint of a body that had burned through bread from the night before and nothing else.
He stopped at the edge of the penalty area, ball at his feet, and listened to his stomach make its case.
He had ti. The team session didn't start until nine-thirty, which gave him, he checked - twenty-five minutes. Enough to get to the canteen, eat sothing proper, and make it back.
He packed the cones, put the ball in the equipnt bin, and walked toward the main building.
Standing in the canteen queue at nine-oh-five, he ordered two portions of scrambled eggs, a bread roll, and a large glass of water, and ate all of it standing at the counter rather than finding a table.
His phone buzzed.
Ben Kehi.
He answered it with his mouth still half full. "I'm coming."
"You're eating." Ben Kehi's voice had the tone of a man doing maths he didn't ask to do. "It's nine twenty-five."
"I'll be there."
"Silva-"
"I'll be there."
He put the phone in his pocket, finished the water in one go, and walked quickly back toward the training ground.
Nine-thirty.
Thirty-two players lined up on the pitch in reasonable order. Daniel strode out from the building with Wickliff beside him, Wickliff already running the roster before they'd fully reached the technical area.
Ben Kehi looked along the line to his left, then to his right, and sighed with the quiet resignation of a man who had called ahead and been given assurances.
Wickliff reached the end of the list. Looked up. Looked at Daniel.
"One missing, Boss."
Daniel's eyes moved to the gap in the line.
Then Mateo ca through the gate at the edge of the training ground at a pace that was technically a fast walk rather than a run, which was perhaps not the distinction he was hoping to make. He slotted into the line at the end, slightly out of breath, and looked at his boots.
The squad's collective attention moved to Daniel with the practiced alertness of people who knew what usually happened next. Daniel had a system. Lateness ant laps. Not negotiable, not contextual, not sothing that bent for new signings or clever excuses.
[Here it cos. Ten laps, and we're all doing it, aren't we.]
[First session and he's already late. Daniel's going to eat him alive.]
[If we all get laps because of him I swear—]
Wickliff was watching Daniel too, pen poised above the clipboard.
Daniel looked at Mateo for a mont. Then he looked at the ground briefly, in the way of soone organising a thought, and looked back up.
"Get in the warm-up." His voice was asured rather than loud, which was in itself unusual. "And don't burn yourself out before the weekend, it's good to be diligent but you'll do yourself a mischief if you're still at it at midnight. Understood?"
Mateo nodded.
That was it.
The squad stood in collective silence for a beat longer than necessary. Wickliff's pen had stopped moving. Ben Kehi, who had been braced for a minimum of three laps regardless of whether Mateo was to bla, turned back to the warm-up with the careful expression of a man deciding not to comnt.
The mood settled. The warm-up began.
The confusion was genuine and widespread. This was the sa coach who had made the entire squad run punishnt laps for being ninety seconds late returning from a water break. Who had sent a player ho from training for arriving with his boots in the wrong bag. Who had once and this story had achieved near-mythological status in the dormitory building - made a player run laps until physically sick for answering a phone call during a tactical briefing.
This kid had walked in ninety seconds after the session started and received nothing more than a gentle word about not overworking himself.
Nobody said anything. They ward up.
After the warm-up Daniel split the squad into A and B teams for a scrimmage. No tactical lecture - the match was at the weekend, the setup was decided, and what the squad needed now was rhythm and sharpness rather than information.
A Team: 4-3-3 — Ben Kehi at ten, Lloyd Angelo at the base, Joey French wide right, Whit Benedict through the centre.
B Team: 4-1-4-1 — compact, a holding midfielder behind two central midfielders, wing mids tucked narrow, single striker up top.
Mateo went to the B Team. Not the A Team - fair, he'd been at the club for two days and the A Team's shape was built on established chemistry. He took up the attacking midfielder role for the B Team, sitting just off the lone striker.
Daniel watched from the sideline with his arms folded.
Wickliff stood beside him, clipboard tucked under his arm.
For the first fifteen minutes Mateo was a problem they couldn't entirely categorise. He'd receive the ball in tight and give it away imdiately trying sothing too ambitious. Then, two minutes later, he'd find a thread-the-needle pass through four players that nobody else on the pitch had seen. Then a miscontrol that handed possession straight to the A Team. Then a La Croqueta through a double-team that produced the kind of audible reaction from the watching substitutes that coaches only heard when sothing genuinely unexpected had happened.
"I don't understand him," Daniel said.
"He's either a dribbling master or a primary school student," Wickliff said. "I can't work out which."
"He's both. At the sa ti."
Wickliff watched Mateo receive a pass, flick it first-ti to his left, and imdiately give it back at exactly the right angle to trigger a forward run. "The passing is consistent. The everything-else isn't."
"The passing is the only good thing," Daniel said, which was not literally what he ant, but it was close enough. "The rest of his ga is being assembled in real ti."
On the pitch, Mateo received the ball at the top of the B Team's attacking third with the A Team's defensive midfielder pressing tight. He shifted it left, shifted it back right through the midfielder's legs - the La Croqueta, clean and decisive and looked up.
The B Team's striker was making a diagonal run, timing his break between the two A Team centre-backs. Mateo struck the ball with the outside of his right boot, hard and low, bending it around the near-side centre-back's recovery run.
The ball curved exactly the right amount and landed in the striker's stride.
The striker got there. Got the ball. Set himself.
And hit it directly at the goalkeeper from six tres, who caught it without moving.
The striker turned with the expression of a man who understood completely that he had just wasted sothing. He looked at Mateo, found Mateo already looking at him with no particular expression, and gave him a slow thumbs-up from the chest, the gesture of a man offering sincere acknowledgnt of his own failure.
Mateo smiled briefly and nodded back.
Ben Kehi, who had been tracking the move from the other side of the pitch, was already shaking his head.
"That pass was perfect," he told Lloyd Angelo quietly. "Weight, angle, timing. If I'd been making that run it's a goal."
"Should've put Whit in the B Team," Lloyd said.
"Whit would've buried it before it landed."
The scrimmage ran for another twenty minutes. Mateo produced two more monts of genuine quality and three more errors that drew no reaction from him whatsoever - no frustration, no visible processing, just reset and continue, exactly the way he'd treated the missed shots at the empty net this morning.
Daniel watched all of it.
At the water break, Wickliff leaned in.
"Boss. The weekend. It's the first match of the season."
"I know when the first match is, Wickliff."
"Last five minutes. Just to give him a taste of it. It won't affect the result."
Daniel was quiet for a mont.
"He's been here two days." Wickliff said.
"I know."
"But he's never played a competitive match. Any competitive match. Not even a reserve fixture."
"I know that too."
Daniel looked at the pitch, where Mateo was walking back to his position after the water break, checking his bootlaces.
"He'll be nervous." Daniel said.
"What if his legs go? What if he freezes?"
"Then we know early," Daniel said. "Better to know early than to find out six weeks from now when the stakes are higher."
Wickliff pressed his small advantage. "You've been trying to transform this team's style for two seasons. You want Tiki-taka in the Third Division, you need soone who can actually play that way. If it works, people notice. The right people." He paused a beat. "Two. Bundesliga managers watch Third Division football."
Daniel's jaw moved slightly, which was as close as he generally got to acknowledging that soone had found the right argunt.
"Keep an eye on him this week," he said finally. "Diet, training load - don't let him run himself into the ground before Saturday. And tell him-" He glanced across the pitch. "Give him a heads-up so he's not ambushed by it. Let him prepare ntally."
Wickliff nodded and wrote sothing on the clipboard.
"And Wickliff."
"Boss."
"Tell him not to train so hard his legs are empty when he steps on that pitch. I need him present, not surviving."
On the far side of the training ground, Mateo was already back in position, waiting for the scrimmage to resu.
He had no idea any of this had just been decided.
He was thinking about the striker's run, specifically about whether the pass had been slightly too straight, whether a fraction more curve would have taken the centre-back out of the equation entirely and given the striker an easier angle. He ran the geotry of it in his head, adjusting the numbers, storing the correction.
The whistle went. He took his position.
There was a match at the weekend. He'd worry about that when it arrived.
Right now, there was still forty minutes of scrimmage left.
Plz Drop PowerStones
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