Three days.
The routine was the sa each morning: alarm at four-thirty, boots on by five, pitch by five-fifteen. Few hours before the team session, then the session itself, then whatever the afternoon gave him before his legs told him enough. Ben Kehi knocked on the door one evening and asked if he wanted to go for a drink sowhere in the city. Mateo told him he was fine. Ben Kehi nodded, didn't push it, and went without him.
There was nothing hostile in the refusal. It was simply that the training value bar was running and he had points to earn and attributes to move, and a night out in Gelsenkirchen was not part of that calculation.
Ball Control. Offensive awareness. Speed - though speed was mostly genetic and the attribute would only move if the underlying physical quality moved with it. He focused on what he could control. Ball Control drilled in the mornings. The team sessions gave him the hours. The afternoon extras pushed the daily count past ten.
Three days. Three points.
He put all three into Dribbling.
It went from 64 to 67, which was not impressive and he knew it. But 67 was functional. At 64, the La Croqueta executed correctly because the skill card overrode the attribute ceiling, the move fired at card level regardless. At 67, the everyday close control improved enough that the errors between the good monts beca marginally less frequent. The gap between what the card could do and what his raw ga could support was narrowing, slowly.
He noted it and kept working.
Friday morning.
The squad assembled on the training ground at eight-thirty with the particular quiet of people who know sothing is about to be decided. No warm-up called yet. Just thirty-two players standing in a loose group, watching Daniel and Wickliff walk out from the building.
Wickliff was carrying a black notebook.
Everyone had seen that notebook before. It appeared once at the start of each season and once again if soone in the squad was significantly injured. It contained the eighteen-man matchday list - the squad that would represent Schalke U18 in the German Third Division for the coming season. Eleven who started, seven who sat on the bench. The remaining fourteen faced the sa choice: wait until January or leave now, while the registration window was still open and other Third Division clubs still had spots to fill.
Daniel spoke first.
"Tomorrow is our first League match." His voice was level rather than rousing - a coach addressing professionals, not children. "We finished fourth last season. Our main striker and attacking midfielder from that squad have both moved up to the 2. Bundesliga, which is how it should be. That's what this club is for." He paused. "If your na isn't called today, it's not the end. The window is open until Monday. There are clubs in this division who need players and who will give you a fair chance. Don't waste the next six months sitting in the stands here when you could be playing sowhere else."
He turned and walked to the sideline. That was the speech.
Wickliff opened the notebook.
A staff mber wheeled out a cart of yellow bibs. Wickliff looked up at the group, then down at the page, and began.
"Babi Edgar."
The goalkeeper moved forward without expression and took a bib. He'd been the starter for two seasons and hadn't expected anything else, but the tension of the mont had touched even him.
The nas ca in order: Esther Scott, Webster Jeffrey - both centre-backs. Morton Jim at left-back, Sitney Parker at right-back. Lloyd Angelo at the base of midfield. Hardy Hant and Wheeler Angelo on the wings. Ben Kehi at attacking mid.
Then: "Halim OShea."
Halim stepped forward and took his bib with the careful expression of a man who had known this was coming but still felt the specific relief of it being confird.
"Whit Benedict."
Eleven. The starting XI complete.
The remaining twenty-one players stood in a group on the other side. Seven of them would be called. Fourteen would not.
Wickliff adjusted his glasses. The squad knew the format - they'd lived through it before, so of them several tis. Two goalkeepers nad next: one of them - Sdley Lev, who exhaled when he heard his na and gripped his bib with both hands. Hancock, who did not hear his na among other two goalkeepers, looked at the ground. Twenty years old, one-eighty-five - fine for an outfield player, not tall enough to compete as a professional goalkeeper in Germany. He'd known the argunt before Wickliff had even opened the notebook. Knowing it didn't make it easier.
Five more nas. Then Wickliff paused.
He looked up from the notebook. His eyes moved across the remaining players - so trying to appear calm, one or two visibly trembling and landed briefly on Mateo, standing near the back with his hands in his pockets.
"Silva."
A murmur moved through the group. Several players turned to look at him - the sa look, different faces: the calculation of how many days he'd been at the club versus how early in the list his na had been called. Less than five days. Last on the list but still on it.
Mateo took the bib, nodded at Wickliff, and stepped to the other side.
Daniel ca back.
He looked at the fourteen who remained without the bib - so staring at the ground, so watching him, one pressing his lips together in a way that wasn't quite holding it together.
"The window closes Monday," Daniel said. "Any of you who want to make arrangents, co to the office this afternoon. The club will process the release within twenty-four hours and your contract obligations transfer cleanly. You won't lose anything by going."
He waited.
Two n stepped forward. Both had been at the club more than a year. Both knew the bench here was not the sa as minutes sowhere else. They shook Daniel's hand - he t each one properly, held the grip a mont, said sothing quiet to each of them that the rest of the squad didn't hear.
Then they picked up their bags and left.
Mateo watched them go. They walked to the changing rooms and ca back out a few minutes later with everything they'd brought. The walk to the gate took about forty seconds. Then the gate closed behind them and they were gone.
Professional football.
He turned back to the pitch. Daniel was already talking formations.
There was a match tomorrow.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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