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Now reading: Chapter 17 17: German Third Division Kicks Off from Football: Maxed Out The Wrong Stat, a Action novel by Shadownarch.

After dinner, Farfán opened his laptop and turned it toward Mateo.

"Before you go," he said. "Look at this."

It was the forum thread - the pan-European football board he'd posted to few days ago. The forty-second clip he'd uploaded without much expectation, the title he'd written in thirty seconds: U18 kid at Schalke - watch the pass at 0:23.

The view count was sitting at just under eighty thousand.

Comnts: four thousand seven hundred and change. Shares: over thirty thousand. The thread had been pinned by the moderators on the third day and hadn't moved from the top of the Bundesliga section since.

Mateo scrolled through it.

[That La Croqueta - his hips commit to the direction before the defender can even read it. This is the result of training, not just raw instinct.]

[The pass at 0:23. Watch the apex. The ball changes direction - that's backspin, deliberately applied. He knew exactly where it was going to land.]

[Schalke U18? Seriously? Their U18 is in the Third Division.]

[It's definitely U18. Badge is visible on the bib. Question is how old he is.]

[Soone in the thread said seventeen. Old Jes brought him in apparently.]

[Outside-of-foot delivery from that range at seventeen. In a training session. Give this two years.]

He stopped scrolling.

It wasn't that the comnts were wrong. The pass had been what it was. But reading people's reactions to sothing he'd found functional rather than remarkable had a particular texture, slightly embarrassing, slightly absurd. They were treating it as exceptional. He'd been treating it as the first data point in a long process of becoming adequate.

"You're embarrassed," Farfán said, watching him.

"They're overreacting."

"They're not, though." Farfán closed the laptop. "You just have no reference point for how rare that pass is. You've been doing it for a week and it feels normal to you. It isn't."

He pulled the laptop back and typed sothing. The thread reloaded with a new post from Farfán's account: For anyone following - the kid just made Schalke's 18-man squad for the first German Third Division match of the season. Tomorrow, Garden Stadium, noon.

He submitted it and pushed the laptop aside.

"Right," he said. "Now go back and sleep."

Mateo walked back.

It was a little over a kilotre from Farfán's building to the club, through quiet Gelsenkirchen streets, the September evening cool enough to need a jacket. He'd eaten too much and the walk was a reasonable response to that. He moved at a pace slightly below his usual stride, hands in his pockets, thinking about nothing in particular.

The training ground was dark when he got back. He changed into his kit and worked in the near-dark for an hour - ball against the wall, receiving off the rebound, the sa close-control drill he'd been running all week. The training bar advanced. That was what mattered.

At so point the light in Daniel's office window went on. It stayed on for a while, then went off. Whether Daniel was at the window or not Mateo couldn't tell from where he was working, and it didn't change what he was doing either way.

He stopped at eleven, went inside, and slept.

Schalke 04 was founded on the fourth of May 1904, in the district of Schalke in what was then a mining city called Gelsenkirchen. The coal that powered the Ruhr district for a century also defined the club's identity - working-class, hard, unfashionable in the way of places that do genuine work. When the Bundesliga was formally established in 1963, Schalke were among its founding mbers.

They had never won it.

Seven runners-up finishes. Multiple DFB-Pokal titles. Champions League finals. A history full of almost, and of the specific endurance required to keep caring after a century of almost. The fans who ca to the Garden Stadium on Saturday morning were the latest generation of that endurance - not the polished matchday experience of a Dortmund or a Bayern, but the raw, habitual loyalty of people who had been coming to this specific ground since before the stands were covered.

The Garden Stadium could hold sixty-one thousand people.

On this particular Saturday noon, for a German Third Division match between Schalke 04 U18 and Rostock, the attendance was fewer than a thousand.

They spread themselves across the lower tier in loose clusters - so in scarves, so in old replica shirts gone soft at the collars from washing, so in the plain clothes of people who just happened to be nearby and had decided to co in. A group of older n near the tunnel argued about sothing that had nothing to do with football. Two teenagers in the upper row were on their phones. Sowhere above the technical area, a man with a drum produced a rhythm that nobody around him appeared to be following.

Mateo sat on the substitutes' bench and looked at the stands.

"The first team plays evenings," Wickliff said, settling onto the bench beside him. He'd read the expression correctly. "Stadium priority goes to the senior squad. We get the noon slot. That's standard for Third Division clubs in cities with a Bundesliga team - other towns, without the competition for the ground, get better crowds."

"How many usually co?" Mateo asked.

"Eight hundred. A thousand if we're playing well." Wickliff looked out at the pitch, where the starting XI were doing their final warm-up. "Last season we had twelve hundred for the last ho match. That's as good as it gets here."

Mateo nodded. He looked at the pitch, the white lines clean and sharp, the grass recently cut, better maintained than the training ground because the first team used this surface. He looked at the goal at the far end, then at the linesman jogging to his position at the halfway flag.

Across the technical area, Rostock were finishing their own warm-up. An older squad - most of them mid-thirties, a few pushing further. They moved with the unhurried efficiency of n who had been doing this for fifteen years and whose preparation was more habit than effort. Their height was noticeable even from the bench: most of them were big, broad, physically mature in the way that ca from years of Bundesliga football.

In the stands, a young man in a grey jacket with a phone already in his hand was filming the warm-up. He'd arrived early, he was here for the evening Bundesliga fixture and had walked into the Third Division match on a whim, found a decent seat in the lower tier, and decided to stay. He didn't know any of these players. He was just watching football.

The referee called both captains to the centre circle.

A whistle. The German Third Division season had begun.

Fweet-!

Schalke kicked off.

Schalke's defensive shape held through the first few seconds, then Halim OShea got the ball in the middle of the park and imdiately ran at the press rather than playing around it. He got three strides before Rostock's attacking midfielder Byinlich ca through him from the side, ball and player together, clean and hard. The referee waved play on without hesitation.

From the sideline, Daniel's jaw tightened.

The ball moved wide to Rostock's right. Their young winger, Bartels, received it with pace and drove at Morton Jim, Schalke's left-back. A simple drop of the shoulder, one change of pace, Morton Jim committed to the wrong foot and Bartels was past him. The cross ca early, whipped hard toward the penalty area.

At the back post, Hahnel had already begun his run. Both Schalke centre-backs tracked him, but tracking and stopping were different problems. Hahnel was thirty-eight years old and six foot three, and in the air he was still everything he'd been at Hamburg. He rose above Webster Jeffrey and Esther Scott as though they were furniture, angled his head, and directed the ball across Babi Edgar into the far corner.

One minute and three seconds.

Schalke 04 U18 0–1 Rostock.

[Shit! What kind of play is that! One minute in!]

[Those defenders - can they not read a simple run? The man walked away from them!]

[Daniel is going to lose his mind. Halim gave that ball straight to them.]

The fans weren't wrong about any of it.

On the bench, Mateo watched Hahnel walk back to the centre circle - no celebration, just the cold economy of a man who had done this many tis and considered goal celebrations for routine headers to be poor professional form.

Thirty tres away, Daniel picked up a water bottle, held it briefly, put it down again.

What followed was not football as Mateo understood it.

For thirty minutes the ball moved between the two teams in long, high arcs - out to the wing, driven toward the box, cleared, switched to the other wing, driven toward the box again. The midfield was a corridor both sides passed over rather than through. Chetkovic and Byinlich controlled the centre for Rostock without particularly trying - simply positioning themselves correctly and letting Schalke's younger players run into dead ends.

Halim kept receiving the ball and running at Chetkovic directly. Chetkovic kept taking it from him by barely moving.

Ben Kehi tried to find pockets between the lines. Each ti he did, Rostock's double pivot shifted and the pocket closed before the ball arrived. He started looking frustrated, then started looking careful, the particular caution of a player trying not to make the sa mistake twice, which sotis ant not making any decision at all.

On the bench, Mateo's eyes moved across the pitch constantly. The passing lanes were clear to him even from here, the spaces that opened each ti Rostock shifted, the gaps that existed for two or three seconds before the defensive shape closed them. Halim and Ben Kehi weren't seeing them, or weren't getting to them fast enough.

The first half continued in the sa ugly register - physical, aerial, technically limited on both sides, the Rostock veterans managing the ga through positioning and experience while Schalke's younger players struggled to find any rhythm.

Sdley Lev, sitting beside Mateo on the bench, leaned across.

"This is the Third Division," he said. "You'll get used to it."

Plz Drop So Power Stones.

For Advance/Early Chapters:

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