Schalke 04's opponent today had a history that deserved more than this ground was offering them. Rostock - formally FC Hansa Rostock, had been one of the dominant forces of East German football, winning the last league and cup double before unification in 1991 and qualifying for the unified Bundesliga as a result. They'd managed a single season at the top level before being relegated, worked their way back up through the 2. Bundesliga in 1995, and spent the next decade in a grinding cycle of survival before the structural collapse that cost them their top-flight status in the 2004/05 season.
After that: a series of seasons in the second division, steadily losing key players they could no longer afford to replace. Last season, for the first ti in their history, Rostock dropped into the Third Division. The board resigned. The club was sold. It was the supporters who ultimately kept the institution alive - a crowdfunding campaign that raised enough to pay wages and keep the lights on while new ownership was arranged.
None of this made them easy to play against.
The squad on the pitch today was composed largely of players other clubs had released - n in their mid-to-late thirties for whom Rostock's modest wages were still better than retirent and whose professional experience still exceeded anything an U18 academy side could offer. They were slow in the ways that age made inevitable, but they were almost impossible to surprise.
Daniel had been clear in the pre-match briefing: speed and stamina. The plan was to press Rostock's back line from the first minute, use Whit Benedict's pace and Hardy Hant's directness to stretch their defensive shape wide, and force errors from defenders whose legs had already been running for fifteen years.
It was, in theory, a sound approach against an ageing side.
In practice, the problem was Halim OShea.
As Schalke's attacking midfielder, Halim's job was to be the link between the midfield base and the attacking third - receiving under pressure, distributing quickly, maintaining the tempo that would make the pressing ga work. Instead, within the first thirty seconds, he received a layoff from Whit Benedict and imdiately ran at Chetkovic.
Chetkovic was thirty-six years old and had spent two seasons at Real Mallorca in La Liga. He watched Halim co at him the way a man watches traffic from a pavent - curious about the timing, not particularly concerned by the direction. He waited, stepped through the ball cleanly, and Byinlich collected possession ten tres away.
The referee waved play on. No foul.
From the sideline Daniel's expression curdled.
Byinlich received, turned, and found Bartels on the right wing imdiately - one touch, no hesitation, a decision made before the ball had arrived. Bartels took it in stride and attacked Morton Jim at pace. He didn't do anything complicated: a single drop of the shoulder at pace, the kind of move that only works when the player doing it is fast enough that the one-step advantage created is too large to recover. Morton Jim lunged and missed.
Bartels crossed it early, hard, in front of the penalty area.
Hahnel had started his run before the cross left Bartels' foot. He'd been reading this cross for thirty-five years of professional football - the curve of the delivery, the pace, the angle of drop. He ran to precisely the right spot and leapt at precisely the right mont. Webster Jeffrey and Esther Scott jumped with him. It made no aningful difference. Hahnel won the ball two feet above their heads and directed it - not power, placent - across Babi Edgar into the far corner.
Fweet-!
Schalke 04 U18 0-2 Rostock.
The few fans in the lower tier reacted with the particular frustration of people who had expected to be frustrated but had been hoping to be wrong.
[That centre-back just stood and watched him jump. Didn't even contest it properly.]
[Why is Halim always running at people? I've been watching this team for three years and he's always running at people.]
Hahnel walked back to the centre circle without celebration. He glanced briefly at Webster Jeffrey and Esther Scott, still recovering their positions, and said nothing. The look communicated the assessnt adequately.
On the bench, Mateo noted the goal, noted the sequence that produced it, and went back to watching the spaces.
For thirty minutes the match continued in the sa vein.
What unfolded was not exactly football - or rather, it was a specific kind of football that existed at the boundary between the professional ga and its cruder antecedents. The ball went long. The ball went wide. The wingers ran to the byline and crossed. The strikers competed aerially with the centre-backs. Nobody played through the middle because the middle was where Chetkovic and Byinlich were, and playing into that space was sothing Halim kept attempting and kept failing at.
Ben Kehi moved intelligently - angling his runs, looking for the pocket between Rostock's lines, arriving in space a fraction of a second before the ball could reach him. Three tis he found the right position. Three tis the ball didn't co, because Halim had already lost it, or because Lloyd Angelo had played it long rather than taking the short option that Ben Kehi's movent had opened.
Daniel directed from the sideline in the specific register of a coach watching his preparation being ignored - loud, specific, increasingly repetitive.
"Quick passing, Halim - quick! Don't run at him!"
"Wide, Wheeler - get out wide when they have it!"
"Benedict, press the ball, don't wait for it to co to you!"
On the bench, Sdley Lev watched the match with the philosophical detachnt of a goalkeeper who wasn't playing. He leaned toward Mateo at one point.
"The German Third Division, it's mostly this. Long ball, physical, set pieces. The creative stuff - that's for above."
He was describing it accurately.
In the stands, Marco had stopped pretending he was filming casually. He had the phone squarely on the pitch now, recording. He wasn't sure what he was filming for exactly. He just had the instinct that sothing was about to happen, and that when it did he'd want to have been recording already.
The first half ground on.
Schalke had zero shots.
Rostock, managing the ga on experience, created two more half-chances - a Chetkovic long ball that Hahnel flicked toward goal with the outside of his boot, which Babi Edgar read and held without drama, and a Bartels run that Morton Jim eventually cut out by conceding a throw-in.
Three or four minutes before half-ti, Daniel stopped shouting quite so often. He stood with his arms folded and watched Halim receive the ball in the centre circle, run at Chetkovic for the seventh or eighth ti, and be dispossessed for the seventh or eighth ti. He didn't shout. He just watched.
Beside him, Wickliff made a note in his clipboard without being asked.
The whistle for half-ti ca. Daniel turned imdiately toward the tunnel without speaking to anyone on the pitch. As he passed the bench he looked at Mateo.
"Warm up," he said. He didn't stop walking.
Mateo looked at the pitch, then at Sdley Lev.
"Warming up at half-ti," Lev said, "ans you're starting the second half."
Mateo stood up and began his warm-up. The score was 0–2. He had not yet touched a ball in a professional match.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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