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Now reading: Chapter 20 20: The Gold Line from Football: Maxed Out The Wrong Stat, a Action novel by Shadownarch.

Daniel pulled him aside at the technical area before the whistle.

"Your job is to pass," he said. "One touch where you can. I've told Benedict and the others to move before you get the ball, they know what to look for. Don't hold it." He held Mateo's gaze for a mont. "Trust the system."

He ant the team's system. Mateo managed to keep his expression neutral.

"Understood," he said.

Rostock kicked off.

Hahnel rolled the ball back to Byinlich, who had already checked his options and decided on a direct run forward. He ca through the middle at pace - not sprinting, just moving with the efficiency of a man who knew exactly where he wanted to be and how long he had to get there. Whit Benedict made a token press from the front that Byinlich walked around without breaking stride.

He was now approaching Mateo's position in the centre of the park.

Mateo stepped forward to close the gap.

This was a mistake and he knew it in the sa mont he made it - his defensive attribute was 58, which was less a defensive capability and more an optimistic description of his willingness to stand in soone's way. Byinlich read the step, shifted the ball to his left with a simple body feint, and was through before Mateo had completed the turn.

Behind him, Lloyd Angelo tracked across imdiately. His side tackle clipped Byinlich's ankle - both n went down, ball rolling free.

Fweet-!

The referee blew. Foul. No card.

From the sideline:

[What was that? He just walked through him - why is a lightweight midfield player being asked to defend?]

[Daniel's lost it. Halim was bad but at least he could take a hit.]

[Give the ball to number seven, why is it going through the centre again?]

The free kick was taken short. Rostock played it back to their centre-backs, reset their shape, and tried again from the left flank this ti - a long ball over the top that Morton Jim, reading it correctly, got to first and cleared to the right side of the pitch.

The clearance was solid enough. The ball bounced once, twice, and fell to Ben Kehi at the edge of the penalty area - roughly thirty tres from goal, Rostock's right winger Bartels already closing from five tres away.

Ben Kehi took it on his right, turned his body, and pushed a quick pass to Mateo on the right side of the centre circle.

Mateo had already moved to receive it before the ball left Ben Kehi's boot.

The ball reached him at pace. He didn't stop it.

In the fraction of a second between the ball's arrival and his decision, the passing overlay lit up across the pitch - the familiar map of coloured lines, their success rates updating as players moved. Green. Amber. A faint red toward Benedict in the box. He scanned it in the ti it took to breathe.

Then one line appeared that he hadn't seen before.

Not green. Not red.

Gold.

It ran directly from his position to the far end of the pitch - a single line, straight and narrow, pointing at Rostock's goal. The number beside it read 100%.

He'd never seen a 100% line before. He'd never seen a gold one.

He looked up. Just once - a single check to confirm what the overlay was telling him. Hanskster, the Rostock goalkeeper, had drifted forward from his line. Not dramatically - maybe four or five tres - but enough. He'd spent the first half with nothing to do. His positioning had relaxed in the way of a man who had stopped expecting to be tested.

Mateo planted his left foot, drew his right leg back, and struck through the bottom of the ball with the outside of his boot - downward, slightly diagonal, the contact designed to generate backspin rather than power alone.

The ball left his foot and climbed.

[What is he doing? There's no one there - just a big kick from the halfway line.]

[Amateur. Daniel's gone mad.]

[That's going to embarrass us. Soone tell why-]

The ball reached its apex - roughly in line with the penalty spot, sixty-five tres from where Mateo had struck it and the backspin caught the air. The trajectory broke sharply downward. Not a gentle fade, a drop, fast and steep, the kind of descent that made goalkeepers' spatial calculations suddenly unreliable.

Hanskster had been watching it as a speculative long-range effort that would fade over the bar. When it didn't fade - when it broke downward instead, toward the space between him and his goal - he turned and ran.

He was four steps too late.

The ball bounced once off the turf, hit the base of the post at an angle the backspin had chosen, and went in.

The referee in the centre circle had his arm out before it crossed the line.

Fweet-!

1–2.

The Garden Stadium produced a silence first.

Not the stunned disbelief of a crowd seeing sothing impossible. More the collective pause of nine hundred people who had been complaining about their team's football for forty-five minutes and had just watched a substitute score from sixty-five tres with his first touch.

Wickliff was the first person to move. He threw both hands up and turned to the players on the bench, who were already rising from their seats. On the pitch, Ben Kehi had reached Mateo before anyone else - both arms around him, neither of them saying anything yet because language was slightly behind the mont.

Then the stands found their voice.

Mateo stood in the group of teammates gathering around him and felt, unexpectedly, very little. Not disappointnt - the goal had gone in, that was the correct outco, the gold line had told him it would. More a kind of neutral calm, the system confirming what it had already told him. He was curious about that - the absence of the elation he'd assud a first professional goal would produce. Filed it away.

Daniel, on the sideline, had both hands pressed to the top of his head. He was staring at the goal, the net still moving, Hanskster crouched against the post, with the expression of a man watching an equation resolve in a way he hadn't predicted.

"That was sixty-five tres," he said, to Wickliff, to the air, to no one in particular. "He shot from sixty-five tres."

"He scored from sixty-five tres," Wickliff said.

Daniel looked at the fans behind the technical area - the sa section that had been audibly questioning his decisions thirty seconds ago. He looked back at the pitch. He arranged his features into the expression of a coach who had planned this.

"The substitution," he said.

"Your substitution," Wickliff agreed.

On Rostock's bench, their head coach watched the celebration subside and the players return to position.

Akama was forty-one years old. He'd spent his twenties and most of his thirties in the coaching structure at Manchester United - starting as a developnt analyst at twenty-five, working his way through the reserve and youth systems, learning from people who understood talent identification at the highest level. He'd co back to Rostock eighteen months ago because the club had asked and because it was ho, and because sotis ho mattered more than the next step.

He had seen the shot clearly.

The others on his bench were calling it lucky. He understood why they thought that - a strike from sixty-five tres going in off the post looked like luck from a distance. But he'd been watching the kid carefully for those two minutes since he'd co on, and there were two things that didn't fit the luck interpretation.

First: the check upward before the strike. Brief - a fraction of a second, but deliberate. He'd looked for Hanskster's position before hitting it.

Second: the technique. Outside of foot, contact point below the midline of the ball, leg travelling diagonally downward through the strike rather than through it. That wasn't how you hit a hopeful long-range effort. That was how you manufactured backspin to make a ball drop at a specific point in its trajectory.

This was not luck.

Akama folded his arms and watched the kick-off.

In the stands, Marco had fild the entire thing on his phone without quite aning to. He looked at the screen. Replayed it. Watched the ball climb and then break sharply downward. Watched Hanskster turn and run and not make it.

He posted to the thread without thinking about what to write first: Goal. Number 38. First touch of his professional career. Long-range lob - outside of foot, heavy backspin. Dropped like a stone over the keeper. Sixty-five tres at least. I have video.

The replies started before he'd put the phone down.

Plz Drop So Power Stones.

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