The thread moved faster than Marco had seen anything move before.
[Are you serious? From sixty-five tres?]
[Outside of foot - that's not a clearance, that's a deliberate shot. Is anyone else watching this?]
[Soone said this is the kid from the Schalke U18 video. The one with the La Croqueta.]
[He just ca on. Literally the first thing he did.]
[Post the video. Please. Now.]
Marco looked up from the phone at the pitch.
The celebration was winding down. Teammates peeling away, Mateo returning to position. Ben Kehi said sothing to him as they walked back. Mateo nodded once. His expression hadn't changed from when he'd arrived on the pitch.
On Rostock's bench, Akama watched the restart with his arms still folded.
The n beside him were already making the argunt that the goal was fortunate - positioning error from Hanskster, unusual bounce, the kind of thing that didn't happen twice. Akama let them make it. He had no interest in the argunt.
He had interest in the player.
The technique was the thing. Forty-one years in football and he could count the players he'd seen use an outside-of-foot strike with genuine backspin at that range on two hands. Most of them had been tested professionals by the ti they tried it in a match. This kid had done it in his first aningful contact with a professional ball.
This was not a footballer who had gotten lucky.
He reached into his jacket pocket and made sure his phone was there. He had a number he rarely used, kept in the contacts under a na he hadn't dialed in almost a year. There were conversations that shouldn't be had until you were certain. He was not yet certain. But he was watching.
The ga restarted.
Schalke were suddenly a different team.
It wasn't tactical - Daniel hadn't changed the shape or issued new instructions from the sideline. It was simpler than that: the players who had spent forty-five minutes not quite trusting each other now had a data point. The substitute had co on, touched the ball once, and pulled the deficit back to one. That wasn't nothing. That was information.
Whit Benedict won a header from Hahnel in Rostock's half - the kind of contest he'd been losing all first half, this ti throwing himself into it rather than anticipating the loss before it happened. The ball broke to Mateo, who had already read the second ball and arrived at the right spot.
One touch to Ben Kehi on his left, then Mateo moved imdiately - not waiting to see where the ball went, already running to the next position.
Ben Kehi received and looked forward. Byinlich pressed imdiately, aggressive, arms wide. Ben Kehi rolled the ball back to Mateo, who had re-appeared behind him, and spun to run off the shoulder of Rostock's right-back.
Mateo received and chipped it.
Not a long ball - a precise, low-trajectory chip about twenty tres forward, over Bartels who had stepped up to press, landing in front of Ben Kehi's run into space. The weight of it was exact: Ben Kehi didn't have to adjust his stride. He received it in full motion and drove into Rostock's half with the ball at his feet and only their defensive midfielder Chetkovic retreating ahead of him.
Ben Kehi carried it to the edge of the penalty area. Chetkovic ca across to cover. Ben Kehi flicked it back with the outside of his left boot - a quick, sharp pass to Mateo, who had tracked the move and arrived at the top of the box.
Two players ca for him imdiately.
Chetkovic from the front, committed to cutting the pass forward. Bartels from his right, covering the space Ben Kehi had vacated.
Mateo pushed the ball left with his right foot - past Chetkovic's outstretched right boot, a single precise contact. Then, before Chetkovic had finished his stride, his left foot collected it and pulled it back right, threading through the gap that Chetkovic's montum had opened between his feet.
Chetkovic stopped.
He'd seen this move before. Not often. Not here. He'd seen it from a Barcelona midfielder against Real Mallorca years ago - the sa push-pull sequence, the sa use of the defender's own closing movent to create the exit lane. The details were the sa. The hip rotation, the first touch angled to draw the commitnt, the second touch through the vacated corridor.
He stood with his weight on the wrong foot and watched the ball erge on the other side.
Mateo ca through behind it and drove to the edge of the penalty area. Rostock's two remaining defenders scrambled to narrow the angle. He cut the ball sideways with the inside of his right foot - not a shot, a low, firm pass across the face of the goal.
Whit Benedict had started his run from the left side of the box before the pass was released. He'd been timing this move since Mateo had received the ball, not guessing where the ball would go, reading where Mateo's body was going to send it. He arrived at the near post at the exact mont the ball crossed the six-yard line, wound up, and drove it first-ti into the far corner.
The goalkeeper was still moving left when it hit the net.
Fweet!
2–2.
The stands rose.
Not the polite appreciation of a watching crowd but the involuntary reaction of people watching sothing they hadn't prepared themselves to see. These were Schalke fans who had co to a Third Division match on a Saturday at noon and expected to lose. The stands were nearly empty and the opponent was a team of experienced professionals and the first half had been almost unwatchable.
And now it was 2–2.
Ben Kehi got to Mateo first. Then Benedict, shedding his shirt on the run. Then the full-backs and the defensive midfielder and all seven players on the bench rising to their feet together.
Mateo accepted it, said nothing, waited for it to finish.
On the sideline, Daniel turned to Wickliff.
"He ca on five minutes ago," Daniel said. He wasn't asking. He was processing.
"Four and a half," Wickliff said.
"One goal and an assist in four and a half minutes."
"The chip for the assist was very good," Wickliff offered. "The weight on it."
"The weight," Daniel agreed. He looked at the celebrating group on the pitch, then at the Rostock bench, where Akama was watching with his arms folded and his face showing very little. "What is Akama thinking?"
"Sothing," Wickliff said. "He's been watching Silva since the lob."
Daniel filed this without responding. He clapped his hands twice toward the pitch - enough, positions and turned back to the ga.
In the stands, Marco was on his feet with the phone pointed at the pitch. He'd fild the whole sequence from the chip to the finish, from Mateo's receipt of the ball through the La Croqueta to Benedict's shot. He replayed it twice, then uploaded that to the thread.
Assist - watch the move to get through the double-team first, then the delivery. Video incoming.
The replies kept coming. He stopped counting them.
On the pitch, Chetkovic walked back toward the centre circle. He moved carefully, carrying a specific discomfort - not physical, but the professional unease of a man who has just been taken apart by a specific chanism he recognised and had no imdiate answer for.
He looked at the number on the back of the Schalke midfielder's shirt as the players reset.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
For Advance/Early Chapters:
patreon/Shadownarch_
User Comments
0 comments from readers