Pierce ca down from his jump and turned.
The ball had bent past him, he was certain of where it had been going when he'd committed, and he was equally certain that it was not where he'd been going. Two things that had been geotrically consistent with each other few seconds ago were now, demonstrably, not. He turned to look for it.
Ben Kehi was already swinging.
He hadn't stopped to control it. The ball dropped to him at thigh height, angled forward, still moving and he drove his right boot through it before it reached the ground. A volley, struck clean and low, the kind of contact that happens when the technique is already there and the decision gets made early enough to let the body do the work.
Hanskster's view was blocked by three bodies. He guessed right. The ball was going left.
It hit the inside of the net.
Swish-
4–2.
80th minute.
The Garden Stadium produced a sound disproportionate to its attendance.
Nine hundred people generating the decibel level of considerably more, sothing that happened when a crowd wasn't spread across a stadium but concentrated in one section, all of them on their feet at the sa ti, all of them processing the sa information simultaneously.
Ben Kehi's shirt ca off. He ran toward the corner flag, arms wide, and turned back to find Mateo still standing in the corner arc with the expression of soone who has just done exactly what they intended to do and is mildly curious about the reaction.
Ben Kehi reached him at a sprint and drove his shoulder into Mateo's chest, taking them both to the ground.
Benedict arrived from the right. Then Wheeler. Then Hardy Hant, who had covered fifty tres of pitch for no tactical reason other than that this was happening and he intended to be part of it. Then Lloyd Angelo at a jog. Then Sitney Parker from the back line, which was frankly excessive.
Mateo was sowhere at the bottom of this.
"Get off," he said. Nobody moved. "There are at least three of you whose weight is dically significant. Get off."
Ben Kehi, from sowhere above him: "That corner. You put it exactly where I was standing. I didn't even move!"
"That was the point," Mateo said, to whoever was closest. "Can soone-"
More weight arrived from sowhere.
"The keeper had no sight line," Ben Kehi continued, apparently having found a comfortable position and decided to stay there. "Pierce was completely wrong-footed. Where did you learn to bend it like that?"
"I'll explain later. Please get up."
The referee arrived and communicated his professional dissatisfaction with the pile. Players began to extract themselves in reverse order of enthusiasm, which took a while. Eventually Mateo was able to stand.
He pulled down his shirt. Ben Kehi was still talking.
"I'm going to be in the Top Ten," Ben Kehi said. "That volley is going to be in the Bundesliga Top Ten. I can feel it."
"The Bundesliga Top Ten is for Bundesliga goals," Mateo said.
"Then I'll be in the German football Top Ten. There must be a German football Top Ten."
"There is," Wickliff called across from the technical area. "You're probably in it."
In the stands, Lars was still on his phone - different conversation now, talking through the structure of the piece, the angle, the hook.
"Brazilian, seventeen, Dortmund reject - I know it sounds too good, but I have photos, I have witness accounts, I have thirty seconds of video from soone in the stands and I'm going to get the full match footage from the club. The corner alone-" He stopped. "Yes, I know it's the Third Division. The goal was from sixty-five tres with his first touch of his professional career, and the corner bent around a man who was at Rostock from the Bundesliga for three seasons. This is the story."
He listened.
"Right," he said. "Right. I'll file by seven."
He hung up and looked at the pitch.
Marco, in the lower tier, was filming everything - the celebrating players, the Schalke fans on their feet, the face of the older man near the tunnel who had crossed and uncrossed his arms four tis in forty-five minutes and was now standing with both of them in the air.
4-2. Final score. 1 goal, 3 assists, 35 minutes. I have video of all of it. Will upload everything tonight.
He posted it and watched the thread accelerate past anything he'd seen on that forum before.
Rostock's players were sitting on the pitch in ones and twos.
Not injured - spent. Sixty-two-minute-average career or not, the German Third Division in September was still ninety minutes of professional football, and the last thirty-five of those minutes had required more defensive running from Rostock's ageing squad than the first forty-five had cost them combined.
Chetkovic stood.
He was the last Rostock player still on his feet, which said sothing about him and sothing about the ground he'd had to cover. He looked at the group of Schalke players still moving around the centre of the pitch - Ben Kehi with his shirt in his hand, Benedict pointing at the scoreboard, the full-backs congratulating each other on a back line that had held.
Then he looked at the number thirty-eight.
Mateo was adjusting his laces. Practical. Unhurried. He didn't appear to be celebrating, or to be waiting for celebration, or to have a strong feeling about the crowd now chanting his na with a slightly imprecise rhythm because they hadn't needed to chant it before and hadn't worked out the tre yet.
Chetkovic watched him for a mont.
One goal. Three assists. Thirty-five minutes. He'd tracked this player for most of those thirty-five minutes and he still felt that he hadn't quite caught up with how it had all happened. The lob, the La Croqueta, the overhead to Benedict, the corner.
Every single one executed correctly.
In three and a half decades of professional football Chetkovic had played with and against so genuinely exceptional players. He had not played against a seventeen-year-old who did this.
He turned and walked toward the tunnel.
On Rostock's bench, Akama sat for a long mont after the final whistle.
His coaching staff were filing their match notes, running their post-ga routines, preparing the brief debrief. He let them. He sat and watched the pitch.
Manchester United. He'd given sixteen years to Old Trafford's coaching structure - first as an analyst, then in the reserve team, then the youth academy, watching players co through the system from fifteen to twenty-two, learning which ones would make it and which ones had the talent but not the will, or the will but not the talent, or both but not the ntality to translate them into consistent performance.
He knew what he was looking at.
The kind of passer who changed how a team moved. The kind of player who made his teammates look better simply by improving the quality and timing of the supply they received. United had had one - once, properly and the years since had been spent looking for sothing comparable and finding approximations.
What he'd seen in the last thirty-five minutes was not an approximation.
He reached into his pocket and took out his phone. Found the contact - stored under the first na, as always. Looked at it for a mont.
Seventeen years old. German Third Division. Six months at least before anything could realistically happen.
But the right conversations, started early, with the right person-
He typed a ssage. Short. Factual.
Watched a kid today in Gelsenkirchen. Third Division, Schalke U18. Brazilian, seventeen. Passing range and execution I haven't seen at this age in a long ti. Worth knowing about. Will send footage.
He read it back. Sent it.
Put the phone away.
The final whistle blew after few minutes.
Schalke's players were already moving toward Mateo before the sound had fully stopped, the acceleration of n who had been building toward this for forty minutes and had been given permission. Mateo had just enough ti to register the approach before the first shoulder connected and lifted.
They carried him.
In the stands the chant that had been working out its timing finally settled into sothing coherent. It was his na, or a version of it — Silva, Silva — the rhythmic repeat that football crowds produced naturally when they'd found a player worth naming.
Lars had descended from the stands and was at the edge of the pitch with his press pass visible, cara up, waiting for the players to co close enough.
Marco was filming from the upper row, wide angle, capturing the whole scene - the teammates, the chanting, the scoreboard showing 4–2 in the pale afternoon light.
And at the back of the technical area, Daniel stood with his hands in his jacket pockets and watched the pitch with the specific private satisfaction of a man who had made a decision that nobody else had believed in and who was now watching it play out in front of an audience.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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