In a bar on Augustastrasse, a Tuesday evening.
The group had started the night talking about the first team, as groups in Gelsenkirchen bars inevitably did after a 0–3 ho defeat. The na Magath had been ntioned in a tone that ranged from exasperated to surgical. The sumr signings had been assessed. The midfield had been found wanting. This conversation had run its natural course by nine o'clock, and then Fries, a broad-shouldered man in a replica shirt that had seen better seasons, who had been at the Garden Stadium at noon for the U18 match started talking.
"That kid," he said.
"Which kid," soone replied.
"The one who ca on at the start of the second half. Brazilian. Ca on 0–2, had the ball once, and shot from like sixty-five tres."
A pause around the table.
"Over the goalkeeper," Fries added. "You could tell it wasn't luck from the way he hit it."
"Sixty-five tres!" soone repeated.
"Outside of foot. The ball dropped like it fell off a cliff." Fries drew the trajectory in the air with his finger, the climb, the apex, the sudden steep descent turned in a goal and three assists too. They won 4–2."
The table digested this.
"You were already three beers in by noon," soone said.
Fries pointed at the bar. "I'll buy a round for everyone here if you co to the next ho match and that kid doesn't make you forget the first team exists for ninety minutes." He looked around the table. "Anyone?"
Nobody took the bet.
The local newspapers had been more asured but equally interested. The Gelsenkirchen Sports Post had run Lars's piece on the Tuesday sports page - modest placent, above the fold, below the first-team post-match report. The German Third Division official website had updated their hopage. A clip was circulating on football forums with several hundred thousand combined views.
Mateo knew none of this.
He was on the training pitch at five in the morning with his cones.
Ben Kehi had started joining him.
Not imdiately, for the first two days after the match he'd gone out with the others, co back at normal hours, slept until seven. Then on the third morning he'd appeared on the training ground at five-thirty with his boots on, said nothing, and started doing his own warm-up ten tres from where Mateo was working.
Mateo had shifted a cone to give him more space.
They trained side by side without much conversation. Ben Kehi ran his own drills - first touch, passing wall work, the technical exercises he'd been doing since he was eight years old. Mateo ran his. The only interaction was occasionally one passing to the other to work on receiving under pace, which both found useful.
On the fourth morning Ben Kehi arrived at five-fifteen, slightly before Mateo.
Mateo saw him and let the mont settle between them. He didn't say a word, but there was a quiet recognition in his eyes, a silent acknowledgnt of the effort.
By Thursday's team session, the progress was visible. Daniel and Wickliff stood at the edge of the pitch watching the A Team run combination drills, and for the third session running they found themselves watching Mateo more than any other player.
"His control is different," Wickliff said.
"Significantly different," Daniel said. "The ball stays properly with him now. Even under pressure - watch, when Sitney presses from the side-"
Sitney Parker ca in tight. Mateo received the ball with his back to goal, took the touch inside Sitney's line, turned in the sa movent, and played it. Clean. No bobble. No adjustnt touch. One movent from receipt to distribution.
"Last week he needed two touches to do that," Daniel said.
"Sotis three," Wickliff said.
"What's he doing differently in training?"
Wickliff looked at his clipboard, which didn't have the answer to this question. "Working more than anyone else," he said. "A lot more."
Daniel watched Mateo receive again, turn, play - one fluid sequence. He shook his head. Not in frustration. In sothing closer to bewildernt.
Farfán called at lunchti.
"Are you eating properly?" he said.
"Chicken breast every day" Mateo said.
"Good. Co for dinner tonight. I want to show you sothing."
At Farfán's apartnt that evening, over rice and grilled fish, Farfán opened his laptop and turned it toward Mateo.
"The forum thread," he said. "Updated."
The clip Marco had posted had accumulated nearly two hundred thousand views. The top comnt had been pinned by a moderator: This is the best debut performance in the German Third Division in the last ten years. Possibly longer.
Mateo scrolled through several responses. Technical analysis of the lob. Fra-by-fra breakdown of the La Croqueta chanics. Soone had compared the corner delivery to a Pirlo free kick in terms of sidespin control. He read it with a specific detached curiosity the, gap between how he experienced those monts (overlay, line, execute) and how they looked to people watching from outside (extraordinary, inexplicable, visionary).
"The first team lost 0–3 to Stuttgart," Farfán said, closing the laptop. "Midfield was completely shut down, Jones sat too deep, Jurado couldn't find angles forward. Raúl had only one genuine chance in ninety minutes."
Mateo had heard about the result but not the detail.
"Raúl spoke to this week," Farfán continued. He ate for a mont. "He said the midfielders in the first team aren't giving him what he needs. The supply into the box is wrong - either too early, too late, or played to where he is rather than where he's going. He said-" Farfán paused, choosing the words. "He said midfielder at the youth team did it correctly."
Mateo was quiet.
"He ant you," Farfán said, in case that wasn't clear.
The food was good. Mateo ate a larger portion than he'd intended, which happened when he was thinking rather than attending to the plate. Raúl. The Bundesliga. The specific arithtic of what he'd need to close the gap: Ball Control will be at 75 by tomorrow morning, then keep pushing. Shooting was still poor - 65, unreliable in execution. Physically he was light. But passing at 100, control at 75, Dribbling climbing. The La Croqueta in the toolkit. Injury Immunity protecting him from the cost of physical football.
"I'm not first-team level yet," he said.
"No," Farfán agreed. "But the direction is right." He refilled Mateo's water glass. "Don't rush it. But don't underestimate it either."
He was back on the training pitch by seven.
Ben Kehi followed him out, which Mateo had begun to expect. They worked until nine, at which point Ben Kehi sat down on the grass and accepted that his body had a different opinion about continuing than his head did.
"I'm done," Ben Kehi said.
"Okay," Mateo said.
He kept going until eleven.
The next morning.
At four-thirty the alarm went off. Mateo's body ached in the specific distributed way of soone who had been asking a lot of it for a long ti. He lay still for exactly three seconds, did the math - training bar at 74%, one more morning session clears the threshold, he gets the point, reset fires and all fatigue and ache gone then he got up.
Ben Kehi did not stir.
Mateo laced his boots in the dark and went out.
The morning was cold. The training ground was empty. He set up the cones and started the familiar sequence - ball control shuttles, the touch corridor, the outside-of-foot repetitions. After soti, the threshold arrived:
[Training threshold reached: 10 hours.]
[Free Attribute Point × 1 available.]
He sat down on the grass with the ball between his feet and opened the system.
Ball Control. From 74 to 75.
[System reset triggered. All negative physical statuses cleared.]
He stood up. The ache was gone. Every joint returned to neutral, the accumulated soreness of extre training volu erased in a single notification.
He thought about what the number ant. Not abstractly - concretely. Ball Control 75 was the operating baseline for a central midfielder at a bottom-tier Bundesliga club. He had reached that baseline. He was, by that asure, technically equipped for a level above where he was playing.
Two weeks ago he had been a technically raw teenager eliminated by Dortmund on the last day of a three-month trial.
He set up the cones again and kept working.
At eight o'clock he knocked on Ben Kehi's door.
"It's eight," he said.
A long pause from inside the room. Then: "How are you even awake."
"Training starts at eight-thirty." Mateo said.
Another pause. "I heard you leave at four-thirty."
"And?"
"And you're fine?"
"Yes."
A sound from inside the room that may have been human speech or may have been sothing else. Eventually: "Give five minutes."
Mateo went to eat breakfast.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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