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Now reading: Chapter 32 32: A Starter! from Football: Maxed Out The Wrong Stat, a Action novel by Shadownarch.

Friday morning.

The squad assembled at eight-thirty. Sa format as two weeks ago - thirty players standing in a loose group on the main training pitch, watching Daniel and Wickliff cross from the building. Wickliff had the black notebook. People had learned what the black notebook ant.

The difference from the first squad announcent was the quality of the tension. Two weeks ago it had been the particular anxiety of people who didn't know where they stood. Now most of them did. The question for most of the group wasn't whether they'd make the eighteen, it was whether they'd keep the spot they'd held for the first match.

Halim OShea knew.

He'd known since the first match, if he was honest with himself, since Daniel had told him to get off at half-ti, since the substitute had co on and by the end of the ga the crowd was chanting his na. He'd spent the week doing what professional athletes did when they felt the ground shifting: training harder, staying quieter, waiting to see if the situation would resolve. It hadn't resolved. It had confird itself in every training session, in the way Daniel positioned the tactical conversations, in the way the other players were already looking at Mateo when there was a ball to be organised.

Wickliff read the starting XI.

Babi Edgar. Esther Scott and Webster Jeffrey at centre-back. Morton Jim and Sitney Parker as full-backs. Lloyd Angelo at the base. Hardy Hant and Wheeler Angelo on the wings. Ben Kehi.

A pause after the tenth na.

Halim kept his expression neutral. He had spent years learning not to let things show on his face when they were hard to hold.

"Silva."

Halim didn't look at Mateo. He turned and walked to the other side with the composed movent of soone who had understood this was coming and had worked out in advance what the correct way to carry it was.

The bench was announced. Halim's na was there. Starting was gone; the squad wasn't. Professional enough.

Daniel took the tactics board.

"The sa shape," he said, "with one change." He looked around the group. "Previously we've played with Ben Kehi and Halim running parallel across the ten position. From Saturday we're changing that." He drew lines on the board. "Silva drops slightly deeper - he's free-roaming between the eight and the ten. Wherever space opens, he fills it. Ben, you move wider, more like a traditional attacking midfielder holding the left channel. Your job is to be available when Silva plays it and to move before he has it."

Ben Kehi nodded.

"Benedict." Daniel looked at him. "You've been waiting for headers. That was right with the old system, Halim's delivery wasn't reliable enough to run in behind. Silva's is. When he has the ball and you can see a gap behind their defensive line, run it. Don't wait to see if the pass is coming just run, and trust that it is."

Benedict absorbed this. It was not complicated. It was the instruction a striker waited his entire career to receive.

"Wings - stay wide, stay available, and be patient. The ball will co to you. Don't co inside looking for it. When Silva switches play you'll be in the right position if you hold width. If you drift in you'll close the space he's trying to play into."

He stepped back from the board.

"Every attack runs through midfeild. Wide or central, it starts from Silva. That's the identity of this team from Saturday."

He looked at the group.

"Questions."

There were none. The players who were playing had understood their roles. The players who weren't had understood the reason.

"Scrimmage," Daniel said. "A Team and B Team. Standard formation. Let's work it."

The scrimmage lasted thirty minutes. By the fifteenth minute Daniel had stopped making notes on his clipboard and was simply watching.

The A Team moved differently.

Not faster, more purposeful. Ben Kehi taking a touch and imdiately looking for Mateo. Mateo arriving at the position before the look. The ball moving to him and moving on in one motion. Benedict making runs off the second pass rather than the first, trusting the sequence to continue and arriving in the right place because the pass landed where he'd predicted rather than where he'd had to slow down for.

Twice in the thirty minutes the B Team defensive line was beaten before anyone had run through it, the ball was simply in behind before the press had ti to form, because the decision had been made a touch earlier than the defenders expected.

"There's sothing wrong," Wickliff said.

Daniel looked at him.

"I an - I can't find it," Wickliff said. "Usually in a scrimmage you can spot the gap in the tactical execution. The touch that's too slow. The position that's slightly off." He watched Mateo receive, turn, play a forty-tre switch to Wheeler Angelo in one movent. "I've been looking for the gap for fifteen minutes and I can't find it."

"Because there isn't one," Daniel said. He said it with the tone of a man still slightly surprised to be saying it.

On the other side of the stadium, in the corner of the west stand, Luca and Stefan had spent three days building sothing that looked like a broadcast booth in the way that a garden shed built by an enthusiastic amateur looked like a broadcast booth. Four screens, a mixing board they'd rented from an equipnt company in Düsseldorf, two chairs. Extension cables running to a power point through a gap in the wall that the stadium staff had been persuaded to overlook.

Tom Warrick arrived on Friday afternoon.

He was fifty-four, with the build of soone who had spent his twenties playing lower-league football before his knees had a different opinion, and the voice - deep, precise, naturally calibrated for confidence, that had made him one of the more recognisable comntators on European football for fifteen years before a series of decisions, so financial and so professional, had brought him here: a DIY broadcast booth in the corner of a German Third Division stadium, preparing to comntate on a match nobody at any major broadcaster had even known was happening two weeks ago.

He looked at the setup. Looked at Luca. Looked at the setup again.

"I've done Copa del Rey warm-up rounds in worse facilities," he said.

"That's the spirit," Stefan said.

Tom took off his jacket, sat down, and opened the folder of match notes Stefan had prepared, Schalke U18 players, Magdeburg players, German Third Division table, Magdeburg's disciplinary record from the previous season.

He read through the Magdeburg section twice.

"Eight red cards last season," he said. "And their captain got fifteen matches for breaking a leg."

"From behind," Stefan confird.

"From behind." Tom put the folder down. "And Silva - the Brazilian kid, he's starting?"

"First start," Luca said. "Replacing the attacking midfielder from the first match."

Tom looked at the photograph Stefan had attached to the player notes - Mateo mid-stride at training, lean, light, clearly not built for the physical confrontation the Third Division ran on.

"He's going to get kicked," Tom said. It wasn't pessimism. Just professional assessnt.

"Probably," Luca said.

"How are his fundantals?"

"Still being built not exactly there yet. First touch is functional. Shooting is inconsistent." Luca leaned forward. "But the passing vision and the decision speed - that's not Third Division. It's barely 2. Bundesliga. Watch the debut highlights."

Tom opened his laptop.

He watched the lob. Watched the La Croqueta. Watched the corner bend around Pierce.

He watched the whole highlights without speaking.

"Right," he said. He opened his notebook. "Tell everything you know about Magdeburg."

The viewers found the stream before the match started.

The EuroSport Report article had gone up Wednesday morning - Luca's interview with Mateo, the training footage, the debut highlights embedded below the text. By Thursday afternoon it had been shared several thousand tis. By Friday evening the magazine's streaming page had a holding screen up for the Saturday match with a viewer count that surprised the editorial team enough that they ntioned it at their Friday afternoon eting.

[First live broadcast. Quality looks decent, actually better than I expected.]

[That lob at the end of the article, watch the contact. Below the midline of the ball, outside of foot, leg going through diagonally.]

[Is he starting? The article said he replaced Halim in the first match but didn't confirm the squad for tomorrow.]

[Starting XI according to the Schalke website - Silva is in the eleven.]

[Magdeburg are rough. Their captain broke a player's leg last season.]

[Silva is going to get kicked.]

[Probably. The question is what happens when he gets up.]

Tom read through these comnts on Stefan's tablet and found himself thinking the sa thing.

He'd been watching football for thirty years and he'd seen what rough defensive midfielders did to technically gifted but physically light teenagers who hadn't yet learned to protect themselves. So of them adapted. So of them got a serious foul in the third match and spent the rest of their early career playing scared.

What Mateo Silva would do on Saturday was, Tom Warrick thought, genuinely uncertain.

That uncertainty was, he had to admit, what made it worth watching.

He picked up his headset and checked the levels.

Plz Drop So Power Stones.

For Advance/Early Chapters:

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