The Garden Stadium was louder than Mateo had expected.
Eight thousand people - more than eight tis the crowd from the first match had spread themselves across the lower tier and were making a noise that didn't quite fit the space. Most of them were Schalke fans, and they had opinions about Magdeburg that they were expressing freely and without much restraint. The police presence near the visitors' section was heavier than last week, which told its own story.
[These lot ca from a pirate town and they play like it. Let's see how their captain likes it when it's their turn to get a kick.]
[Eight thousand for a U18 match? Haven't seen this many here since the reserve cup semi.]
[Word got around. After last week people wanted to see the kid again.]
In the broadcast booth, Tom settled his headset and checked the levels.
"Good afternoon from the Garden Stadium in Gelsenkirchen. I'm Tom Warrick, and this is the second round of the German Third Division - Schalke 04 U18 hosting Magdeburg. Both teams in their known formations: Schalke in a 4-3-3, Magdeburg in their usual 4-3-3. Starting lineups in the match notes." He paused a beat. "Before we get into tactics, worth noting the attendance. Eight thousand for a youth team fixture in the third tier. Last week had fewer than a thousand. Sothing happened between then and now."
He left that hanging and moved into the preview.
Mateo stood in the centre circle and looked at the pitch.
The passing overlay was already live - faint lines mapping positions and probabilities, not yet aningful because nobody was moving. He let it sit at the edge of his attention, the way you leave a screen on in your peripheral vision.
Rosa Marshall was in his half.
Not pressing, just occupying. Standing with his weight on his back foot, arms loose, surveying the shape.
The referee's whistle.
Benedict tapped it to Mateo to start. Mateo played it sideways to Lloyd Angelo - first touch, simple, get it moving and Lloyd shifted it on to Ben Kehi.
Marshall had already moved before the pass left Lloyd's boot. He cut across the lane, got his foot to the ball before Ben Kehi could, and Magdeburg had possession inside eight seconds.
Magdeburg's shape was imdiately clear. the ball moved wide before the echo of the whistle had faded, and Lynd Augsberg on the right wing was already in his stride, pushing into Schalke's half with Morton Jim scrambling across to track him.
Tom watched it from the booth. "No hesitation from Magdeburg - straight to the flanks, no interest in building centrally. Their ga plan against this Schalke side is obvious: use the wings to generate crosses, use Matilda Neil in the air. Neil is a shade under two tres, and Schalke's centre-backs are teenagers. The maths there is uncomfortable."
Augsberg cut inside once, pushed the ball left, found his angle, and drove a cross in early. Neil was already moving before the ball was struck - reading the delivery, timing the approach. He rose above Esther Scott with the ease of soone for whom this particular contest happened every week. Her header was powerful and directed.
Babi Edgar ca off his line and punched it clear with both fists. The ball bounced once and dropped to Lloyd Angelo at the edge of the area.
[Keeper was sharp there.]
[Neil's going to eat those centre-backs alive if this keeps up.]
[Keep the ball on the ground. Don't play into their hands.]
Lloyd controlled it, looked up, and played a simple diagonal ball to Mateo.
Mateo turned on the ball, opened his body to face forward-
THUD-
The impact ca from behind. Hard, low, into the small of his back. He went down.
He hit the turf and lay still for a second, taking stock. His back hurt. His hip where he'd landed hurt. He was, by any normal account of what had just happened, fine. He pressed his hand to his lower back and rolled onto his knees.
Rosa Marshall was standing two tres away with the expression of a man who has just communicated sothing and is waiting to see if it was understood.
The referee blew.
Fweet-!
Foul.
No card.
Daniel's voice reached the pitch from twenty tres away with clarity and volu. The referee didn't look over.
Ben Kehi and Lloyd Angelo got to Mateo at the sa ti.
"Are you alright?" Lloyd asked.
"Yeah." Mateo pressed his hand to his back once more and stood. "It just hurts."
He looked at Marshall. Marshall t his gaze with the mild interest of soone reading a nu they've seen before.
Tom, in the booth: "That was a deliberate foul from Marshall - well-tid, no attempt on the ball. The referee has let it go without so much as a word. This is going to be the pattern for the afternoon: Magdeburg will test the boundary and keep testing it until they find where the line is." A pause. "Or until Schalke finds a way around it."
Four minutes. A set piece deep in Schalke's half. Lloyd played it long - not ideal, but safe. The header contest went predictably: Ben Kehi against Magdeburg's attacking midfielder Kiplin Jason, who had five centitres and fifteen kilograms on him. The ball went sideways to Congreve Bowen on the left wing.
Bowen ca forward. Sitney Parker dropped his weight and narrowed the inside channel, forcing Bowen wide. Bowen took it - accepted the outside track, pushed the ball to the byline, and shaped a cross. Sitney raised his leg to block.
Bowen sold the dummy, pulled the ball back with his left foot, turned inside, and struck.
The cross ca in hard and flat, cutting across the face of the goal. Neil had already started his run from the edge of the box, timing his movent to arrive at the ball as it crossed the six-yard line. Scott went with him. Scott was seventeen and Neil was a professional who had been heading crosses for eight years.
Swish-
The ball went into the net.
1–0. Magdeburg. Seven minutes.
The visiting players celebrated in a tight group near the corner flag. In the stand, the Schalke fans were not applauding.
[One touch and they've scored. We can't defend crosses to save our lives.]
[Their striker wins everything in the air. Why isn't anyone blocking the cross?]
[We need to stop letting them get to the byline.]
Daniel stood at the edge of the technical area with his arms at his sides. He'd known this was coming. The cross had been good, the header had been clean, and the defending had been as good as his centre-backs could manage at this level against that opposition. Sotis a goal is just a goal.
He looked at the pitch rather than his players' faces.
On the field, Mateo gathered his teammates without making a production of it.
"We play on the ground from here," he said. "Don't compete with them in the air, that's their ga. Give it to feet, keep it moving." He looked at Ben Kehi, then at Lloyd. "Don't play it long unless there's genuinely no option."
They nodded. It matched what Daniel had been saying all week.
Daniel, watching from the sideline, gave a short nod himself.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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