Bujerab's morning had started badly before Mateo arrived.
Isco Bujerab was twenty-seven years old and had spent the last fourteen months being described as Schalke's most technically gifted midfielder. He'd arrived from Monaco the previous sumr for €2.3 million - not a headline number by European standards, but significant for a club that asured its spending carefully. In his first season he'd been the reason the team finished fourth. His habit of circulating the ball through tight spaces, his ability to hold under pressure and release at the right mont, had given Raúl and Huntelaar a quality of service neither of them had expected from a German mid-table side.
This season, opposition analysts had caught up with him.
The specific problem was one touch too many. Bujerab received the ball and instinctively took a steadying touch before looking up - a habit built over fifteen years of professional football that worked fine against passive defences and fell apart against anything with a press. Two Bundesliga opponents had identified it before the season started and built their defensive shape around it. The first match was awkward. The second was bad. After the Cottbus loss, Magath had watched the footage three tis and the sa mont appeared every ti - Bujerab receiving in a good position, taking his extra touch, and the window closing.
He knew this about himself. He'd been trying to correct it for six weeks. The correction was making things worse because thinking about the touch was interrupting the other decisions that the touch was supposed to free him up to make.
And now there was a seventeen-year-old from the U18 squad in the building who apparently didn't have this problem.
He did his warm-up on the far side of the pitch and told himself it was fine.
Morning training was recovery-focused - the day after a Bundesliga match, nobody was running hard. Fitness circuits, light ball work, individual technique sessions. Magath moved around the group, watching without intervening much.
Mateo stayed quiet. He worked his individual drill at one end of the pitch, the sa outside-of-foot repetitions he'd been running since Dortmund, and observed. He noted the way the first-team players moved when they weren't performing for anyone - the shortcuts in their warm-up, the efficiency of their individual sessions, the way Raúl received every ball with the sa controlled base regardless of the pace it arrived at. The standard was higher. Not dramatically, the fundantal actions were the sa actions. But the margin of error was tighter and the execution was more consistent, and that consistency was the difference.
He made a note of it.
After training, Farfán found Mateo at the edge of the pitch and they walked to the first-team canteen together. It was the sa food as the building below. The chairs were better.
"How was it?" Farfán asked.
"Quieter than I expected," Mateo said.
"It's quieter when they've lost." Farfán poured two glasses of water and slid one across. "When things are going well it's a different atmosphere. This is the other version."
"Bujerab didn't looked at once."
"He will. Eventually." Farfán picked up his fork. "Don't take it personally. He's under pressure and your arrival is inconvenient timing for him. Nothing to do with you specifically."
"I know." Mateo ate for a mont. "I'm not going to do anything about it."
Farfán glanced at him. "Good."
He said it the way you said sothing when you'd been half-expecting a different answer.
The tactical briefing room was at the end of the corridor on the second floor, a standard eting room with a large screen at one end and enough chairs for the full squad. The starters sat in the front rows. Everyone else filled in behind. Mateo sat at the back beside Farfán, which was where the players who weren't in the current matchday picture sat, and which suited him fine - from the back row you could watch everyone else's reaction to what was being shown without anyone watching yours.
Magath walked in and the room went quiet imdiately.
He didn't open with any warmth. He opened with the footage.
The screen showed the sixty-third minute against Cottbus - Schalke in possession in their own half, a chance to break forward. Huntelaar had already made his run. The defensive midfielder had the ball. He found Bujerab in the left half-space.
The clip slowed.
Bujerab received it. Left foot, first touch to steady. Weight shifted. He looked up.
Huntelaar's run had already pulled him to an offside position. Half a second, one extra touch, and the option was gone.
Magath didn't comnt. He played the next clip. Then the next. Three separate monts where the sa pattern appeared - ball arrived, an extra touch, a window closing. He let the footage do the work.
He didn't na Bujerab directly. He didn't need to. Everyone in the room who had played that match knew where their own mistakes were in the footage, and Bujerab sat in the third row with his jaw set and his hands on his knees and said nothing.
For an hour Magath went through the match - defensive positioning, pressing triggers, the specific monts where Cottbus had found space and why. He was precise and relentless without being cruel. He nad the problem, showed the evidence, moved on. No dwelling, no repetition for emphasis. The next clip, the next problem, the solution that should have been applied.
Mateo absorbed all of it.
He'd been executing tactical concepts through the overlay since his debut - reading the press, finding the third-man run, timing the switch, but he'd been doing it reactively, responding to what the system showed him without understanding why certain passes were rated higher than others. Magath's briefing was the frawork behind the overlay. Here was the reason the red line appeared in the channel when the defensive midfielder stepped up: it appeared because the centre-back had committed to tracking the striker, which left the space. Here was why the switch pass to the far wing was the right call when both central defenders shifted: because the winger's overlap hadn't been tracked and the weight of the delivery mattered for whether he could cross first-ti.
Magath wasn't teaching Mateo anything he didn't already know. He was giving him the vocabulary for what he already knew, and that was a different and more useful thing.
The session ended. Players filed out. Farfán fell into step beside Mateo in the corridor.
"You were actually paying attention in there," Farfán said. It wasn't quite a question.
"It was really useful."
"Most of the experienced players have heard that version four or five tis. They stop taking it in."
"I've heard it once." Mateo glanced back toward the briefing room. "He showed why the press broke down our midfield. I understood the situation when I was in it - I didn't have the frawork for why it was happening." He paused. "Makes it easier to anticipate."
Farfán studied him for a mont. "You're a strange kind of footballer."
"Probably." Mateo headed for the exit. "I'm going to train."
"The gym's the other way."
"I know."
He went outside.
The afternoon was warm for September. He worked through his usual sequence - ball control drills, outside-of-foot repetitions, shooting. The shooting was improving. Still inconsistent, but the miss rate had co down noticeably from the 5-out-of-10 it had been in the first week. The chanics were bedding in.
After two hours he checked the ti, paused, and opened the system. The threshold had crossed. He spent the point on Ball Control. 76.
The reset ca. He started another sequence.
At so point while he was working, he beca aware of soone at the edge of the training ground.
He finished the drill, collected the ball, and looked over.
Bujerab was standing outside the gym building with his kitbag over one shoulder, watching. Not approaching, not acknowledging - just watching, with an expression that was difficult to read from this distance.
Mateo held the gaze for a mont.
Then he placed the ball and started the next drill.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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