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Ten minutes after the laps finished, Magath called the squad together.
"A Team and B Team. Standard formation. Thirty minutes."
The groupings were familiar - the starting XI on one side, the rotation players on the other. Mateo wasn't assigned to either. He'd been at the first team for two days. He stood on the sideline with a water bottle and watched.
The A Team moved into their shape. Bujerab at the ten, Huntelaar up front, Raúl alongside him. The B Team set up across from them - a mix of fringe players and rotation options, solid enough individually but without the cohesion of a group that had been training together all sumr.
Magath stood with his arms folded at the edge of the technical area. Hughes Yves had a clipboard.
The whistle went.
Inside forty seconds, Mateo had identified the pattern.
Bujerab received from the base of midfield, looked up, and imdiately drove right - toward the B Team's left-back position, occupied by a stocky German defender nad rtens who was third-choice at this club and knew it. He was earnest and not especially quick, and he'd spent the morning running ten laps in the September sun, and Bujerab had done the sa maths.
A simple shoulder drop. rtens committed left. Bujerab went right and crossed low into the box. Huntelaar arrived ahead of his marker and side-footed it in.
1–0. Three minutes.
No celebration. Just Bujerab jogging back, and a glance over his shoulder toward the sideline where Mateo was standing.
It was a brief look. Calibrated. The kind of glance that was long enough to land and short enough to deny.
Mateo watched it and said nothing.
It happened again at six minutes.
Bujerab received wide right, drove at rtens again. This ti rtens tried to show him inside, cutting off the byline. Bujerab saw it coming, stopped, rolled it back to the overlapping winger, got the return first-ti in the channel, and slid it through for Raúl to tap in from close range.
2–0.
The sa glance. Mateo t it this ti, briefly, before looking back at the pitch.
Beside him, Farfán had co to stand on the sideline during a brief break in his own warm-up. He watched the next sequence - Bujerab driving at rtens a third ti, winning a foul, looking over and said quietly: "He's doing this for you."
"I know," Mateo said.
"He wants you to react."
"I know that too."
Farfán looked at him. "And? You're not going to?"
"No. Why should I?"
Farfán went back to his warm-up.
The scrimmage continued in the sa vein. Bujerab kept going right, kept finding rtens, kept winning. The fourth goal ca from a different route - a one-two with Jurado that opened up the left side instead but by then the B Team's goalkeeper Sdley Lev had lost patience. He was a goalkeeper from the U18 squad who'd been brought up to fill the rotation slot, and goalkeepers develop a particular and entirely understandable irritation when the sa mistake is scored on four tis.
"rtens." His voice carried. "Sa side. Every ti. You're giving it to him."
rtens knew. He pressed his hands to his knees and stared at the ground.
It wasn't cruelty from Lev - it was the specific frustration of soone who can see the problem clearly and can't fix it himself. He'd have said the sa thing to anyone making the sa error. He turned back to his goal without waiting for a response.
Magath watched from the sideline. He'd seen the pattern ten minutes ago. He made no adjustnt, the B Team's defensive problem was a real one that existed before this session, and Bujerab was exploiting a genuine weakness, which was his job. The glances toward the sideline were less professional, but glances weren't sothing you warned a player about in a training scrimmage.
He folded his arms more tightly and kept watching.
The thirty minutes finished. Players gathered water, caught breath, broke into small groups.
Raúl walked over to Mateo.
He looked at him for a mont with the particular assessnt of soone who has decided whether a person is worth their ti and is checking whether they were right.
"Dinner tonight," he said. "Jurado's coming. You should co."
"Alright," Mateo said.
"Good." Raúl picked up his bottle. He glanced once at Bujerab across the pitch - who was talking to a group of the German players with his back to them, then looked back at Mateo. "Don't let it distract you. He'll either co around or he won't. Either way it's not your problem."
Mateo looked at the pitch where the scrimmage had just been. "He's a good player," he said. "The extra touch is a habit, not a limitation. He could fix it if he had to."
Raúl looked at him, slightly surprised.
"I know," Raúl said, after a mont. "Tell him that yourself at so point. Not yet. But at so point."
He walked off toward the changing rooms.
Mateo stood on the sideline a mont longer, looking at the empty pitch. Then he went to get his cones.
The restaurant was on Vohwinkelstraße, the kind of place that didn't need to advertise because everyone who could afford it already knew. Raúl had been here twice since arriving at Schalke. The maître d' recognised him.
They were four - Raúl, Jurado, Mateo, and Farfán who had been added at the last mont when Raúl had seen him heading to the canteen alone. The table was good. The bread arrived before they'd ordered anything.
Raúl talked the way players with twenty years of club experience talked - comfortably, without showmanship, full of specific detail. Real Madrid in the early 2000s. The dressing room dynamics that never made the press. The way senior players established position not through confrontation but through accumulated small signals - who sat where, who spoke to whom before training, whose warm-up jokes landed and whose didn't.
"It's the sa everywhere," Raúl said. "The nas change. The structure doesn't."
"It's worse at smaller clubs in so ways," Jurado said. "At United or Madrid there's enough success to dilute it. Here, when it goes badly, there's nowhere for the tension to go."
Farfán nodded. He'd been at two clubs since leaving Brazil and had watched both dressing rooms operate on similar chanics.
Mateo ate his bread and listened. He didn't say much, but he wasn't elsewhere either - he was tracking the conversation the way he tracked movent on the pitch, picking out the things that would be useful later from the things that were just context.
"You were very calm today," Jurado said to him, at so point between the main course and the end of the evening. "During the session. Bujerab wasn't subtle."
"He wasn't," Mateo agreed.
"It didn't bother you?"
Mateo thought about it honestly. "It bothered enough to notice. Not enough to do anything about." He looked at his glass. "I'd rather show him on the pitch."
Raúl smiled at that - a small shift at the corner of his mouth. He'd heard the right answer and was choosing not to make a production of it.
It was just past eight when Mateo got back to the training ground.
He changed into his kit, set up the cones under the floodlight, and started his sequence. The evening was quiet. The rest of the squad had gone ho or gone out. The groundsman's lights were on in the far building but otherwise the complex was dark.
He worked through his drills until the bar told him to stop.
Then he went inside and slept.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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