The starting lineup had gone up an hour before the match.
Bujerab had been in the AWD Arena changing room reading it off the sheet Hughes Yves had pinned to the board, and when he'd found Silva and Farfán both nad as attacking midfielders, his expression had done sothing he hadn't entirely controlled. He'd straightened up, looked at the sheet once more to confirm he'd read it correctly, and then moved to his place in the room without saying anything.
He was on the bench. A Bundesliga midfielder with two decent seasons behind him, on the bench for a cup match against a 2. Bundesliga side.
He sat with his hands on his knees and his jaw set, and said nothing, because there was nothing to say. Magath was the manager. Magath's decisions were his decisions. The correct professional response was to be ready to co on in the second half and prove a point with the minutes he was given, which was exactly what he intended to do.
It didn't make it easier. But it was the job.
Now they were on the pitch.
Mateo took his position in the attacking midfield line, looked across the half at Hannover's shape, a compact 4-4-2, disciplined, the kind of setup that a motivated lower-division team used when they wanted to make a Bundesliga side uncomfortable and let the overlay settle over the pitch.
Yellow lines mostly. A few amber toward the wings where the spacing was generous. Nothing threatening yet, neither side had started, the teams still completing their final positions. He looked at Farfán a few tres to his left and felt the thing the card had created between them: a quiet awareness of where Farfán was without looking, the specific geotry of another person's movent registered at the edge of attention.
It was strange. He'd played with Ben Kehi long enough that sothing similar had developed but that had taken weeks of early mornings. This was imdiate. He understood why the card worked: it didn't give Farfán new abilities. It gave both of them the positional intuition that usually took months to build.
The referee held up his watch, communicated with the linesman, and looked at both captains.
Fweet—!
Hannover kicked off.
Their number nine, Abdellaoue - lean, quick, the kind of forward who was most dangerous in behind, knocked it back to his midfielder and the Hannover shape imdiately pressed high. The full intention of the evening made visible in the first four seconds: they were going to press from the front, make Schalke uncomfortable in possession, and turn every mistake into a mont the crowd could feed on.
Schalke's pivot, tzelder, received the back pass and shifted it wide imdiately to the right-back, buying ti. The right-back found Annan on the wing. Annan took one touch and looked up.
Mateo had already moved, dropping slightly off his midfield line, creating an angle between Hannover's two central midfielders. The amber line toward him brightened. Annan saw it and played it.
Mateo received it on the half-turn.
The two Hannover central midfielders both shifted toward him. The crowd noise spiked - fifty thousand people registering that the player everyone had been told to expect sothing from had the ball.
He played it back to tzelder in one touch before either midfielder arrived.
Simple. Composure-establishing. This was not the mont for ambition.
tzelder played it out to the left. Farfán received it on the touchline with a Hannover right-back pressing imdiately. In the previous weeks Mateo had watched Farfán in training, the way he used his body to shield, the direction he preferred to turn, the pass he defaulted to under pressure.
He already knew where Farfán was going to go.
He started his run before Farfán touched the ball.
Farfán turned inside, past the pressing right-back with a controlled roll of his shoulder, and found Mateo's run on the diagonal, the ball arriving precisely in stride, not a fraction early or late.
Hannover's centre-backs scrambled to track it.
Mateo was already in the half-space between the right-back and the nearest centre-back, the overlay showing a red line cutting through the gap into the penalty area. He played it with the outside of his right boot - not a shot, a through ball angled behind the retreating centre-back, into the channel where Annan, reading the movent from the right wing, had already started his run.
Annan collected it in his stride six tres from the byline.
His cross ca in low and fast.
Huntelaar arrived at the near post and redirected it, one touch, into the far corner.
SWISH!
Fweet—!
1–0. 4th minute.
The Schalke bench rose. Magath folded his arms more tightly, which was his version of the sa thing.
In the stands, the Hannover faithful had gone from full noise to a stunned quiet that always felt louder than the roar that preceded it. They'd been booing this team for few minutes. Their team had pressed from the first second. And Schalke had moved the ball through them with three passes and a diagonal run and scored before the match had found its shape.
Huntelaar was already jogging back to the centre. Annan punched the air once and ran after him. Farfán found Mateo in the middle of the pitch.
"That's the partnership," Farfán said.
Mateo looked at him. "One goal."
"I know." Farfán was breathing slightly faster than usual - the specific energy of soone whose body was running better than expected and wasn't entirely sure why.
He turned to take his position.
Mateo looked at the Hannover shape resetting for the restart - their back line closer together now, the press going to be more cautious after giving up space so cheaply. They'd adjust. That was fine. He'd adjust too.
Fweet—!
Hannover kicked off again.
The match had barely started.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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