The Hannover players took their positions for the restart.
Fifty thousand people were still processing the first goal, the specific noise of a crowd that has gone from booing to silence and hasn't found the next register yet. The big screen showed the replay. Huntelaar's tap-in. The empty net. The AWD Arena's own footage confirming what had just happened to them.
The referee checked his watch.
Fweet—!
Hannover kicked off.
Abdellaoue played it back to Schmiedebach, who turned imdiately and looked to play it long, the standard reset after conceding, get the ball away from danger, reorganise. He hit it forward and Schalke's defensive midfielder won it in the air without a contest.
The ball moved quickly to the right-back, who shifted it to Annan, who found Farfán on the left side of the centre circle.
Schmiedebach, reading this imdiately, pressed forward to cut the passing lane. He was good at this, the quick recovery after losing the ball, the body position that blocked two options at once. He got between Farfán and the angle toward Mateo.
Farfán didn't hesitate. He rolled the ball inside off his left foot, buying himself half a step, then turned sharply - left shoulder dropping, right foot flicking the ball through Schmiedebach's attempted interception. Not a dramatic move. Just precise and quick, the timing off by a fraction from what Schmiedebach had calculated.
The defender turned to chase. He was a step behind.
Farfán played it diagonally to Mateo without looking up.
Mateo received it sideways, one touch settling it, and in the sa motion his body was already angled toward the Hannover defensive line. The overlay was sharp, a red line threading between the two centre-backs, Huntelaar was already in his run, the angle just right if the contact was exact.
He drove his right foot through the ball, catching it slightly below the midline, the backspin keeping the trajectory flat and fast between the defenders.
Schulz moved to intercept but was a bit too late.
The ball reached Huntelaar in his stride, no adjustnt needed, weight perfectly judged. Zieler ca off his line. Huntelaar pushed it low to the goalkeeper's right with the unhurried efficiency of soone for whom scoring from that position was simply the next step in a sequence.
SWISH!
Fweet—!
2–0.
The AWD Arena went quiet in a different way from the first goal. The first silence had been shock. This was sothing closer to disbelief, the specific stillness of fifty thousand people trying to work out what was happening to their team.
The big screen showed the ti stamp.
Twenty-nine seconds.
Twenty-nine seconds after the restart from 1–0, Schalke had scored again.
On the Schalke bench, House - Schalke's broadcast partner comntator, working from the sideline booth had found his footing again after the second goal.
"Two goals in the opening five minutes. Four minutes thirty seconds for the first, twenty-nine seconds after the restart for the second." A pause. "I have been covering Schalke 04 matches for eleven years. I have not seen a quick counter like this."
He looked at his notes. He'd been scrambling for information on the two starting midfielders since the lineup had been released.
"Mateo Silva, attacking midfielder, joined the first team ten days ago from the U18 squad. Before that: two German Third Division appearances, seven assists. Tonight he's already contributed to both goals." He looked up from his notes at the pitch. "Both passes were different in technique, identical in effect. His teammates did not need to adjust their stride to receive either delivery."
On the opposite sideline, Mirko Slomka stood with his hands in his jacket pockets and looked at his team.
He was a composed man. Four seasons managing Hannover, multiple crisis points navigated, budgets that required him to make decisions other coaches didn't have to make. He understood the gap between a Bundesliga first team and his squad, that was not a surprise. What he'd been told was that Schalke were fielding rotation players and a youth team promotion. What he was watching was two midfielders moving the ball through his team's press as though his defensive shape was a training drill.
The Brazilian kid. He'd watched him give the first goal and then the second. Two passes, completely different in chanics, both landing exactly where they needed to.
He turned to his assistant. "Who is he?"
"Silva. Mateo Silva. Promoted from their U18 last week."
Slomka looked back at the pitch.
Last week.
He thought about what he was going to say to the press after this match, and decided to think about it after the match instead. Right now he had a ga to manage.
He walked to the edge of his technical area and started calling instructions.
Mateo jogged back to the centre circle.
The crowd noise was recovering, the instinct of a football crowd to find its voice again even after a shock, to shift from stunned quiet back to sothing that at least resembled atmosphere. It was harder this ti. The goal had co too fast.
Farfán fell into step beside him.
"That turn past Schmiedebach," Mateo said.
"Good, wasn't it."
"Better than your usual."
Farfán looked at him sideways. "What does that an?"
"It ans it was better than your usual." Mateo kept his expression even. "The touch was sharper."
Farfán considered this. He'd noticed the sa thing, a crispness in his movents that felt different from normal, the kind of clarity that ca on certain days when everything clicked. He hadn't been able to identify why today was one of those days.
He decided not to examine it too closely for now.
"Let's get a third," he said.
Mateo jogged back to the centre circle.
The crowd noise was recovering, the instinct of a football crowd to find its voice again even after a shock, to shift from stunned quiet back to sothing that at least resembled atmosphere. It was harder this ti. The goal had co too fast after the first.
Mateo looked at the Hannover shape resetting for the restart. Slomka was already at the edge of his technical area calling instructions - reorganising, adjusting, doing what a competent coach did after conceding twice in the opening ten minutes. Sothing would change. A deeper block, closer marking on the midfield line, maybe a positional switch to cut the through-ball angles.
He'd find out what it was and respond to it.
Fweet—!
Hannover kicked off again.
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