The last few minutes of the first half were administrative.
Hannover kept the ball more, not because their shape had improved but because Schalke had stopped pressing. With a four-goal lead and a full second half ahead, there was no point burning energy on a press that wasn't needed. Magath gave the instruction from the touchline, hold the shape, don't chase, let them have the ball in their own half. The players understood and complied.
In the forty-second minute, the sequence that had been building all half almost produced a fifth. Mateo played a low through ball to Huntelaar, finding him on the edge of the box with one defender between him and goal. Huntelaar set his angle and struck.
Zieler dived right and got both hands to it. A good save, proper weight behind it, not just a reflex block. Huntelaar spread his hands and turned with an apologetic look at Mateo, who waved it off. The goalkeeper had done his job.
Fweet—!
Halfti. 4–0.
The Schalke players walked to the tunnel together, loose, the relaxed movent of a group that has nothing to correct. Huntelaar put his arm around Mateo's shoulders as they walked.
"That last one, I pushed it a bit straight. Keeper read the angle." He paused. "Should've gone across."
"You'll get more in the second half," Mateo said.
Huntelaar looked at him. "You'll be on the bench in the second half."
Mateo thought about this for a mont. "I'll get soone else to pass them to you."
Huntelaar laughed - a short, genuine sound. He kept his arm around Mateo's shoulders until the tunnel swallowed them.
Behind them, Pliatsikas fell into step.
"You know, you gave Annan three balls tonight and you haven't given one good one." He said it with the practiced tone of a man complaining about sothing he doesn't actually expect to change. "I'm right there on the wing every ti."
"I knew you were," Mateo said. "but Annan was in better positions."
"That's because you were looking at Annan."
"I was looking at Annan because Annan was in better positions."
Pliatsikas shook his head. "Buy dinner and I'll forgive you."
"You buy dinner," Mateo said. "You have a contract."
Pliatsikas laughed and dropped back to talk to soone else.
The locker room was warm with the specific energy of a first half that had gone well, not euphoria, just the relaxed confidence of a group that had done its work and knew it. Players towelling off, drinking water, the low conversation of people who had been through sothing together and didn't need to explain it to each other.
Magath waited until the room settled.
"Good first half," he said. He let that sit for a mont. "Silva - outstanding. Four assists and every decision was correct."
Mateo, sitting in the middle of the room, kept his expression neutral. Several players nearby looked at him with the particular combination of genuine respect and mild calculation that professional footballers used when acknowledging that soone had done sothing they hadn't expected.
Bujerab, at the edge of the room, looked at his boots.
Then Magath reached for his substitutions board.
"Second half - Bujerab on for Silva. Per Kluge on for Farfán." He looked at the room. "Sa tactical shape. Everything runs through the midfield. I want the sa standard of passing in the second half that we had in the first."
The room went quiet in the specific way of people who had understood a subtext simultaneously.
Bujerab looked up from his boots. The substitution board had his na on it, coming on, yes, but the instruction that followed it was the thing. Sa standard of passing. Sa shape. Sa ball movent. Magath wasn't resting the first half's starters to protect the system. He was putting Bujerab into the sa system to see what Bujerab did with it.
The players who had been standing near Bujerab found reasons to look elsewhere.
Magath looked around the room once more, making sure everyone had heard correctly, and walked out.
In the corridor, Farfán and Mateo walked side by side.
Farfán was pulling off his shin guards. He'd known since the squad announcent that this was a rotation start, the cup was the opportunity, the second half belonged to the main players. He had no complaints about it.
"Good first half," he said, in Spanish.
"You played well," Mateo said.
"I played very well." Farfán glanced at him sideways. "Better than usual, actually. Sharper." He looked at his hands briefly, the sa gesture he'd made in the tunnel before kickoff. "I don't know why."
"Good days happen," Mateo said.
Farfán looked at him. The expression on Mateo's face was entirely neutral and had been entirely neutral for the entire conversation.
"Sure," Farfán said. "Good days."
He went to get water.
Back in the locker room, Bujerab was lacing his boots.
The room had mostly cleared, players at the water station, so outside in the corridor. He was alone with his preparations, which was how he preferred it before going on.
He thought about what Magath had said. Sa standard. The implication was clear enough that you didn't need to decode it. Magath wanted to see whether Bujerab, in the sa system, against the sa opponent, could produce what a seventeen-year-old had produced in the first forty minutes.
This was not subtle.
He finished his laces. Stood up.
He had forty-five minutes.
In the Hannover locker room, Slomka was speaking to his players. He kept it brief, the scoreline didn't require extended analysis, and the players were professionals who already understood what had happened. What he told them was simple: the second half was a fresh start, the first-half result was decided, their job now was to make sure the final scoreline was respectable and that they showed sothing worth building on.
They listened. They were professionals.
He didn't ntion the Brazilian kid specifically. He didn't need to.
He thought about the four assists as he walked back to the technical area.
In fourteen years of coaching he had seen passing like that, but not in cup matches, and not from players who had been in professional football for three weeks.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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