Saturday morning.
The bus had dropped them back at the hotel the previous afternoon, and the rest of Friday had been their own - dinner as a group, early nights, the contained energy of a squad preparing for sothing that mattered. Magath had given them two hours in the evening and then sent them to bed, which was the instruction of a man who understood that rest was preparation.
Mateo had used the two hours to work in the hotel stairwell, which was the only space large enough for footwork drills and unlikely to bother anyone. At nine he'd gone to sleep.
Saturday's session at the Comrzbank-Arena was the last before the match.
Light work. Movent patterns. The yellow vest announcent.
Magath stood at the edge of the pitch with Hughes Yves beside him and the small cart of vests between them. The squad gathered. This was the mont that preceded every matchday, and everyone knew what it ant - your na called, you stepped forward, you were in. Your na not called, you were watching from the bench or the stands.
Hughes Yves opened his notebook.
"Neuer."
The goalkeeper moved forward.
"tzelder. Höwedes. Schmitz. Uchida."
The back four. Sa as the cup match. The sa as every match this season.
"Per Kluge."
The defensive pivot. Also the sa.
"Annan. Pliatsikas."
The wingers. Still unchanged.
"Huntelaar. Raúl."
Ten nas called. Eleven vests on the cart. The squad was very quiet.
Hughes Yves paused. He glanced at the remaining players - the fringe squad mbers, the rotation options and then looked at his notebook again. The pause was a fraction longer than necessary.
"Silva."
Mateo stepped forward, took the yellow vest, and pulled it on.
Several players looked at him. A few nodded. Raúl gave him the small nod - the nod that had started as a greeting and had beco sothing more specific: I've seen what you do, I trust it. Huntelaar said sothing under his breath that was probably not a complaint.
At the back of the group, the fringe players who had been hoping for a na that hadn't co accepted it with the professional composure of n who had been through this before.
Magath moved them straight into the session.
For an hour the starting eleven worked their patterns on the Comrzbank-Arena pitch. Frankfurt's ground was well-maintained, the surface fast, the stadium's enclosed shape giving the sound an acoustic that made everything feel slightly more serious than an outdoor ground. Fifty-one thousand empty seats watched in silence.
Mateo moved through the passing sequences and felt the overlay mapping the space - the angles between Per Kluge and the defensive line, the gaps that appeared when Huntelaar pulled wide and Raúl stepped into the channel. He ran the sequences until they beca instinct rather than calculation. The overlay was a tool. The intuition was what he needed to be building.
Raúl was sharp. Even without the Partner Card — he was still the player who had scored thirty-seven Champions League goals for Real Madrid. His movent was economy itself: arriving at positions without wasted steps, body always angled to receive and release in the sa motion.
After twenty minutes of patterns, Magath made a single observation.
"One touch, Silva. Always one touch if you can. Don't give Frankfurt's midfield ti to shift."
"Understood."
"Show ."
They ran the sequence again. One touch from Mateo, the ball moving before Frankfurt's hypothetical shape could close. Per Kluge to Mateo to Annan in the channel - the whole sequence in under three seconds. Magath watched it twice. Said nothing further.
That was his version of approval.
The press conference was at two.
Magath sat at the table across from Frankfurt's coach, Stiel Hall - a man with the asured manner of soone who had kept a mid-table squad organised and competitive for four consecutive seasons. They knew each other. They respected each other in the way of professionals who had competed often enough to understand the opponent's quality.
The reporters packed the room. The Bundesliga press corps had co in force for this one - Schalke's poor start, the Bujerab injury, the seventeen-year-old starting. Several laptops were already open with half-written headlines.
The Frankfurt reporter went first.
"Mr. Magath - with Bujerab injured and Schalke sitting twelfth, how confident are you going into tomorrow's match?"
"In football, you play until the whistle. I know what my players can do. Frankfurt will find out tomorrow."
"You're fielding a seventeen-year-old with no Bundesliga experience in the starting eleven. Is that the statent of a team that believes it can win, or a team that's running out of options?"
The room went quiet in the particular way of rooms where soone has said the thing that was in the air but hadn't been said yet.
Magath looked at the reporter.
"How I use my players is my business." His voice was level and final.
He turned and pointed at the next raised hand without waiting for a response.
Stiel Hall, beside him, kept his expression neutral. He'd been asked later if he knew Schalke's new starter. He gave a diplomatic answer - ntioned a few Schalke players he'd watched, noted that all young players deserved to be seen on the pitch rather than described before the match.
It was the correct answer. The reporters moved on.
Magath walked out at the end with the dark expression of a man who had been challenged in a room and had decided to convert that into fuel rather than frustration. He was good at this. He had been doing it for thirty years.
He went back to the hotel and reviewed Frankfurt's defensive shape one more ti.
Tom Warrick had arrived in Frankfurt that morning on the early train from Gelsenkirchen.
The call from the EuroSport Report editor had co on Thursday evening. "Mateo Silva is starting in the Bundesliga on Sunday. We're broadcasting it. You're comntating." A pause. "We acquired the broadcast rights last night."
Tom had been expecting this call since the cup match. The viewership numbers from the Hannover broadcast had been the highest EuroSport Report had seen for a non-Champions League fixture in two years. The editor didn't need much convincing that the Bundesliga match was worth acquiring.
He checked into his Frankfurt hotel, set up his laptop, and went through the Frankfurt squad notes Duncan had compiled and sent through. He knew the Bundesliga well. Schalke he knew adequately. Per Kluge, tzelder, Raúl, Huntelaar - all familiar. The Frankfurt players — Halil Altıntop, Lord, Schwegler, he had coverage notes from two previous EuroSport matches.
At the bottom of his preparation file, Duncan had added a single line:
Mateo Silva — age 17 years 59 days at match date. One of the youngest starters in recent Bundesliga history, possibly the youngest ever to start in the top flight at this age. Check record.
Tom checked. The youngest player to appear in the Bundesliga had been Nuri Şahin in 2005 - sixteen years and 334 days, as a substitute for Dortmund. But Mateo was starting the match, rather than appearing as a substitute, was a different and arguably more demanding distinction. Whether Mateo held the youngest Bundesliga starter record specifically Tom couldn't confirm with the sources available. What he could confirm was that 17 years and 59 days was young by any reasonable standard.
He closed the file, ordered room service, and went through his notes until eleven.
Back at the Schalke hotel, the squad had been given the evening.
Mateo did his bodyweight session in the stairwell again, ate dinner with the group, and was back in the room by nine. Farfán was already in bed reading sothing on his phone.
"Ready for tomorrow?" Farfán said without looking up.
Mateo sat on his bed and thought about it honestly. The Bundesliga. Frankfurt's press. Halil Altıntop's speed on the left. Per Kluge behind him to cover.
"Yes," he said.
Farfán put his phone down. "Good." He slipped under the covers, turned off his bedside light, and whispered, "Rest well."
Mateo lay back.
Outside, Frankfurt was doing what European cities did on Saturday nights, noise and light filtering up from the streets below, distant and irrelevant.
Plz Drop So Power Stones.
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