The Schalke U18 squad was larger than most people realised from the outside.
Thirty-five players when you counted everyone on the books - formal contracts on the A Team side, apprentice deals filling out the B Team and the fringes. The gap between the two groups wasn't just tactical. The A Team players pulled enough weekly wage to live on. The apprentices didn't. Several of them held part-ti jobs around training - bar work, deliveries, whatever fitted the schedule. Schalke put money into the first team and managed the youth program with what was left, which was never quite enough.
So when Mateo had walked straight into an A Team bib on his first afternoon, without going through the B Team at all, without serving any kind of waiting period, several of the substitute players on the sideline had noticed, and their reaction was not warm.
Jennings in particular.
He was the B Team's defensive midfielder - tall, physical, technically limited but positionally sharp enough to have held his spot through the early part of the season. He'd watched Mateo's two assists in the morning session from the sideline. He'd seen the passes. He'd told himself it was a combination of luck and a defensive shape that hadn't been ready for soone playing like that. He still believed that. Mostly.
When Mateo stepped onto the pitch for the afternoon session, Jennings found him imdiately and didn't look away.
A Team: 4-3-3 — Ben Kehi in the ten, Mateo in a second attacking-mid role just off him, Lloyd Angelo anchoring the base. Joey French wide right, Whit Benedict through the centre.
B Team: 4-5-1 — Two holding midfielders, two wing-mids tucked narrow, a single striker kept high. Compact, deliberately hard to play through. Built to cut lines rather than press high.
Daniel had designed the B Team shape to do exactly what a German Third Division opponent would do on the weekend - sit deep, block the central channels, make every pass through the middle a problem. The session was a test of the A Team's ability to circulate and find the gaps. It was also, incidentally, the exact scenario Halim OShea had been failing to manage all morning.
Ben Kehi started with the ball, took a touch, moved forward.
The B Team responded imdiately. The two holding midfielders split to cover passing angles. The near-side wing-mid stepped up to limit the outside option. And Jennings, rather than tracking the play, simply walked Mateo. Positioned himself in the lane between Mateo and Ben Kehi, and stayed there. Not marking the ball. Marking the connection.
It was deliberate and everyone on the pitch understood it.
Daniel on the sideline watched and said nothing. He wanted to see what Mateo would do about it.
Raúl, standing at the fence with Farfán, absorbed the picture in a couple of seconds. "The midfielder isn't interested in Ben kehi," he said quietly. "He's just standing in the passing lane."
Farfán watched. "So he's isolated."
"For now."
On the pitch, Mateo had already understood the situation, the overlay confird it, the lane to Ben Kehi darkening to amber as Jennings's positioning crowded it out. He moved to create a new angle, stepped wider to open a different line. Jennings moved with him, unhurried, a shadow that had decided to beco structural.
Ben Kehi was getting pressed. The second B Team midfielder had joined the double-team, and the right wing-mid was closing too - three players collapsing onto one zone, which in theory ant space was opening sowhere else, but with Mateo's connection cut, there was no clean way to exploit it.
Ben Kehi played it anyway. A sharp horizontal pass pushed into Mateo's feet - the only option before he was swallowed entirely.
The ball arrived at pace.
Mateo's first touch killed it wrong. The ball skipped off the inside of his boot and bobbled two feet to his left, at exactly the mont all three B Team players arrived from their different angles.
Jennings reached him first.
On the sideline, Farfán's expression tightened. Mateo was lean, his first touch had misfired once already today, and three physical German teenagers in a coordinated press was a difficult problem for anyone, let alone a player whose technical foundations outside of passing were still rough. He'd co up against that kind of press himself in his early Bundesliga seasons and knew how quickly it could make a technically gifted player look ordinary.
Raúl didn't look away.
Three bodies closing from three angles. The ball bobbling. Any ordinary player in this position either forces the clearance or surrenders possession, either outco acceptable to Jennings.
Mateo moved first.
His right foot pushed the ball left - a single precise touch, not a pass, just a redirect, slipping the ball past the outstretched boot of the wing-mid arriving from that side. An inch of clearance.
Before the wing-mid had registered it, his left foot was already moving, collecting the redirected ball and pushing it back right, through the corridor that Jennings's own closing stride had briefly created between his legs. The ball threaded through.
Jennings checked his run. Looked down.
The ball was gone.
Mateo's left foot again - pushing it back left now, through the gap the second midfielder had vacated by committing rightward to cover the first movent.
And then: through.
He poked the ball forward with his left toe - not hard, just enough and stepped between the two midfielders as they tried to turn, walking into open space behind the collapsed press as if all three of them had been a revolving door.
The session went quiet.
It hadn't looked like athleticism. It hadn't looked like pace or power or even that particular German brand of controlled aggression. It had looked like geotry - three bodies closing, each movent pulling them fractionally out of position, each touch by Mateo using that fraction. Left. Right. Left. Through.
La Croqueta. Iniesta's signature, built on the principle that a defender's montum is a problem you can make into a solution.
Jennings stood with his feet in the wrong place and stared at the space where the ball had been.
Daniel's mouth was open.
Ben Kehi had already turned - already reading what was coming, already angling into the channel because of all the players on this pitch he was the fastest to understand that Mateo with the ball in open space and Benedict making a diagonal run was a situation that ended in one way.
On the sideline, Raúl had straightened up from the fence.
Mateo looked up from the ball. Benedict was running - diagonal, timing the gap between the two centre-backs, trying to arrive in behind just as the delivery ca. The passing overlay burned red in that direction. Eighty-seven percent.
He struck it with the outside of his right boot, catching the ball low on its underside, and it left his foot like sothing being released rather than kicked.
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