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The dressing room of the Coastal Arena felt like the inside of a drum that had been beaten for ninety minutes straight. The air was thick with the sll of sweat, deep-heat rub, and the tallic tang of adrenaline.

Players were slumped on the wooden benches, their chests still heaving, socks rolled down to their ankles. So were staring at the ceiling with wide, disbelieving eyes. Others were leaning forward, heads in hands, simply trying to process the fact that they had won.

Eric Maddox stood by the door, watching them. In his previous life, he had seen many dressing rooms after big wins. He had seen the champagne showers and the wild singing. But this was different. This was the quiet, heavy realization of a group of boys who had just realized they were n.

He waited for the noise of the boots clattering on the floor to stop and the heavy breathing to settle.

"Look at yourselves," Maddox said. His voice wasn’t loud, but it cut through the room like a knife.

The players all looked up.

"You look like you’ve been through a war," Maddox continued with a rare chuckle. He walked into the center of the room, his eyes scanning every face. "And in a way, you have. You went into a stadium where nobody expected you to survive. You went against a team that was bigger, stronger, and had the referee in their pocket for most of the night. You had goals taken away. You had balls burst under your feet. You had everything thrown at you, including the kitchen sink."

He stopped in front of Luis Navarro. The striker’s face was still flushed with the anger of the disallowed goal.

"Luis," Maddox said.

The Spaniard looked up, his jaw tight.

"That goal was onside," Maddox said firmly. "I saw it. You saw it. Everyone present in the stadium saw it. It was a top-class finish from a top-class run. Do not let that linesman’s flag live in your head. In my book, you scored twice tonight. You led the line like a captain without an armband."

Luis let out a long breath, his shoulders finally dropping. A small, tired nod was all he gave, but the tension in his face vanished.

Maddox turned to the rest of the group. "But here is the truth. We didn’t win tonight because of luck. We didn’t win because of a miracle. We won because when the pressure was at its highest, you didn’t break. You followed the plan. You found the weakness in their backline. You moved the ball exactly where we practiced. That is what separates winners from losers. Winners find a way when the world says ’no’."

He looked at Declan Whittaker, who was sitting quietly in the corner, still wearing the dazed expression of soone who couldn’t believe his last-minute strike had actually hit the net.

"Declan," Maddox said. "That shot. That was the mont you stopped being a youth player and started being a professional. That was courage."

The room erupted into a sudden, brief cheer. Jack Stones slapped Declan on the back, and the boy finally cracked a smile.

"But listen to ," Maddox said, quieting them down again. "The Youth League is over. We finished second. We qualified for the biggest youth tournant. But that was the easy part."

The players shifted. The ’easy’ part? They had just nearly died on the pitch.

"Next month," Maddox said, his voice turning cold and professional, "the NextGen Ascension League begins. You think tonight was hard? In the Ascension League, every team is a Hastings or a level above. Every manager is a tactician. And mistake would surely lead to a goal. We have three weeks to prepare. Three weeks to turn this team from a surprise contender into a dominant force. We will be training five days a week. We will be studying film until your eyes bleed. We have more ti now that the regular season is done, and I intend to use every second of it."

He looked at them one last ti. "Enjoy this win tonight. Drink your water, get your sleep. Tomorrow, the real work starts. We aren’t just here to participate in the Ascension League. We are here to win the whole damn thing."

He walked out of the room before they could respond, leaving them with the weight of the future.

***

In the quiet of the manager’s office, Maddox sat down and let out a long sigh. His body felt every bit of his seventy years, even if his skin looked twenty-five. He pulled up the Pro Manager System interface. The blue light filled the small, dim room.

[POST-MATCH PERFORMANCE REPORT: NORTHCASTLE RISING STARS VS HASTINGS COASTAL ACADEMY]

The stats began to scroll.

[Team Passing Accuracy: 82% (Season High)

Successful Pressing Actions: 44 (Up 15% from last match)

Tactical Discipline: 8.5/10]

Maddox tapped through the individual reports. He could see the growth. The bars were moving steadily. The "Bond Level" notifications began to pop up like bubbles.

[BOND LEVEL INCREASE: JACK STONES (Level 4 - Trusted Captain)]

[BOND LEVEL INCREASE: LUIS NAVARRO (Level 3 - Reliable Finisher)]

[BOND LEVEL INCREASE: FREDDIE BOOTH (Level 2 - Aspiring Student)]

Each increase ant the players would follow his instructions more precisely during the heat of a match. It ant they believed in him. In a world where football was a religion, faith in the manager was the strongest currency.

Then, a red notification flashed at the bottom of the screen. It was different from the others. It was the sa "Hidden Potential" flag that had appeared for Luis Navarro a few days ago.

[Hidden Potential Flagged, Player #7, Declan Whittaker]

Maddox leaned forward, his heart racing. He tapped the icon.

[Position: LW

Age: 17

Foot: Right

Wage: 80 ⊽/week

Overall Rating: 7.2 / 20

Potential (updated): ★★★½☆

Current Ability (updated): 6.9 / 20

Stats Overview (updated):

Pace: 10

Shooting: 10

Dribbling: 7

Passing: 6

Physical: 7

Defending: 3

Technique: 8

Positioning: 7

Creativity: 7

Movent: 8

Teamwork: 7

Aggression: 5

Decisions: 6

Leadership: 5

System Summary:

Positives: Clinical winger, strong movent, Smooth Curler.

Negatives: Slow decision making.

Recomnd: Dedicated ntorship Protocol.]

Maddox stared at the screen. A 7.2 overall rating for a seventeen-year-old was respectable, but it was the "Smooth Curler" trait and the potential jump that caught his eye.

Declan wasn’t just a fast kid with a decent kick. He had the rare ability to manipulate the ball’s flight, sothing that usually took years of top-flight experience to master.

But the "Slow decision making" was a glaring red flag. In the Ascension League, a winger who hesitated for half a second would be dispossessed by a defender before he could even look up.

"Dedicated ntorship Protocol," Maddox whispered.

He knew what that ant. It ant he couldn’t just coach Declan as part of the group. He had to break him down and rebuild him. He had to teach the boy to see the ga seconds before it happened.

The Youth League was a small pond. The Ascension League was the river. And in the river, if you weren’t a predator, you were bait.

He looked back at the screen, at Declan’s stats.

"Three weeks," Maddox said to the empty room. "I’ll make a predator out of you yet."

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