The press room at the Coastal Arena was cramped, filled with expensive cara equipnt. Fluorescent lights shone overhead, casting a harsh glare on the plastic table where Eric Maddox was expected to sit.
The room was packed with local reporters, sports bloggers, and a few high-profile journalists who had traveled specifically to see if the new "baby coach" of Northcastle Rising Stars was the real deal.
Maddox stepped into the room, followed by his dia officer. The flashes of caras were instantaneous, a strobe-light welco that would have blinded a lesser man. He sat down, his expression neutral. He had done this a thousand tis in his previous life, but back then, the caras were bulkier and the reporters used notebooks instead of tablets.
The moderator tapped the microphone. "We will now begin the post-match press conference with Northcastle Rising Stars manager, Eric Maddox. Please wait for the microphone and state your na and outlet."
A young woman in the front row raised her hand imdiately. "Sarah Jenkins, Coastal Daily. Coach Maddox, congratulations on the win. It was a ga of two halves. In the first half, your team seed rattled by the penalty decisions and the atmosphere. How did you keep them from falling apart in the dressing room?"
Maddox leaned into the microphone. "Thank you, Sarah. You’re right, the atmosphere was intense. When you play at the Coastal Arena, you’re playing against the crowd as much as the team. Regarding the decisions, I told the boys that we can’t control the referee. We can only control our reaction to him. If we spend ninety minutes complaining, we lose ninety minutes of football. I told them to turn that frustration into energy. They didn’t fall apart because they trust the process more than they fear the scoreboard."
A man with a salt-and-pepper beard took the microphone next. "Mark Thorne, Football Insider. Let’s talk about the sixty-minute mark. You were 2-1 down, and Hastings seed to have a stranglehold on the match. You made three quick substitutions and changed your tactical shape. Walk us through your thought process at that mont. What did you see that prompted such a drastic move?"
Maddox adjusted his posture. This was the question he liked. The tactical question. "At sixty minutes, we were losing the battle on the flanks. Our wingers were tucking in too much, which allowed Hastings to stay compact. I saw that Dylan Foster, their right-back, was starting to lag. The data from my experienced eyes, and my staff, showed he was physically hitting a wall. I needed fresh legs to exploit that specific gap. We moved to a wider 4-3-3, pushing the full-backs higher to force Foster into one-on-one situations he couldn’t win anymore."
"Did you honestly expect the substitutes to have such an imdiate impact?" Thorne followed up. "Whittaker’s goal and Toby’s runs seed almost scripted."
"You don’t make substitutions hoping for the best," Maddox replied simply. "You make them because you have a specific job for that player. Toby’s job was to stretch the line. Whittaker’s job was to be the clinical edge we were missing. I didn’t know if they would score in the ninety-third minute, but I knew that by putting them on, we were increasing our probability of a breakthrough. They executed their roles perfectly. That’s credit to their preparation, not luck."
The room humd with the sound of typing. Then, a reporter from a tabloid-style sports site stood up. "Coach, there was a mont after the final whistle. We saw you and Robert Hayes, the Hastings coach, having a fairly long exchange on the pitch. Given the tension of the match and the disallowed goals, so are speculating there’s a growing feud between you two. Is there any bad blood there? What exactly was said?"
Maddox saw the trap imdiately. The dia loved a rivalry. They wanted him to say sothing inflammatory about Hayes’ defensive tactics or the "ho-cooked" officiating. He wasn’t going to give it to them.
"There’s no feud," Maddox said with a knowing chuckle, his voice level and calm. "Robert is a professional. We had a very respectful exchange. In fact, he was a gentleman. He congratulated our boys on their heart and specifically praised Whittaker’s goal. He even went as far as to wish us a successful outing in the NextGen Ascension League. We’re cool. What happens on the touchline stays on the touchline. We both want to win, but once the whistle blows, the competition ends and the respect begins."
The reporter looked disappointed, but the more serious journalists nodded in approval. Maddox was playing the dia ga as well as he played the tactical one.
"Let’s look at the bigger picture," a reporter from the back said. "The Youth League E standings are now finalized. Northcastle finishes second, jumping over Hastings at the final hurdle. You’ve qualified for the NextGen Ascension League. Considering where this team was when you took over, at the verge of missing out on qualifying for the NextGen Ascension League, how do you summarize this ’one-ga’ journey?"
Maddox looked down at the table for a mont, a rare flash of genuine emotion crossing his face. "When I arrived, this was a group of individuals who were still rough at the edges. They were talented, but they lacked a soul. The challenge wasn’t about teaching them how to kick a ball; they already knew that. it was about teaching them how to be a team. Finishing second isn’t the end of the journey; it’s just the validation that we’re on the right path. We’ve earned our place in the Ascension League, but we aren’t satisfied just being there."
"On that note," Sarah Jenkins asked again, "the Ascension League starts early next month. The competition level takes a massive jump. You’ll be facing academy teams from top-flight clubs and well-funded regional powerhouses all around the world of Terra. How do you prepare a youth team for that kind of step up in such a short window?"
"Preparation started the second that whistle blew," Maddox said. "We have a three-week block. The first week is recovery and physiological assessnt. We need to see who is carrying knocks. The second and third weeks will be the most intense training this club has ever seen. We aren’t just going to work on fitness; we’re going to work on ntal speed. In the Ascension League, the ga moves faster. If you have to think about your next pass, you’ve already lost the ball. We’ll be using advanced scouting and data analysis to prepare for every opponent. We won’t be the biggest team in the league, but I promise you, we will be the most prepared."
"Are you looking to add to the squad?" another reporter asked. "With the qualification cos a small budget increase from the board. Do you feel this current roster can compete at the next level?"
Maddox leaned back, crossing his arms. "I believe in the boys we have. They’ve proven they can handle pressure. However, a manager’s job is to always look for ways to improve the squad. If the right player becos available, soone who fits our culture and fills a tactical void, we’ll look at it. But I’m not going to bring in players just for the sake of spending money. Anyone who joins this team has to be ready to work as hard as every other player on the team. No passengers."
The dia officer checked his watch. "Last two questions, please."
"Coach, a personal question," a journalist from a national sports magazine said. "You’ve gone from a ’failing’ youth coach from Silvergate Youth Sailors to the talk of the region in a matter of weeks. The ’Touchline God’ nickna is starting to trend on social dia. How are you handling the sudden fa? Does it put more pressure on you for the Ascension League?"
Maddox chuckled, a dry, raspy sound. "I’ve been called a lot of things in my life. ’God’ is a bit much. I’m just a man with confidence and a plan. Fa is for the players; they’re the ones doing the running. My pressure doesn’t co from social dia or nicknas. It cos from the responsibility I have to these twenty-two young n. They’ve given their trust, and I owe them my best work. That’s the only pressure that matters."
The final question ca from a local student reporter. "What is your ssage to the Northcastle fans who travelled to see the ga? They were loud and supportive tonight."
Maddox smiled. "My ssage is simple: Keep believing. We heard you tonight. When we were 2-1 down and the world felt like it was closing in, we heard the ’Stars’ chant. It gave the boys that extra five percent they needed to make those sprints in injury ti. We’re going to the Ascension League together. Stay with us, because we’re just getting started."
The moderator stood up. "Thank you, everyone. That concludes the press conference."
Maddox stood, nodding to the reporters as they scrambled to file their stories. He walked out of the room, the adrenaline of the match finally starting to fade, replaced by a deep, buzzing excitent for the future. He walked down the corridor toward the team bus.
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