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Chapter 3: First Test

Matchday.

The air on Saturday morning carried that strange mix of nerves and damp English weather—fog curling low over the Crawley car park, dew on the grass, and the tallic tang of anticipation that settled in Niels's chest the second he woke up.

He got in early. before Milan. Before the players. He needed the quiet ti. Just him, the tactics board, and the clunky old coffeemaker sputtering like it hated being awake too.

The away trip to Mansfield wasn't glamorous. Their pitch had more sand than soil. The stadium felt more like a municipal rec ground than a professional venue. But for Crawley—sitting 21st in the league—it was massive.

A win could drag them up. A loss, and the whispers would start again. "Relegation form." or "Manager's lost the room."

Niels wasn't the manager, not yet—but today, it felt like he had the wheel.

He stared at the board. Shifted magnets. Then shifted them again.

4-2-3-1? Too passive.

4-3-3? Risky.

Eventually, he settled on a compact 4-4-2 diamond. Narrow. Ugly. Functional.

Sothing scraped behind him—rubber soles on the tile floor.

It was Milan, stepping into the room with a yawn and a cup of sothing that looked suspiciously like instant coffee.

"Early bird," the coach muttered, glancing at the whiteboard. "Nervous?"

Niels nodded. "A little."

"Good," Milan said, taking a sip. "It ans you care about the team."

They sat down together and walked through the ga plan. Once, then again. Milan listened, asked a few questions, and made a couple of small suggestions—tactical tweaks, minor details.

But he didn't take over. He didn't second-guess.

He just observed quietly, then gave a single nod. He showed his trust.

By the ti the team bus rolled into Mansfield, the nerves had settled into sothing sharper. Focus. That old feeling. Like waiting in the tunnel before kickoff—not as a coach, but as the kid he used to be.

Pre-injury. Pre-crash. Pre-rebirth.

Inside the dressing room, the energy was muted. Players sat in silence, headphones on, taping up socks, lacing boots.

Niels stood by the whiteboard. Heart thudding. Fingers twitching. Ti to speak.

"Alright," he began, voice steadier than expected. "We're not here to impress anyone. We're here to outwork them. Outthink them."

A few heads turned. Luka locked eyes with him and nodded.

"They press high. So we play through the middle. Quick touches. Angles. Keep the shape."

He looked around the room. No one was laughing. No one looked lost. Just tired eyes, listening.

And then, just before kickoff, Niels lingered outside the dugout, eyes scanning the field. The cheat pulsed faintly in his head—muffled insights, not full clarity.

One of Mansfield's midfielders had heavy legs. Another had poor discipline when dropping back.

"Exploit their left," Niels muttered to himself. "Luka's side."

The whistle blew. Ga began.

The first ten minutes were chaos. Crawley couldn't string three passes. The pitch was a ss—bobbling the ball like a bad FIFA patch.

But the structure held. The midfield compact. The back line disciplined.

Marko, benched last week, had earned his start back—and was now barking commands like a man who wanted to stay in the eleven.

Then, in the 27th minute, Luka broke through. He didn't score, but he got hacked down just outside the box. Free kick. Dangerous angle—right of center.

As the team set up, Milan leaned over. "Top corner?"

Niels shook his head and pointed. "Go low. Near post. Skip it just in front of the wall."

Milan raised a brow. "Seriously?"

"Trust ."

On the pitch, the taker did just that—drove the ball low and fast. It skimd the uneven turf, took a wicked bounce just past the wall, and clipped a defender's shin. The deflection wrong-footed the keeper completely.

Goal. 1–0.

They exploded off the bench.

The rest of the match was survival. Mansfield ca hard in the second half. Crosses. Corners. One header pinged off the post. Another was clawed away by their keeper, who'd been inconsistent all season—until now, of course.

Niels felt every minute stretch like taffy. He lived each pass. Each clearance.

Finally—finally—the whistle blew.

Full-ti. 1–0.

It wasn't pretty. But it was a win.

In the changing room, sweat still steaming off the players, Niels stood at the edge. Watching. Listening to the laughter. The low hum of relief.

"Good job," Milan said, clapping him on the back. "You kept your nerve."

Niels smiled, but inside, sothing deeper stirred. It wasn't just relief. It wasn't pride either.

It was hunger.

Later, alone on the bus ride back, he stared out the window. Trees blurred past in the dark. His reflection looked older than it used to. Sharper. Tired.

But alive.

He'd done it. One ga. One win. One step forward.

He wasn't just the assistant anymore. He wasn't a keyboard coach screaming into the void of Career Mode forums.

He was here.

On the grass.

In the fight.

And for the first ti in a long ti, he felt like he belonged.

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