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Chapter 108 - Student on the Pitch

Amani rested his books against the bright yellow wall of the St. Bonifatius College corridor, the morning sunlight streaming through high windows to gild the polished floor. Lockers clanged and laughter echoed down the hallway as classmates shuffled to their first lessons.

Already, groups were whispering and pointing; some turned to smile at him as he passed. The chatter stopped for a moment when he caught an eye-line, and a small wave of recognition passed over the teenagers.

In one direct glance, a girl mouthed Hamadi! and grinned, as if seeing a pop star on the street. Amani felt a flush under his skin and hurried past, tucking his hands in his pockets.

"Let's go," he muttered to Malik, his close friend and fellow teammate, who sidled up beside him at that moment. Malik laughed, a low warm sound. "Easy, Professor Hamadi. You're going to be late for geography if you're swooning at your fans." The bell ringing above their heads cut through the murmurs, sending them scattering.

In class, Amani sat near the front as usual, elbows tucked on the wooden desk. Mrs. De Jong, their history teacher, paced at the chalkboard with a piece of chalk squeaking behind her, explaining the Dutch Golden Age.

Amani tried to focus, but each time he glanced at the clock, he heard the echoes of lunchtime talk outside. His phone lay face down on the desk, a silent and blinking observer. A small vibration went unnoticed against the polished wood as a new notification arrived.

Malik nudged him. "Bad connection, you missed the start. Look who has 20,000 followers now." He jerked his thumb toward Amani's smartphone. Amani blinked and looked down; the screen was locked, but he could imagine the flurry of likes and comments from last night's post of Utrecht highlights.

He forced a smile. Mrs. De Jong caught his eye as he unlocked the phone. "Amani, I notice you're not taking notes. Care to share some historical insight with the class?" she asked lightly, though her tone was stern.

Amani cleared his throat. "Sorry, mevrouw. Just… uh… checking the time." He grinned half-heartedly. "As I was saying, five years ago the United East India Company…" The class snickered softly as the teacher continued the lesson. He ducked his head.

At the short morning break, students poured into the courtyard. Amani and Malik joined a group under the old maple tree, its leaves just turning gold. Across the yard, two girls giggled as they passed him.

"Amani, can you sign my copy of the student newspaper?" one called, holding up the freshly printed school newsletter with a red headline proclaiming "Utrecht Youngster Shines."

The other added with a laugh, "It even lists your stats: three goals and six assists already this season, and RB Leipzig scouts tried to friend you last night!" Amani waved them off, uncomfortable under their eager faces.

"Thanks, but I've gotta get to practice," he said, shouldering past. "Come on, people are wild." He and Malik walked toward the building for their next class, sidestepping clusters of students waving and whispering.

The rest of the day passed in a blur of Dutch essays and math equations. At every break, classmates threw him quick thumbs-ups or tried to start conversations. Amani answered politely, never lingering long.

By afternoon physics, he was remarkably adept at using in-class doodling to camouflage his excitement. When the teacher called on him, he shook off daydreams of headers and long passes and answered about projectile motion like a pro.

After the final school bell, evening training awaited. Outside the building, Amani stretched his sore shoulders and felt the cool breeze off the canals. He and Malik walked toward the academy's parking lot, their sports bags swinging on their shoulders.

As they approached the glass-fronted FC Utrecht training center, two younger players on bicycles recognized Amani. "Amani!" one shouted, skidding to a stop. "Huge game last week, man. Amazing passes. You're a beast!"

Amani grinned and gave a thumbs-up. "Thanks, mate. See you on the pitch." They waved and rode off. Inside the nearly empty dressing room, the sharp scent of disinfectant mingled with worn leather cleats and fresh laundry. Amani leaned back on the bench and closed his eyes for a moment.

His body ached from the season's grind, but the off-season mission was clear: recover now, train smart later. He followed the physio's instructions diligently, rolling a therapy ball under his calves, bending deeply to stretch the tight hamstrings, letting cool gel from the massage therapist ease the soreness from his legs. Each throb reminded him that even a superstar-in-waiting still had to look after his temple of a body.

Soon, Coach Pronk gathered the players. "Alright, boys, quick session tonight. Strategy and film analysis," he said, motioning toward the small media room at the edge of the field. Amani's eyes lit up; tactics was his favorite part of the game.

After a short warm-up jog, Amrabat and Tijmen joined Amani and Malik in the room.

In the media room, Amani lowered himself into a chair beside Amrabat's tall frame and Tijmen's energetic grin. The lights dimmed slightly. On the screen, a recent match replay of Utrecht's attack scenes began to play silently.

It was footage from one of Amani's four Eredivisie appearances, the game where he had set up two goals and scored one himself. The formation shifted fluidly in 4-2-3-1, wingers drifting, midfielders interchanging positions.

"Notice here," Amani began quietly, pausing at the twenty-four-minute mark. A dotted line highlighted his dribble path through traffic, followed by a white arrow where he had laid off the pass.

Amrabat nodded appreciatively. "Good vision. That first layoff to Takagi was perfect. But what if you'd cut inside instead? That might've drawn the fullback and created space."

Tijmen chimed in, eyes fixed on the screen. "And look at Alexander over there. If he makes that near-post run, you would have had him wide open." Amani nodded thoughtfully. "Yeah, I see. The gap between center back and fullback was small. I thought cut-out pass first, but maybe a diagonal run over the top could hit Alexander."

They rewound and watched the clip again. The system mission was in full effect: study these scenarios, identify passing lanes, and make attacking movements. The projector's hum filled the silence. Coach Pronk joined them. "Good observations. What else do you see? How could we create even more space in that next play?"

Amani pointed on the paused screen. "If I pretend to thread the ball there, I could make the center-back shift a step. Then Takagi could quickly cut inside behind the wing-back."

He sketched a new route on the frozen image. Malik, leaning against the doorframe, added, "We practiced that last week in training, remember? Fake one way, go the other." Amani grinned. "Right. Let's try that on the field."

"Exactly," Coach said approvingly. "Now, let's work on those movement patterns." He clapped his hands. "Back to the field for drills." He laid out cones in a loose zigzag pattern on the pitch under the floodlights. Amrabat challenged Amani with a playful smirk. "I bet I can get the ball past you with a feint," he teased.

"Bring it on," Amani shot back. The two danced through the cones with a ball at their feet as Coach and Malik served as passive defenders. Each step-over and sudden burst was met with laughter and competitive gasps.

Tijmen shouted from the sideline, "That's it, Amani! Shake him!" Cleats squeaked on the grass; Amani's hair clung damply to his forehead as he spun past Amrabat for a mock goal.

The coach then had them work on two-touch passing in a triangle, emphasizing movement off the ball. Amrabat pumped forward into a channel, Amani drew his marker toward him, and a quick release sent the ball out wide to Tijmen on the wing.

The trio's movements improved with each repetition. When Malik slipped the final pass to find Tijmen in space, and the winger drilled it into the net of spare cones, the three erupted in cheers.

Afterward, the night air was cool on their sweaty skin as they packed up. Amani leaned against the brick wall of the dressing room, pulling on a warm hoodie. Malik tossed him a towel.

"You did great today," Amrabat said, clapping Amani's shoulder. "Those cuts and passes… this next season is gonna be something else." Amani felt pride heat his cheeks, then tempered it with a grin. "Thanks. We all worked hard for it," he replied quietly. "We just gotta keep at it. Don't get lazy."

Meanwhile, in the quiet conference room at Stadion Galgenwaard, club leaders were convened. The polished table reflected the gravity of the discussion as the Technical Director slid open a thick binder of paperwork.

"We have to be careful," Ms. De Vries began, eyes on the file. "According to FIFA regulations and Dutch labor law, we can't offer a professional contract until Amani turns sixteen, and even then, only up to three years. He still must attend school full-time under those youth transfer rules."

The Technical Director nodded slowly. "Right, but we can't afford to lose him while we wait. There are already scouts from RB Leipzig and OGC Nice circling. Leipzig's academy director reached out today. They're offering him a place and school there."

Mr. Stein, the head scout, added quietly, "Nice even proposed a scholarship, letting him finish here in Utrecht part-time. We have to keep him with us."

The CEO tapped his pen against the table. "We should write a formal letter of intent, not an official pro deal yet, but a clear commitment. Offer to cover his schooling and pay a loyalty bonus effective at his sixteenth birthday. And let's register him permanently in our youth system."

Mr. Jansen, the financial director, agreed. "That and a transparent offer will deter rivals. If any club approached him, they'd be breaking the rules."

Ms. De Vries added, "I'll coordinate with the KNVB and the labor authorities to make sure everything is by the book. They take poaching seriously. For now, we simply protect him within our academy." Mr. Stein smiled wryly. "He's still a kid, sure, but he's sharp. He knows this club has always looked out for him. I'll talk with him tomorrow after training."

The officials nodded, each understanding the stakes. Outside the boardroom window, the Galgenwaard stadium lights glowed brightly against the dusk sky, as if cheering on Amani's next move.

Later that evening, back in his small apartment, Amani sat at the desk in his bedroom, the door cracked open to listen for his younger brother practicing piano next door. His textbook lay before him, Dutch grammar exercises untouched, but he was thinking about the day's tactical notes.

He held his phone, fingers hovering over the DM list, reading a polite message from a Leipzig youth coach complimenting his vision. He stared at it, then slid the phone aside. Its glow felt ordinary now. Three games left this year and six assists next season – that was his goal, not new follower counts or transfer rumors.

He glanced at the framed photo on his desk from the latest game: his mouth open in mid-shout after scoring, drenched in stadium lights. It made him smile. You earned that, he thought.

But he also remembered Coach Jan Wouter's words and the board's cautious plan. He still had school tomorrow and the rest of the off season to himself. He was grateful for every cheer and every DM, but he couldn't let it go to his head.

Blowing out the desk lamp, Amani lay back on his bed. He allowed himself a quiet pride in the day's progress, tactical moves unlocked, no one outworked, and the attention it had brought.

But mostly, he fell asleep thinking of next week's schedule: balancing math homework with match prep, and making sure he kept both feet firmly on the ground, even when everyone else expected him to soar.

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