Football Coaching Game: Starting With SSS-Rank Player
Chapter 35: A huge welcome back to The Apex
CHAPTER 35: A HUGE WELCOME BACK TO THE APEX
The final beep of the checkout scanner felt like a starting pistol.
Ethan finished his shift at CostMart, a tired but satisfied smile on his face.
He had spent the last three days in a whirlwind of reality: helping his recovering mother, who was now awake and talking, albeit weakly; playing with Gaffer, the fluffy new center of the family’s universe; and stacking an infinite number of soup cans under the grumpy but watchful eye of Mr. Henderson.
He had handed his earnings to his dad, a small but significant contribution that had earned him a proud clap on the back.
His two worlds, once in jarring conflict, were starting to find a strange, exhausting rhythm.
But today was different. Today was Saturday.
Today was matchday.
He practically flew home on his bike, the fatigue in his legs replaced by the familiar pre-match buzz. He gave his mom a gentle hug, checked that she was comfortable, and then made a beeline for his room.
Before diving into the match preparations, he knew he had to address the ominous message that had been sitting in his virtual inbox for days.
With a deep breath, he lay down in the pod and logged in, appearing in his silent, moonlit office. He navigated to his inbox, his heart thumping, and opened the message from the System Administrator.
The text was formal, cold, and corporate.
To: Manager Ethan Couch, Apex United
From: FCG System Administrator
Subject: Regarding your unscheduled disconnection during FCG League One Fixture #1.
This message serves as a formal warning.
Unscheduled disconnections during active, competitive fixtures are a violation of the FCG Terms of Service (Section 7, Subsection B: Match Integrity).
Your match was completed via AI Assistant simulation, which resulted in a satisfactory outcome. However, repeated violations will result in penalties, including but not limited to: financial sanctions, points deductions, or account suspension.
Ethan felt a chill run down his spine.
Account suspension.
The thought was terrifying. But the message continued, and the tone shifted unexpectedly.
We understand that managers have real-world commitments.
The FCG is designed to integrate with, not detract from, your primary reality.
To that end, we have noted your new, registered employment schedule.
As a result, we are enabling the ’Real-Time Sync’ feature on your account.
For scheduled work shifts, you will now have the option to delegate full match control to your AI Assistant Manager from the start.
You will receive key highlight notifications to your real-world device and can issue simple, one-touch tactical commands (e.g., ’Attack’, ’Defend’, ’Make Substitution’) at halftime or during stoppages in play.
This feature is designed to help you balance your responsibilities. Use it wisely.
Ethan stared at the message, his mind blown.
The game knew about his job. It hadn’t just noted it; it had adapted to it. It had given him a tool to manage his two lives simultaneously.
It was an incredible, slightly terrifying feature that blurred the lines between his worlds even further. He didn’t have to choose. He could do both.
With a newfound sense of control, he closed the message and focused on the task at hand. Bolton Wanderers. He dived into the matchday environment.
The home dressing room at The Apex was buzzing.
The victory against Luton had filled the squad with a palpable confidence.
"Did you see the league table?" Jonathan Rowe was saying to a few of the younger players. "We’re in the top half! After one game!"
"It’s a long season, Jonny. Don’t go planning the parade just yet," Grant Hanley’s voice rumbled from the corner, but even he had a slight smile on his face.
David Kerrigan was juggling a ball, looking completely at ease. "So, who are these Bolton lads? Any good?"
"They’re a solid side. Tough to break down," Kenny McLean answered, lacing up his boots. "Don’t expect them to give you as much space as my mate Leo’s team did."
Ethan clapped his hands, and the room fell silent. "Alright, everyone. Good week of training. I can see the confidence, and I love it. But we don’t get arrogant. Bolton are a good team. They’re organized, they’re disciplined, and they won’t make it easy for us. We have to earn this."
He gestured to the tactics board. "We’re sticking with the 4-3-3 that worked so well last week. The lineup is unchanged. I want us to be patient. We might not score in the first ten minutes. We might have to wait. But if we keep moving the ball, if we trust the system, the chances will come."
He looked at his front three. "Emre, Viktor, David. You three were brilliant last week. I want more of the same. Link up, be creative, be a nightmare to defend. Let’s go out there and give our fans something to cheer about."
The team walked out into the roar of the home crowd, the sun shining brightly on the perfect green pitch.
"A huge welcome back to The Apex, where the high-flying, newly-formed Apex United are looking to make it two wins from two to start their inaugural season!" the commentator announced. "They face a tough test today against the ever-reliable Bolton Wanderers, who themselves are coming off a solid opening day draw. After their surprise victory against Luton, the league is certainly taking notice of Ethan Couch’s young, exciting side."
The whistle blew, and the match began.
From the start, it was clear that Bolton was a different kind of challenge.
They weren’t as physical as Luton, but they were far more intelligent.
They sat in a compact 4-5-1 formation, denying Apex any space in the midfield.
"There’s nothing through the middle!" Hanley shouted, as another attack was patiently snuffed out.
"Gotta go wide! Stretch ’em out!" McLean urged his wingers.
It was a tactical chess match. Ethan watched from the sideline, impressed by Bolton’s discipline.
He could see his players getting frustrated.
David Kerrigan tried to take on three players and lost the ball.
Viktor Kristensen made a clever run, but the pass was cut out by a perfectly positioned defender.
Then, in the 22nd minute, Ethan’s ’Managerial Instinct’ trait flared. It wasn’t a specific weakness this time. It was a pattern.
[OPPORTUNITY INSIGHT: Bolton’s central midfielders are highly disciplined in holding their position. A deep-lying midfielder making a late, forward run will likely go untracked.]
It was a subtle insight, but a brilliant one.
He caught Kenny McLean’s eye. He pointed at the Scottish midfielder, then pointed aggressively towards the Bolton penalty area.
You. Run.
McLean, a smart and experienced player, understood immediately. He gave a discreet thumbs-up.
For the next few minutes, nothing changed.
Apex passed the ball patiently across the backline, lulling Bolton into a false sense of security.
Then, the moment came.
Emre Demir dropped deep, pulling his marker with him. He laid the ball off to Sørensen, the defensive shield.
Sørensen took one touch and played a simple pass to Grant Hanley.
It was the trigger.
As the Bolton midfield watched the ball, Kenny McLean, from his deep-lying position, burst forward, a ghost running into the space Emre had just created. No one tracked him.
Hanley looked up and, bypassing the entire midfield, clipped a beautiful, lofted pass over the top of the Bolton defense, right into the path of the charging McLean.
The Bolton defenders were in shock.
They had been so focused on the front three that they had completely forgotten about the Scottish veteran.
McLean was through on goal.
He let the ball bounce once before hitting a sweet, first-time volley. The keeper got a hand to it, but the power was too much. The ball looped up and nestled into the back of the net.
1-0!
The stadium erupted! The players mobbed McLean, who roared with a passion rarely seen from the calm midfielder.
"WHERE DID HE COME FROM?!" the commentator screamed in delight. "Kenny McLean, the midfield general, with a perfectly timed run from deep! A stunning pass from the captain Grant Hanley, and Apex United have picked the lock! A goal of sheer tactical brilliance!"
Ethan allowed himself a satisfied smile.
He looked over at the Bolton manager, who was staring at the pitch, completely bewildered, trying to figure out what had just happened.
As the game was about to restart, a notification flashed in Ethan’s vision. It was a message from the System Administrator.
[’Real-Time Sync’ feature is now active. Your current match is estimated to conclude at 16:48. Your registered work shift begins at 18:00. The system will monitor your progress.]
Ethan blinked.
The system will monitor your progress.
The message was both helpful and deeply unsettling.
It felt like the game was watching him, not just as a manager, but as a person.
The line between his two lives had just become a whole lot blurrier.