"I still don't know how we did that," Jonathan Rowe said, shaking his head as he unlaced his boots.
"For a minute there, after that bicycle kick, I thought the game was going to ask us to just forfeit out of respect."
"My penalty was a tactical masterpiece," Kenny McLean announced to the room with a deadpan expression.
"I was aiming for the keeper's weaker side, psychologically speaking. The bottom right corner is a well-known area of emotional vulnerability."
The room erupted in laughter.
The tension of the match had given way to a kind of giddy, disbelieving joy.
Ethan stood in the middle of it all, a proud, tired smile on his face. He let them laugh, let them decompress. They had earned it.
"Alright, you absolute lunatics, listen up!" he finally called out, and the room quieted down, all eyes turning to him.
"That was not a draw," he began, his voice ringing with a quiet, powerful conviction.
"That was a statement. We went to the home of a team of legends, we got punched in the mouth, twice, and we got back up and punched them right back. Every single team in this league will have watched that game. And right now, not a single one of them wants to play us."
He brought up the league table on the main holographic screen.
The Apex United crest was still, by the slimmest of goal-difference margins, sitting in first place.
"The good news," he said, pointing to the top spot, "is that we're still here. We're still the kings of the castle." He then swiped, and the fixture list appeared.
"The bad news is, the team in second place just won their game 5-0. They're level on points, and they're breathing down our necks. Our next league match, at home, is a must-win. Anything less than three points, and we lose the top spot. The party's over. The real work starts now."
The players were silent, the message received.
Ethan logged off, the roar of the virtual stadium fading into the quiet hum of his bedroom.
He felt drained, but in the best possible way.
He was about to fall into bed when his phone buzzed.
It was a notification from the YouTube app.
He opened it, a flicker of nervous curiosity in his mind. He navigated to his channel, 'The Gaffer's Office'. The live stream from the Derby match had been a chaotic, thrilling success.
The viewer numbers had been incredible.
But what about the subscribers? The magic number was 1,000.
He looked at the screen, his heart doing a little stutter-step.
999 Subscribers.
He was so close he could taste it. He stared at the number, a single, solitary subscriber away from his goal. He refreshed the page.
Still 999. He refreshed it again. Still 999. It was a special kind of torture.
"Come on, just one more," he whispered to the empty room.
"One more person who wants to watch a team of chaotic lunatics try to play football."
He was about to give up and go to sleep when his bedroom door creaked open.
It was his sister, Sarah, holding a small pile of freshly laundered clothes.
"The laundry fairy has arrived," she said, her voice light and teasing.
"And she's noticed you've been staring at your phone with the intensity of a brain surgeon for the last ten minutes. Everything okay?"
"Yeah, fine," he said, quickly putting his phone down.
"Just... checking some stats."
"Stats, huh?" she said, a knowing smile on her face as she placed the clothes on his chair.
"What's 'The Gaffer's Office'?"
Ethan froze. "What?"
"The Gaffer's Office," she repeated, picking up his phone.
"It's the channel you've been refreshing like a madman. You know, for a secret, underground football manager, you're not very subtle."
His face burned.
"You saw that?"
"I saw the stream last week," she admitted, her expression softening.
"The one with the puppy. It was... surprisingly entertaining. You're good at it, Ethan. You're a natural."
"Thanks," he mumbled, feeling a mixture of embarrassment and pride.
"So, what's the big deal?" she asked, looking at the channel page.
"999 subscribers. That's pretty cool." She tapped the screen a few times.
"What does it take to... you know."
She pressed the big, red 'Subscribe' button.
The number on the screen ticked over.
1,000 Subscribers.
A notification from YouTube immediately popped up on his screen.
Congratulations! You have reached the requirements for the YouTube Partner Program!
Ethan just stared at the screen, then at his sister, a slow, disbelieving grin spreading across his face.
"You... you were the thousandth?"
"Looks like it," she said with a casual shrug, but her eyes were sparkling with a proud, sisterly affection.
"So, what does this mean? Do you get a little plaque? A golden play button?"
"It means," he said, the words feeling huge and wonderful and impossibly real, "that I can start getting paid."
"Paid?" she said, her eyebrows shooting up.
"For playing your football game?"
"For telling our story," he corrected her, a new, powerful confidence in his voice.
"For building a brand. It's not just a game anymore, Sarah. It's a business."
She looked at him, at the fire in his eyes, at the quiet determination that had replaced his old, aimless boredom.
She saw the 'Gaffer'. And she was incredibly proud.
"Well then, Mr. CEO," she said, ruffling his hair.
"As your thousandth, and therefore most important, investor, I have some notes. Your branding is a little inconsistent. And your 'About' page could use some work. We should talk strategy."
She turned to leave, then paused at the door.
"Oh, and I was thinking," she said, a brilliant, game-changing idea sparking in her eyes.
"Your dad's new gaming cafe, 'The Gaffer's Dugout'... what if 'The Gaffer's Office' wasn't just in the game? What if you had a real-life studio? A place to stream from, to host events, to connect with your 'Gaffer Gang'?"
She grinned. "What if you merged your two worlds, for real?"
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