The marker squeaked across the whiteboard in short, clipped strokes. Red arrows carved through green dots. A rectangular pitch split into thirds with diagonal lines slashed through the center like a battlefield strategy.
"Standard warm-up, then rondos," Michel said, capping the pen and tucking his clipboard under his arm. "Two-touch. Five-versus-two, tight spaces. Circle compression." His voice carried the confidence of routine. "You know the drill."
The coaching staff nodded, murmurs passing between them like static. Morning sunlight cut through dusty air in golden strips, painting tiger stripes across the locker room wall. The clock above the door ticked to 8:14. First whistle waited fifteen minutes away.
Demien leaned against the far end of the board. Hands tucked in his pockets, one foot hooked casually behind the other. A man with nowhere urgent to be. Composed on the surface.
Inside, he itched.
Yesterday's rondos played back in his mind. Tight circles. Limited touches. Endless repetition. Good for tempo but narrow. Predictable. Players drilling muscle memory they'd never use in actual matches. In-game transitions didn't happen in perfect circles. Pressure never arrived from just two directions.
Not wrong. Just outdated. Like watching football from the previous decade.
"Let's adjust it," Demien said suddenly. His quiet voice landed with unexpected weight.
Michel blinked. "Adjust?"
"Same numbers. Five-on-two." Demien nodded toward the board. "But spread the layout. Create lanes between zones. One floater on each edge. Encourage third-man runs. Get them thinking past the closest pass."
Silence filled the room. A younger coach shifted his feet, eyes darting between Michel and Demien.
Michel tilted his head slightly. "That's not what we've been running."
"No," Demien said. "But it should be."
He didn't wait for follow-up questions. Instead, he pushed off the wall, grabbed magnetic pieces from the ledge, and began rearranging the board. Player markers drifted wider. Triangles stretched diagonally instead of hugging tight circles. Lines between them sharpened like crossing wires.
Michel watched without speaking.
The room's rhythm shifted. Subtle resistance hung in the air – the natural reaction to anything new disrupting established patterns.
Outside, morning light turned the pitch into something alive. Dew-heavy grass caught sunlight like scattered diamonds. Players filtered out one by one, adjusting bibs and jogging lightly. Staff hauled equipment across the sideline.
"Setup three zones," Demien called to the nearest assistant. "Use the half-space markers and push them wide."
The man hesitated momentarily before moving. His eyes flicked toward Michel, seeking confirmation that never came.
Whistles chirped across the field. Players stretched limbs and loosened joints, but their attention drifted toward the unfamiliar setup. Cones formed patterns they'd never seen in training before.
Rothen tilted his head. "What's that?"
"New warm-up," Michel muttered. "Just roll with it."
Demien stood midfield, hands clasped behind his back, watching the layout take final shape. Three long rectangles. Two neutrals floating on either edge. Pressers trapped in the central corridor between pulsing movement.
"Start slow," he said. "Two-touch max. Communicate early."
The first ball rolled in.
Confusion erupted immediately.
Evra passed diagonally into empty space—nobody moved. Bernardi hesitated between zones. Giuly darted too far ahead, killing the triangle. The pressing pair exchanged glances, looked toward Demien, then reset without a word.
Not wrong. Just unfamiliar. Like speaking a language they recognized but couldn't quite speak.
The second rep brought three broken passes and a collision at the edge line.
Snickers bubbled from the sideline. Rothen muttered something in French, tapping his temple with one finger.
Demien didn't correct anyone. He walked the edge of the grid, unhurried and unbothered. Let them feel the chaos first. Then, as he passed Giuly: "Half-turn earlier."
To Evra: "Check your blind shoulder."
To Plasil: "Don't chase the pass. Shape it."
Another rep. Another broken pattern.
Then something started clicking. The rhythm found its edge. Giuly delayed half a second—drew the presser wide—slipped a cutback into Bernardi's path. Two quick passes later, the ball emerged clean on the far side. Crisp. Intentional.
Light applause sparked from the bench.
Demien gave nothing back. Only continued pacing, eyes narrowed in assessment.
Another repetition.
Rothen over-committed. Evra capitalized—absorbed the press, slipped through to find the third man on the wing.
Demien stopped walking.
"Good," he said, just loud enough to carry. Not praise, just acknowledgment.
The players didn't break stride, but energy shifted visibly. Heads lifted. Shoulders straightened. Frustration remained, but now it had somewhere productive to flow.
Michel stood beside the second assistant, arms folded across his chest.
"This your session?" the assistant asked quietly.
Michel didn't answer immediately. Then leaned in, voice lowered. "That's not in our manual..."
Demien heard it clearly across the field.
He didn't turn. Didn't react. But a slow smile curved the edge of his mouth. The kind that doesn't reach the eyes. The kind that signified something important had just shifted.
Not for them. For him.
The drill continued, players adapting with each repetition. What began as confusion transformed into something else—not mastery yet, but recognition. The outlines of a system that existed nowhere except in Demien's mind. Football from years ahead of its time.
By the tenth repetition, Zikos had found the rhythm. His switches bypassed the first pressing line entirely. Rothen began shifting his body shape before receiving, already oriented toward the next possible connection.
Giuly—the captain, the standard-bearer—paused during a water break. "This is different," he said, not a question.
Demien met his eyes. "Different doesn't mean wrong."
As the session progressed, the confusion dissipated. Replaced by something more valuable—curiosity. The players weren't just following instructions anymore. They were discovering possibilities.
Michel approached as the drill wound down. "The players are adapting," he said cautiously. "But this isn't traditional."
"Tradition," Demien replied, "is just what worked yesterday."
Tomorrow belonged to those who saw it coming.