Chapter 128: Der Klassiker debut
The sixty-eighth minute arrived with the scoreline locked at 2-2 and the tension in the Westfalenstadion reaching a crescendo that seemed to make the very air vibrate with anticipation.
Both teams had thrown everything at each other, creating a spectacle worthy of the greatest stages in world football, but neither could find the decisive breakthrough that would claim the first trophy of the season.
On the touchline, Jürgen Klopp paced like a caged lion, his tactical mind working overtime as he searched for the key to unlock Bayern's increasingly desperate defense. Then, as if struck by divine inspiration, his eyes fell on the figure he had been saving for exactly this moment.
"Mateo!" Klopp's voice cut through the stadium noise like a thunderclap. "This is your time! Show them what we saw in you from the very beginning!"
Mateo's heart exploded into overdrive as he sprang from the bench, his legs feeling light despite the magnitude of the moment.
This was it... the opportunity he had dreamed of since childhood, the chance to prove himself on the biggest stage German football could offer.
As he began his warm-up routine along the touchline, the crowd began to take notice, a murmur rippling through the stands as supporters recognized the young Spaniard who had been the subject of so much speculation and hope.
"Adrenaline levels spiking to optimal performance parameters," the System reported, its voice steady despite the chaos of the moment. "Heart rate: 145 BPM. Muscle tension: ideal for explosive movement. Cognitive function: enhanced beyond normal parameters. Subject is entering peak performance state."
On the Bayern bench, Pep Guardiola's attention was immediately drawn to the warming figure on the sideline.
His expression shifted through a complex range of emotions: professional concern, tactical calculation, and something deeper that spoke to personal history. He leaned forward, speaking urgently to his assistant coaches, no doubt preparing adjustments for the player he had once coached but failed to keep.
The substitution board went up in the seventy-first minute: Gündoğan off, Álvarez on. The stadium announcer's voice boomed across the Westfalenstadion with barely contained excitement: "Making his Der Klassiker debut... wearing number nineteen... MATEO ÁLVAREZ!"
The response was immediate and overwhelming. Eighty thousand voices rose as one, creating a wall of sound that seemed to lift the roof off the stadium and send it spinning into the German sky.
The Yellow Wall erupted in a display of yellow and black that created a visual spectacle to match the auditory assault, flags and banners creating a living tapestry of hope and expectation.
Mateo jogged onto the pitch, his legs feeling like springs despite the weight of the moment. Gündoğan met him at the touchline, pulling him into a brief embrace that spoke to the brotherhood that existed within the squad.
"Show them what you can do," the German midfielder said, his voice barely audible over the crowd but his eyes blazing with conviction. "This is your stage now. Make it legendary."
The first few touches were crucial, and Mateo knew it. He positioned himself in the center of the pitch, his eyes constantly scanning, his mind processing the positions and movements of twenty-one other players with the precision of a supercomputer.
When the ball first came to him, a simple pass from Kehl, he controlled it with a soft touch that seemed to caress the leather, immediately looking for the next option. Nothing spectacular, just clean, efficient football that showed he belonged at this level.
"Initial integration successful," the System noted with something approaching satisfaction. "Teammates are actively seeking to involve the subject in play. Bayern's defensive positioning has shifted to account for the new threat. Guardiola has instructed his players to close down space more aggressively when the ball approaches the subject."
For the next seven minutes, Mateo played with the composure of a veteran, making simple passes, maintaining possession, and gradually asserting his influence on the game's rhythm. The crowd appreciated his calmness, but they were waiting for something more, a moment of magic that would justify their faith in this silent prodigy who had captured their imagination.
That moment began to unfold in the seventy-eighth minute, and it would be talked about for decades to come.
Dortmund had been defending a Bayern corner, and Hummels rose majestically to head the ball clear, his timing perfect as he outjumped two Bayern attackers. The ball fell to Mateo, standing just inside his own half, with his back to goal and the entire Bayern team between him and their penalty area. What happened next would redefine what was possible on a football pitch.
Mateo's first touch was sublime, cushioning the ball with the outside of his right foot while simultaneously turning to face the Bayern goal. He could see the space opening up ahead of him, could feel the System calculating angles and probabilities, but more than that, he could sense the moment calling for something extraordinary.
He began to run.
The first defender, Javi Martínez, approached with the confidence of a player who had won everything in the game.
Mateo waited until the last possible second, his body language suggesting he would go left, before exploding to the right with a burst of acceleration that left the Spanish midfielder grasping at air. The crowd's noise level increased perceptibly as they sensed something special beginning to unfold.
The second defender, Bastian Schweinsteiger, was already moving to close the space, his experience telling him exactly where Mateo would go. But experience meant nothing when faced with pure instinct and perfect technique.
Mateo dropped his shoulder, feinted left with such conviction that Schweinsteiger committed his entire body weight to the movement, then slipped the ball through the German's legs with a delicate touch that was both audacious and perfectly weighted.
By now, the crowd was on its feet, sensing something extraordinary unfolding before their eyes. The third defender, Philipp Lahm, approached with the caution of a man who had just watched two world-class players made to look ordinary.
But caution was no defense against genius. Mateo performed a perfect Cruyff turn, the ball seeming to stick to his foot as he pivoted 180 degrees, leaving Lahm spinning in confusion.
"Movement pattern recognition: Subject is replicating Lionel Messi's famous run against Getafe, April 18, 2007," the System observed, its analytical voice almost breathless with the impossibility of what it was witnessing. "Defensive players eliminated: three. Distance covered: thirty-eight meters. Ball touches: six. Perfection rating: 99.8%."