As a rookie, I am still learning the rules. It is easier to introduce the player to start some media articles. Here comes the story about the rookie Mario Messi in Kansas City.
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Once when he was playing the game in high school, Mario attempted to penetrate through the center of the defensive line (Yes! A viable strategy of a route runner), but immediately got surrounded by three 400-pound defenders from his right, left, and front, and other three 400-pound teammates trailing after him, who were trying to help power him over the defenders. Within a split second, Mario was squeezed and squashed by the muscles weighing thousands of pounds. He toppled down and fell into a coma, with blood trickling down his thigh, gushing out of his skull, and swirling around his face. The team physician, who is taciturn but an eminent doctor nationwide, compressed Mario's injured body and punched Mario’s face repeatedly to wake him up. The hideous cheerleader from the home team excitingly squealed and danced with malignity. Mario sensed uproars and a flurry of vile profanities from the spectators stands: “Faking injuries! Fake blood capsules in his underwear! Search his underwear! Blatant flopping!”. His teammates tried to help: two helped punch Mario’s face following the doctor’s order, one braced himself for vengeance, one fainted with fear to demonstrate his empathy with Mario, and the other four teammates forming a little circle formation, hurling profanities back to the spectators. In a coma, Mario lamented how little impact this collision had on him and planned to jeer at his opponents after waking up. Mario vowed to himself, next time, he would first get rid of the stupid teammates trailing him, heed the mammoth defenders emerging out of the thin air, and remember to jump over the glass splinters on the pitch. He would keep penetrating the central defensive line again and again, since great strategies should be relentlessly executed until success. Mario Messi suffered from anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears and meniscal tears for other ten times after this game. The injuries become the emblem of Mario’s fights, and he always brings it up later in this life, whenever he needs a pretext for his failures or just boosts his esteem before falling into sleep. Although Mario did not get any chance to play in the past three games, the past experiences (as above) have demonstrated his impressive perseverance, which will contribute dramatically to the team in future games : )
(Obviously, it is not about expansion...)
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Once when he was playing the game in high school, Mario attempted to penetrate through the center of the defensive line (Yes! A viable strategy of a route runner), but immediately got surrounded by three 400-pound defenders from his right, left, and front, and other three 400-pound teammates trailing after him, who were trying to help power him over the defenders. Within a split second, Mario was squeezed and squashed by the muscles weighing thousands of pounds. He toppled down and fell into a coma, with blood trickling down his thigh, gushing out of his skull, and swirling around his face. The team physician, who is taciturn but an eminent doctor nationwide, compressed Mario's injured body and punched Mario’s face repeatedly to wake him up. The hideous cheerleader from the home team excitingly squealed and danced with malignity. Mario sensed uproars and a flurry of vile profanities from the spectators stands: “Faking injuries! Fake blood capsules in his underwear! Search his underwear! Blatant flopping!”. His teammates tried to help: two helped punch Mario’s face following the doctor’s order, one braced himself for vengeance, one fainted with fear to demonstrate his empathy with Mario, and the other four teammates forming a little circle formation, hurling profanities back to the spectators. In a coma, Mario lamented how little impact this collision had on him and planned to jeer at his opponents after waking up. Mario vowed to himself, next time, he would first get rid of the stupid teammates trailing him, heed the mammoth defenders emerging out of the thin air, and remember to jump over the glass splinters on the pitch. He would keep penetrating the central defensive line again and again, since great strategies should be relentlessly executed until success. Mario Messi suffered from anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears and meniscal tears for other ten times after this game. The injuries become the emblem of Mario’s fights, and he always brings it up later in this life, whenever he needs a pretext for his failures or just boosts his esteem before falling into sleep. Although Mario did not get any chance to play in the past three games, the past experiences (as above) have demonstrated his impressive perseverance, which will contribute dramatically to the team in future games : )
(Obviously, it is not about expansion...)