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Bobo Lelo
June 13th, 2026
On Saturday morning, while the children were still asleep, Julien joined a Teams meeting with his core staff. Assistant Manager Fritz Schmid, Director of Football Roger Stilz, Chief Scout Nnamdi Aghanya, Head of Youth Development Mario Gilli, and Loan Manager Renato Fusco all connected. The main objective of the meeting was to review the squad and decide whose contracts should be extended and whose should not. The discussion began with Stilz announcing that Amiens, who had finished 10th in Ligue 2, had submitted a £54,000 offer for Jésah Ayessa. The staff quickly agreed to accept the bid.
Stilz continued. He announced that Albert Vallci had accepted an offer from Anderlecht, adding £1.1 million to St. Gallen's transfer budget. Furthermore, offloading both Vallci and Ayessa had a positive impact on the payroll, instantly freeing up a combined £12,000 per week in the wage budget.
Right at that moment, Nnamdi Aghanya spoke up. He calmly reported on a phone call he had received the previous evening: AC Bellinzona, who had finished 6th in the Swiss Challenge League, had offered him their vacant manager position. Julien and Roger Stilz almost fell off their chairs. While they were aware of some interest, neither expected an approach this quickly. The news brought mixed emotions to the call. On one hand, everyone was thrilled for their colleague’s great career opportunity—Aghanya had been a loyal servant to St. Gallen since 2013. On the other hand, Julien knew they were losing an incredibly knowledgeable specialist, though the club would at least be due £130,000 in compensation. One by one, the screen filled with smiles as the entire staff congratulated Nnamdi on his well-deserved breakthrough into management.
The meeting continued with a review of the club's financial situation. While Vallci's sale left St. Gallen in a comfortable position, a quick calculation of incoming player salaries against the departures revealed they would be overspending by roughly £10,000 to £12,000 per week. To fix this, they decided to adjust the budgets by moving £2 million from the £4.02 million transfer budget to the wage budget to secure their long-term financial stability.
Next, the staff evaluated the players whose contracts would expire by the end of the 2026/27 season at the latest. It had already been decided that Probst and Höhener would leave the club this summer, while Becker has been put up for sale, and Efekele would be sent out on loan. Shqiprim Vladi's loan deal would not be extended, meaning he would return to Lugano. Meanwhile, Fehr, Ambrosius, Faber, Stanić, Fazliji, Witzig, Gaal, Watkowiak, and Boukhalfa would all be invited to contract renewal talks early next week. Aside from the five departures, the club aimed to extend contracts with everyone entering their final year.
Finally, they reviewed the players whose contracts ran until the end of the 2027/28 season. Ayessa was close to joining Amiens, and Simone Giordano was transfer listed earlier. Albian Ajeti had already signed his permanent contract, ensuring his future with St. Gallen, while Aliou Baldé would return to Nice. Renewing Chima Okoroji, Hugo Vandermersch, Behar Neziri, and Lukas Daschner was a priority, with talks scheduled for early next week, whereas Vinni Triboulet’s future would only be decided at the end of next season. On the recommendation of Loan Manager Renato Fusco, Julien agreed to give Kevin Csoboth a chance during pre-season following his return from loan, though the French manager remained unconvinced that the Hungarian winger had a future in his squad. The biggest question mark remained the club captain, Lukas Görtler. He would turn 32 on Monday and be 34 by the time his current deal expired. Despite his immense popularity among fans, players, and staff, extending his contract right now made no financial sense. Julien decided to speak with him face-to-face on Monday about his future.
"That concludes today's meeting," Julien announced, before asking Mario Gilli to stay on the call for a minute. "Wait, I have one last surprise for you," Aghanya interrupted. "I know how disappointed you all were when we missed out on Gbamin, so as a parting gift, I found you a new central defender." He presented a scouting report for 34-year-old Stefan de Vrij. "You're funny, Nnamdi," Julien smiled, looking at the Dutchman's £115,000-a-week wage demand, before wishing him the best of luck in his new managerial career.
Gilli stayed on the call. Outside of football, he owned a small pub in St. Gallen. Julien asked him if he could gather the staff there tomorrow evening for burgers and beers to give the chief scout a proper send-off. Mario was always happy to do so. Since Julien was also traveling to Switzerland on Sunday evening, he welcomed the plan; it meant he wouldn't have to spend his first night alone in that large, empty apartment.
Julien was sitting in the living room, when the front door opened. Laura had secretly organized an early birthday celebration for him, bringing together the family to give him a proper send-off. Walking through the door was Julien’s sister, Léa. The surprise deepened when Léa announced her plans: Laura asked her to travel with Julien to Switzerland the next day. Working in an art gallery, she volunteered to spend her week off helping to design and set up the new apartment in St. Gallen. The joyful atmosphere, however, took a turn when Laura’s brother, Paul, arrived. Paul immediately began pushing Julien to "strike while the iron is hot," urging him to leverage the recent Brack Super League championship title to secure a more lucrative contract at a bigger club. Julien refused to even consider the thought. Arguments flared up, voices were raised, and an uncomfortable disagreement temporarily ruined the afternoon mood before Paul finally backed down.
Fortunately, Laura saved the afternoon with his favorite dish Bouillabaisse, packed with fresh Mediterranean fish and a homemade birthday cake.
As the afternoon rolled on, the family gathered around the table for a long board game session. While the dice rolled, Julien looked across the table and noticed asome sadness in his children's eyes. Sunday's farewell was clearly weighing on them, turning their laughter into quiet smiles.
A sudden realization struck his mind as he went to sleep. Pre-season training was starting in less than 48 hours, yet the club had not scheduled a single friendly so far. He sent an SMS to Assistant Manager Fritz Schmid: "Fritz, sorry for the hour. We have zero friendlies locked in for the schedule. We absolutely must resolve this first thing tomorrow morning."
At this moment I've hit continue and a day has passed. See you on:
Bobo Lelo
June 14th, 2026
Laura pinned a note to the fridge for Camille and Louis before they left, she drove Julien and Léa to the Charles de Gaulle airport. They just had a short goodbye before Laura had to leave. Julien watched her car pull away turning toward the security gates with Léa.
They were both reading on the flight to Zürich, but Julien stopped for a moment. "Mario Gilli is hosting a farewell to a colleague tonight" Julien told his sister "Just a few close staff at his pub in town. You should come." Léa looked up from her book. "I’d love to. It’s better than sitting in an empty flat."
They took the train from Zürich Airport to Gossau, caught a taxi, and arrived at the apartment around one o'clock. "Well, this is it," Julien said. "I have two beds ready, and we can eat at that table." He pointed to the garden table with four chairs sitting in the middle of the dining room. Their footsteps echoed through the flat. "Julien, this is beautiful," Léa said. "Don't worry about the furniture, that's why I'm here." They ordered pizza for lunch and ate it straight out of the cardboard boxes.
After lunch, Julien cleaned the cardboard boxes off the garden table and unlocked his phone. A few new scout reports filled his inbox, forwarded by the recruitment team. He skimmed through them quickly, dismissing most because of high transfer fees or wage demands that St. Gallen simply could not afford. However a notification from Elena Meçe, the club's press officer, made him stop. It was official. Bellinzona had just released the formal press announcement. Nnamdyi Aghanya was their new manager. Julien locked the screen and tossed the phone onto the plastic table.
Before Julien could stand up, his phone buzzed on the table. The screen showed Fritz Schmid’s name.
Julien answered, putting the call on speaker. “Hey, about your message from yesterday. I've planned something” he started
"I was thinking we should book a match for the very first weekend, we need to make sure the boys don’t get bored with just fitness training. They need to play, and they need to play a lot."
Julien leaned over the garden table. "Agreed, but I don’t want a meaningless kickabout. At the same time, let’s not pick an opponent that is too big a bite for the opening week."
They debated names for a few minutes, filtering through regional options and Swiss lower-league sides.
"Stade Lausanne-Ouchy," Julien said. "They just finished third in the Challenge League. It’s a proper test but manageable."
"At home?" Schmid asked.
"Yes. We start the preparation at home."
The conversation with Fritz Schmid lasted nearly forty-five minutes. They went back and forth over dates, travel logistics, and squad rotation before finalising the summer schedule. The plan was built to gradually increase the intensity:
Neither of them was entirely sure when their first Champions League qualifying round would take place. They decided to wait for the draw, to finalise their plans.
"We leave the rest open for now," Julien said. "Let's talk again once the draw is out."
“Tonight at Gilli's” Schmid asked.
“Yes, 6PM sharp”
They hung up, and Schmid started to organise the matches.
The phone rang again. It was Sebastian Rickenbacher from The Swiss Football Free Press.
"Nnamdyi spent thirteen years building the scouting foundations of this club. He earned this opportunity, and we respect his decision. We wish him nothing but the best in the Challenge League." Replied Julien, and he hoped that was it for today.
Fritz Schmid did not waste time. By late afternoon, he had already worked through the contacts and booked all the friendlies. Julien checked his phone one last time before leaving the flat. A series of short confirmation emails sat in his inbox. Every invited club had accepted the proposal for the friendly fixtures.
Julien grabbed his jacket and nodded to his sister. It was time.
On the train from Gossau to St. Gallen, Julien checked the World Cup news. Lawrence Ati-Zigi played in Ghana's opening group match against Qatar at the Estadio Monterrey.
Ghana secured a 3–1 victory, and Ati-Zigi delivered a solid performance.
By 6:00 PM, the usual staff had gathered at Gilli’s Pub & Bar. The pub belonged to Mario Gilli, the club's head of youth development, whose family had run the place for generations.
The core of St. Gallen’s staff was there. Mario Gilli, Fritz Schmid, Elena Meçe, Pascal Zuberbühler, first-team coach Alain Meyer, loan manager Renato Fusco, and U18 manager Nicolas Lüchinger were already settled in. Léa sat next to Julien. Nnamdyi Aghanya sat at the head of the table, raising a glass as the Gauthiers walked in.
The evening ended in heavy drinking and lot of football talk. By midnight, the entire table was drunk. Julien called an Uber to take him and Léa back to Gossau.
Inside the quiet car, Léa leaned her head against the cool glass of the window, looking out at the passing streetlights. "Elena likes you," she said, her voice slightly slurred. "My brother has an admirer, that’s for sure." Julien didn't say a word.
When the Uber dropped them off in Gossau, they they went straight to sleep.
"My God, how am I going to get up tomorrow?"
At this moment I've hit continue and a day has passed. See you on:
Bobo Lelo
June 15th, 2026
Julien woke up with a headache. He took the train from Gossau to St. Gallen. The journey took only a few minutes.
He bumped into Jan Breitenmoser, the technical director, by the coffee machine.
"This coffee is still absolute shit," Julien said, rubbing his temples as they walked toward his office.
"We need to replace Nnamdyi," Breitenmoser said, cutting straight to business.
"Let's see if we have anyone in-house we can promote to chief scout." Julien leaned against his desk.
"Honestly, Kei Tamura would be the logical choice. But he just signed with us. It wouldn't be fair to the scouts who have been here for years, but I expected we'd talk about it" Breitenmoser replied, opening a profile on his laptop. "So I did some homework. Haris Louris. Currently at Reggiana. He has seventeen years of experience, worked in several countries, and his knowledge base is incredibly broad."
Julien looked at the screen. The 38-year-old Greek scout had stints at Torino, Norwich, and Trabzonspor. His scouting network covered England, Italy, Germany, and France. He looked exactly what St. Gallen. They reached an agreement quickly. As soon as Breitenmoser stepped out of the office, he mobilised his contacts. Before the morning was over, St. Gallen had already submitted an official contract offer to Louris.
Before the morning training session, Julien had a meeting with Lukas Görtler. They spoke for a long time. Julien was completely honest with him.
"Look Lukas, a few new players are arriving this year, but you remain our captain, our highest-paid player, and our most important asset," Julien said, leaning back in his chair. "We are talking to a lot of players today about the future. Some will get new contracts. But Lukas, you will be thirty-four by the time your current deal expires in two years. We might only discuss an extension closer to that date. Do you have a problem with that?"
Görtler leaned back and shrugged. "Thanks, boss. As long as I'm playing, I don't care about that. Who knows what the next two years will bring. Maybe I won't be able to, or won't want to play at this level anymore. I just ask you to tell me when I'm no longer needed."
They shook hands, and then the real work began. Roger Stilz arrived at the office, and the players started coming in one by one. They scheduled strict thirty-minute meetings with each of them. Fehr, Ambrosius, Stanić, Fazliji, Witzig, van der Gaal, Watkowiak, Boukhalfa, Vandermersch, and Daschner all signed their new contracts. The renewals added a combined £3,050 per week to the club's total wage bill. However, negotiations failed with three players.
Julien stayed in the office with Stilz to discuss the remaining three names. Konrad Faber was the easiest case. The German wing-back had just returned from a loan spell at Dynamo Dresden, where the team finished dead last in the 2. Bundesliga. Despite the relegation, Faber refused to back down on his squad status. He demanded to become an "Important Player," but in his position, Vandermersch was the number one choice. Julien put Fritz Schmid on speakerphone.They refused to lie to a player about guaranteed minutes just to force a signature. Faber was placed on the transfer list immediately. With only one year left on his contract, St. Gallen needed to sell him now before losing him for nothing next summer.
Chima Okoroji’s situation was similar, but it required a different approach. He had been the first-choice left-back, but the arrival of Mads Pedersen meant Okoroji’s playing time would likely drop. He also demanded guarantees that Julien could not provide. However, unlike Faber, Okoroji’s contract ran until 2028. Julien and Stilz decided not to rush a sale. They decided to keep him as cover and re-evaluate his situation at the end of next season.
The final meeting was with Behar Neziri. The negotiations collapsed quickly over his wage demands, as the two sides remained too far apart. Julien and Stilz decided not to force the issue immediately. Neziri was a young talent with time on his side, so they chose to pause the talks and planned to restart contract talks in a few weeks.
"This was easier than I expected," Stilz said, closing his briefcase.
"Yes, but we probably overstretched the wage budget," Julien replied. He rubbed the back of his neck, the hangover finally fading. "Can you run the scouting department until we find Nnamdyi’s replacement?"
"Of course," Stilz nodded. "I know... we need a right-back to compete with Vandermersch. I’ll handle it."
Stilz had barely stepped out of the office when the corridor rumors began to circulate. Julien was back at the coffee machine when his phone rand.
The DoF called him. Behar Neziri was clearly furious about the morning’s failed contract discussions. Instead of letting the situation sit for a few weeks, the young Albanian midfielder took immediate action and sacked his agent, Manfred Bär. Neziri wanted a deal with St. Gallen, and he blamed his representative for the breakdown.
In the afternoon another notification arrived from Roger Stilz. Jésah Ayessa had agreed terms to leave the club and return to France, signing with Ligue 2 side Amiens SC. He had been a fringe player in the title-winning squad.
Before leaving the facility, Julien met with Fritz Schmid to review the squad's daily training metrics and begin basic preparations for the weekend friendly against Stade Lausanne-Ouchy. They did not dive as deeply into the data as they would for a league fixture, but a report from performance analyst Jonas Maier highlighted something interesting.
The Challenge League side shoot often last season, but these were mostly low qualities.
"They manage more shots on target per match than the league average," Schmid noted, pointing at the analytical scatter plot on the monitor. "But their average chance quality is worse than most teams. They take low-quality shots from distance."
"We pack the box and force them wide," Julien said, shutting down his computer.
At this point I've hit continue, and a day has passed, see you on:
But before that, as mentioned earlier, I ve added the Austrian league:
Bobo Lelo
This time we will look a few days ahead
June 16th, 2026
On Tuesday morning, they were still eating breakfast at the same plastic table they had used for Sunday's lunch.
"I wasn’t resting while you were working yesterday," Léa said, pulling out her tablet. "I already showed this to Laura. Look, if you like it, I’ll start ordering the furniture, and I’ll finish both kids' rooms by tomorrow."
She turned the screen toward him, showing the visual plan of the living room and the kitchen. Julien had a sip of his coffee and nodded. "Get it done. It looks like a home."
Shortly after breakfast, an email arrived from Roger Stilz. For the first time in weeks, a scouting report actually caught Julien’s attention.
Lassine Sinayoko had been a squad player for Auxerre, who just finished fifth in Ligue 1. Julien liked the profile of the 26-year-old Mali international, who had already earned thirty caps for his country. If they could pull off the transfer, Sinayoko would fight for the starting spot on the right wing with Fabio Fehr. On the left, Tiamoko Ouattara and Christian Witzig would compete for the role, leaving Kevin Csoboth as the versatile third option capable of covering either flank during injuries or suspensions. Julien asked the DoF to contact his agent straight away.
However, the representative demanded an immediate "Star Player" status for his client, a condition Julien refused to meet. The negotiation collapsed before it could even start. Sinayoko was moved to the primary shortlist instead. Julien and Roger agreed to step away for now and try again once his contract officially expired at the end of the month.
Tuesday’s training session could not have gone any worse. Head physio Stephan Oberli brought the bad news right after the squad left the pitch.
Lukas Daschner had suffered a groin strain after twisting sharply during a possession drill. The medical staff estimated a recovery time of two to three weeks, meaning the German attacking midfielder would miss the training camp.
Later that evening, there was a World Cup match at a reasonable hour. Julien and his core staff ended up back at Gilli’s Pub, with Léa joining them once again.
They watched France face Italy over a few drinks. Didier Deschamps' side secured a tight 1–0 victory, decided by an Ousmane Dembélé goal. Right after the final whistle, everyone headed straight home.
June 17th, 2026
Léa finished the digital renderings for Camille and Louis’s bedrooms right after breakfast. Julien reviewed the layout on her tablet. The designs looked great.
"Perfect," Julien said.
Roger Stilz sent an urgent notification regarding the academy setup. Four lower-league Swiss clubs—SC Binningen, FC La Tour/Le Pâquier, FC Châtel-St-Denis, and FC Unterstrass—have offered a contract to seventeen-year-old youth striker Jonas Nushi. His youth contract was set to expire at the end of the month.
Julien called Mario Gilli.
"Nushi has real talent," the head of youth development said over the phone. "We shouldn't let him walk away." Based on Gilli’s assessment, Julien instructed Stilz to counter the interest. St. Gallen also offered a contract to keep him at the club.
The UEFA Champions League Champions Path second qualifying round draw took place later that afternoon.
St. Gallen learned their European campaign would officially begin on July 21st. The draw paired them against the winner of the first qualifying round tie between Northern Irish side Coleraine and Lithuanian champions Žalgiris.
"Manageable," Julien said, staring at the official UEFA confirmation sheet on his desk.
When Julien arrived home on Wednesday evening, his phone rang again. Laura and the children were on the screen, calling from Le Havre to wish him a happy forty-sixth birthday. Camille and Louis took turns showing him their final school projects. Before they hung up, Julien mentioned the apartment progress. "Léa is almost completely finished with the design" he said. It was the best part of the day.
June 18th, 2026
When Julien woke up on Thursday morning, he reached straight for his phone on the floor. He had been too exhausted to stay up for the late-night (or early morning) World Cup match. The screen showed a disappointing result. Switzerland had lost 2–1 to Germany in their group stage match. The German's opened the scoring in the 5th minute, and though Miro Muheim managed to equalise from the penalty spot in the 64th, a late 88th-minute strike meant Germany won 2-1. Julien locked his phone, stood up from his mattress, and headed to the kitchen to have a coffee. “I'd need a proper bed” he told Léa. They laughed.
The headline of the day arrived in Julien's inbox before the morning training session began. Haris Louris had agreed to terms to become St. Gallen's new Chief Scout. The Greek scout rejected a renewal offer from Reggiana to make the move.
At this moment I've hit continue and a day has passed. See you on:
(we will play this on Thursday)
Bobo Lelo
Today we reach Monday, June 22.
June 19th, 2026
On Friday morning, Léa showed Julien the finalized interior designs of the apartment. "Laura and the kids will be at her parents' house tomorrow," Léa said, packing her tablet into her bag. "I’m going to stop by Saint-Pierre-de-Chartreuse for a couple of days too before heading back to Lyon. I always like staying with the Morels." She paused, "I forgot to give you this on Wednesday. It was meant for your birthday."
She handed Julien a photograph of their parents, smiling together during their last holiday in Nice back in 2019. "I never thought it would be their last one," Léa whispered. "Thank you. I’m taking this to my office. It will always be on my desk." Léa picked up her luggage, Julien drove her to the train station before he went to Kybunpark.
Julien and Fritz Schmid met early to finalise the line-up for the opening pre-season friendly against Stade Lausanne-Ouchy. The starting eleven was pinned to the dressing room noticeboard before the players arrived. Lots of subs at half-time. Julien added to the bottom of the sheet.
Later that morning, the squad for the upcoming pre-season training camp in Monthey was finalized. There was very little debate between Julien and Schmid regarding the selections. The criteria remained simple: every healthy player who had not yet agreed to terms with a new club was included. Youth team midfielders Marko Starčević and Nevio Scherrer were called up to gain first-team experience. The injured Lukas Daschner, along with summer signings Gaetano Castrovilli, Marcus Mathisen, and Mads Pedersen will join later.
The staff and the squad shared lunch together in the club canteen before heading out for a light afternoon training session. After the training session, Julien stopped by Gilli's Pub later that evening with goalkeeping coach Pascal Zuberbühler. They spent the hour looking over the World Cup standings and debating the prospects of both France and Switzerland. "I think we will win it," Julien said, pointing to the Group G table on his phone. "Anything less than the semi-finals is a complete failure for this squad. We started well against Italy—our toughest group opponent. It wasn't smooth, but we got the three points. That victory should secure us the top spot in the group."
"Easy for you to say," Gilli laughed, wiping down the counter. "France is a serious contender, but Switzerland shouldn't have any issues either." Julien glanced at the Group J standings on the screen. Switzerland sat third after their defeat to Germany, with Algeria leading the pack. "Absolutely," Zuberbühler added, leaning over his beer. "We almost snatched a point against the Germans. There is no way we drop points against Jordan and Algeria. With a bit of luck in the knockout draws, this Swiss team can reach the quarter-finals." Julien nodded, finishing his drink. The tournament was a welcome distraction, but his mind was already shifting toward the morning and the reality of the pre-season match.
"What do you think about Lawrence's chances?" Gilli asked, nodding toward the Group F standings.
"They started well," Julien said.
"Yes, and Lawrence made some crucial saves," Zuberbühler added. "But I don't know. That group is incredibly tough."
"True," Gilli agreed. "Portugal and Croatia are still the clear favourites of this group."
Julien stared at the screen, watching Ghana sit level at the top with Portugal after the first round. "If Lawrence shuts up shop against the Croats..." he muttered quietly.
"To Lawrence," they cheered, clinking their glasses together before finishing their drinks and heading home.
June 20th, 2026
Matchday at Kybunpark, St. Gallen
The match itself was complete trash. It was probably the most boring football match ever played on Earth Carlo Boukhalfa scored in the 92nd minute to seal the win.
"An incredibly boring match," Julien said in the dressing room after the final whistle. "We struggled to create, and we should have scored more. Maybe we shouldn't have played this game at all."
"At least nobody on our side got injured, That’s the only positive from the opening week."
Julien thanked the players for their physical effort, told them to forget the performance, and gave the entire squad Sunday off to rest.
When Julien arrived home after the match, an email from Roger Stilz was waiting in his inbox. SG Dynamo Dresden activated the release clause for Konrad Faber, submitting a formal bid of £300K. When the German wing-back refused to sign his contract extension he was transfer listed anyway, so everyone was happy. Then Julien kept reading the mail. Faber wasn't interested in joining Dresden permanenly so now they have to wait.
In the afternoon, Julien tried to call Laura from the flat, but they could barely hold a proper conversation. The line was noisy, and the kids were shouting in the background. Laura, Camille, and Louis were already on the road to Saint-Pierre-de-Chartreuse to stay with the Morel grandparents.
"I'll call you once we arrive," Laura said before they hung up. Julien tossed his phone onto the mattress.
Later that night, Julien sat alone in the flat to watch Ghana face Croatia in their second World Cup group match. To everyone's surprise, the Africans took the initiative early on. The match went into half-time at 0–0; Ati-Zigi had very little to do, but he handled his few interventions with absolute confidence. In the 63rd minute, Mohammed Kudus broke the deadlock to give Ghana the lead, and the midfielder struck again in the 93rd minute to make it 2–0. Ati-Zigi finished the match as one of Ghana's standout performers. With six points from two games, his country qualified for the Round of 32 regardless of the final group stage results. Julien was genuinely happy for his goalkeeper, but he held his head in his hands. He knew what this meant. A Swiss league title followed by a clean-sheet masterclass at the World Cup would inevitably draw attention from the Top 5 European leagues.
He opened his phone and sent a message to Roger Stilz: Start drawing up a list of alternative goalkeepers. Just in case.
At this moment I've hit continue and a couple of days have passed. See you on: