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In The Player, Manuel García tells the stories of real men: virile, practical, imperfect. Men who live out their desires without filters, between locker rooms and tense silences, where a single touch or glance is enough to upset the balance. His stories do not seek romanticism, but the carnal truth of the male body-the smell of sweat, wet skin, breath held before everything explodes. It is not pornography: it is virile, hard, and authentic eroticism, where men desire men with the force of those who do not ask permission.In the story that gives the collection its title, a mistake on the field becomes the point of no return. Max, a reserved young man, and Johnny, his impulsive and dominant teammate, clash between anger and attraction. A power game that continues beyond the baseline, behind the door of a locker room, between steam and running water. There, desire becomes palpable, fierce, uncontrollable.The water beat on the tiles and the noise drowned out every sound. Through a crack, Max saw him: Johnny, naked, his body tense under the shower, his skin shining like bronze. Drops slid between his muscles, along the swollen veins of his arm. He turned slightly, and for a moment their eyes met-or perhaps it was just an impression, a flash, the boundary between fear and desire.Manuel García writes with the precision of someone who knows the flesh and silence of men. Each story is an encounter of strength and vulnerability, of confrontation and surrender.In the camp, in the shower, or behind a closed door, there is always a moment when the game changes. And no one ever goes back.