On November 13, 2015, a luxury friendly match will take place at the Stade de France. Opposite are Germany, world champions in Brazil two years earlier, with its stars and its battleship-like quadrature, and France, hosts, both that day and in the following summer, when the European Championship was already being talked about of protection for ISIS and for the various terrorist attacks that could be carried out. However, no one would have thought that that night would end up in history because in the French capital there will be several deaths precisely due to the streak of fundamentalist fanatics.
Outside the stadium there is a real massacre, in particular at the Bataclan, in the center, where a concert was taking place. Then machine guns were fired on some brasseries and the total was frightening, 130 dead.
However, fortunately little happens at the Stade de France. Outside the stadium there is an explosion at 9.17pm, another at 9.20pm, with a totally sold out stadium with 80 thousand people inside. It would have been an endless massacre. The police manage to limit the death count, with two terrorists and limiting the bulletin to three in total. At first no one believes the worst, a second attacker blows himself up and, half an hour later, there is even a third. Probably a lucky coincidence: the attackers arrived late at the stadium and failed to blow themselves up in the crowd.