Ten days after the shooting, Grenoble's Mistral Football Club tries to reassure and relaunch its positive dynamic in the neighborhood. The club, which has been in the news for the past few days, is trying to distance itself from the tragic events that occurred on May 26, just a few meters from their club. The shooting, which killed one person and injured four others, has left the club's reputation at stake. « There is no direct link between the club and the recent dramatic events », emphasizes Mustapha Aouragh, the club's secretary general. The club, which has 300 members, from six years old to adulthood, is an institution in the Mistral neighborhood. On Wednesday afternoon, near 80 young people took a snack on the new terrace of the club. « Once a quarter, we celebrate the birthdays of the children of the past three months. It's a family, festive moment with cakes and sweets », explains him. « There is the will of the club and the parents to maintain the event today, not to make room for fear and to continue to do positive things in the neighborhood. I came in support of this dynamic », specifies Meriem Naili, youth and sports advisor (and herself a footballer). At the Mistral FC, life goes on, passes are chained, nets tremble and laughter bursts in the Mistral sky. « We feel like we're in a family, we know everyone. When we make mistakes, we're told and when we do well, we know we're told », says Djillal, 16 years old, and has been at the club for nearly ten years. In a neighborhood like Mistral, the social role of the football club is essential. « Our educational role is paramount, beyond forming good footballers, we want to form good citizens », insists Mustapha Aouragh. With the will to accompany boys but also girls: the Mistral FC is one of the few clubs in the Grenoble agglomeration to have a women's section.