Found at a nearby park, growing on soil covered in dead leaves. I’m not sure if this mushroom is supposed to look like this, as it was the only one around. This gilled mushroom’s cap has a planal shape, split margins, and fibrillose surface. The gills appear to be sinuate, broad, and thick. Their spacing is between close and crowded, and their edges are serrate. It’s central stem has an equal shape and fibrous surface. It does not seem to have a veil, and the bulb is not visible. This one was hard to identify, but in the end I narrowed it down to the genus Tricholoma. If I had to pick a species the closest would be Tricholoma arvernense, because of their scaly, brownish-white cap and stem with no veil or shagginess. However, I think the scales of the mushroom above has “shed”, leaving behind only the centre brown spot.