Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 267: The Mid-Point I
Four games. Four wins. Top of the Group 1 table with a perfect record, and the football world was losing its collective mind. The media storm that had begun after our FA Youth Cup triumph at Wembley had now evolved into a full-blown hurricane.
Every major outlet, from The Guardian to Sky Sports, was running features on us. "The Best Youth Team in a Generation," screamed one headline.
"Walsh’s Wonders: The Future of English Football," proclaimed another. Pundits who had never given youth football a second thought were now dissecting our tactics, analyzing our players, predicting which Premier League clubs would come calling in the summer. It was intoxicating. It was terrifying. And it was exactly what I had planned.
Group 1 the second league table told a simple, beautiful story. Crystal Palace U18s sat at the top with twelve points from four games, three points clear of Manchester City in second.
Arsenal, Tottenham, Blackburn, Chelsea, and West Ham trailed behind us, their hopes of UEFA Youth League qualification slipping away with each passing week.
We had beaten Arsenal away, demolished Blackburn at home, ground out a defensive masterclass against City, and then watched Connor Blake put Tottenham to the sword with a hat-trick that would be replayed on social media for years to come. We were not just winning. We were dominating. And the world was watching.
But Monday morning, as I sat in my office at the Beckenham training ground, juggling my part-time UEFA A Licence coursework with the ever-growing demands of the team, staring at the league table on my laptop screen, I felt a strange sense of calm.
The noise outside was deafening, but inside, in this quiet room with its whiteboard covered in tactical diagrams and its walls lined with match footage, I was at peace. This was the eye of the storm. The moment of reflection before the final push.
Three more games. Three more wins. And we would qualify for the UEFA Youth League, the promise I had made to myself back in Chapter 76, the dream that had seemed so impossibly distant when I had first arrived at this club with nothing but a second-hand suit and a System that nobody else could see.
The sound of boots on grass pulled me from my thoughts. I looked out the window and saw a figure on the training pitch, moving slowly, deliberately, through a series of light drills. Nya Kirby. He was back. Not fully, not yet, but he was back.
The grade two ligament tear that had threatened to derail our entire campaign was healing ahead of schedule, a testament to his determination, to Rebecca’s meticulous injury management, and to the sheer, bloody-minded refusal of a seventeen-year-old boy to let his dream slip away.
He was doing individual work, light passing drills with one of the academy coaches, his movements careful and controlled, but the fire in his eyes was unmistakable. He was a warrior, and he was preparing for battle.
I watched him for a long moment, and I felt a swell of pride. The System’s latest injury report had been encouraging.
*[Nya Kirby - Injury Update: Recovery progressing ahead of schedule. Expected return: 2-3 weeks. Player Morale: Determined.]**
Two to three weeks. That meant he could be back for the final game, maybe even the second-to-last. It was a lifeline, a potential game-changer. But more than that, his presence, even on crutches, even on the sidelines, had been a source of inspiration for the squad.
He had become a coach, a mentor, a voice of tactical wisdom that the boys trusted implicitly. His football brain was as sharp as ever, and his determination to come back stronger was infectious. We had learned to win without him. But having him back would make us unstoppable.
A meeting with Steve Parish and Gary Issott was scheduled for Tuesday afternoon, in the boardroom at Selhurst Park. As I walked through the corridors of the stadium, past the framed photos of club legends and historic moments, I felt a strange mixture of pride and apprehension.
This was the inner sanctum, the heart of the club, and I was being invited in. The boardroom was exactly what you would expect: polished wood, leather chairs, a long table that could seat twenty, and floor-to-ceiling windows that looked out over the pitch.
Steve Parish, the club chairman, was already there, his face beaming with a smile that could light up a room. Gary Issott, the academy director and the man who had given me this chance, sat beside him, his expression more reserved but no less pleased.
"Danny!" Parish stood and shook my hand with the enthusiasm of a man who had just won the lottery. "Sit, sit. We’ve been watching. My God, we’ve been watching. Four wins from four. Top of the table. The whole country is talking about us. About you. About these boys. It’s incredible. Absolutely incredible."
I sat down, trying to keep my composure, trying not to let the praise go to my head. Gary leaned forward, his eyes sharp and assessing. "You’ve done something special, Danny. The FA Youth Cup was the dream. But this? This unbeaten run in the Group 1? This is building a legacy. The board is thrilled. The fans are in love with the team. And the players? They’re playing the best football I’ve seen at this level in twenty years." 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝕨𝕖𝗯𝚗𝚘𝕧𝕖𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝕞
Parish nodded enthusiastically. "And I want you to know, Danny, that we’re not going to do anything stupid. There’s been interest, of course. Clubs sniffing around Connor, around Eze, around Olise. Big clubs. Big money. But we’re not selling. Not this summer. Not unless it’s an offer we absolutely cannot refuse. And even then, we’ll fight it. These boys are ours. They’re Palace. And we’re going to keep them here as long as we possibly can."
It was the news I had been hoping for, the validation of Phase 2 of my plan. Make them heroes. Make them beloved. Make them unsellable. And it was working. But I also knew that football was a business, and promises made in boardrooms could be broken in an instant if the right offer came along.
The real test was still to come. "Thank you, Mr. Parish. That means a lot. But we’re not done yet. Three more games. We need to win the Group 1 playoffs. We need to qualify for the UEFA Youth League. That’s the goal."
Parish grinned. "Then go and get it, son. Go and make history."
***
Thank you to nameyelus for the luxury car.







