Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 272: The Homecoming II: Nya Kirby

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Chapter 272: The Homecoming II: Nya Kirby

I brought the players into a final huddle, the roar of the crowd a physical presence around us. I looked into their eyes, and I saw not fear, not nerves, but a burning, unshakeable belief. They were ready.

"Look at this," I said, my voice a low, intense growl.

"Look at this crowd. Listen to them. They are here for you. The whole world is watching you. But don’t play for them. Don’t play for the scouts. Don’t play for the media. Play for each other. Play for the badge on your chest. Play for the boy standing next to you. We are five wins from five. We are two wins away from the UEFA Youth League. Two wins away from making history. Manchester United are a great club. A historic club. But they are just another team in our way. We are at home. This is our fortress. And nobody, nobody, comes into our house and beats us. Now go and show them who we are."

The whistle blew, and the game began. From the first minute, we were dominant. We were a team possessed, our passing crisp and incisive, our movement fluid and intelligent, our pressing relentless and suffocating.

Manchester United, a good side in their own right, were simply overwhelmed. They couldn’t get out of their own half. They couldn’t breathe. It was a masterclass, a culmination of everything we had worked on, everything we had built.

And it was beautiful to watch. I was a whirlwind on the touchline, my voice hoarse from shouting instructions. "Press! Press! Connor, get tight! Eze, drop in! Olise, switch!"

The System’s interface was a constant, invisible presence before my eyes, feeding me real-time data on player positioning, passing accuracy, defensive vulnerabilities. I was juggling it all, the human intuition of my coaching staff, the cold, hard data of the System, the raw, visceral reality of the game unfolding before me. It was chaos. It was beautiful. It was our football.

In the 28th minute, we took the lead. Eze, our magician, our artist, picked up the ball on the edge of the box, shimmied past one defender, nutmegged another, and then, with a deft, delicate touch, curled the ball into the far corner of the net.

1-0. The stadium erupted.

The noise was deafening. And we were just getting started. I saw the scouts in the stands lean forward, their pens scribbling furiously in their notebooks. Eze had just announced himself to the world. Again.

Ten minutes later, it was two. A blistering counter-attack, a move that started with a brilliant save from Ryan Fletcher and ended with Semenyo, our powerhouse winger, latching onto a perfect through ball from Olise and smashing it past the helpless United keeper.

2-0.

It was a goal that encapsulated everything we were about: defensive solidity, lightning-fast transitions, and clinical, ruthless finishing. The crowd was in raptures. The players were flying. And I knew, with a certainty that resonated in the very core of my being, that this was our day.

We went into halftime two goals to the good, and the mood in the dressing room was electric. But I knew we couldn’t get complacent. I reminded them of the game plan, made a few minor tactical adjustments, and then, I turned to Nya. "You ready?" I asked, my voice quiet. He just nodded, his eyes burning with a fierce, unshakeable intensity. "I was born ready, boss."

I brought him on in the 60th minute, replacing a tiring but brilliant Jake Morrison. The stadium rose as one, a deafening, emotional roar that seemed to shake the very foundations of the ground. Nya Kirby was back.

And the homecoming was complete. His impact was immediate. He stabilized the midfield, his calm, authoritative presence a perfect foil for Eze’s creative genius. He broke up play, he dictated the tempo, he played with the intelligence and maturity of a seasoned pro. He was the missing piece of the puzzle, the final, crucial component of our beautiful, chaotic machine.

And then, in the 85th minute, the moment that everyone had been dreaming of. A corner, whipped in by Olise, caused chaos in the United box. The ball broke to Nya, who had made a late, intelligent run to the edge of the area.

He took one touch to control it, and then, with his supposedly weaker left foot, he volleyed it, a sweet, clean strike that flew through a crowd of players and into the back of the net.

3-0.

The stadium exploded. Nya, his face a mask of pure, unadulterated joy, ran to the corner flag, his teammates mobbing him, the fans screaming his name. It was a fairytale ending to a fairytale story. The boy who had been told his season was over, the boy who had fought back from injury with a determination that had inspired a whole club, had come home. And he had scored.

After the match, as the fans streamed onto the pitch, a joyous, chaotic celebration of everything we had achieved, I found Nya in the center of the madness. He was crying, tears of joy and relief streaming down his face. I pulled him into a hug, my own eyes welling up. "Welcome back, skip," I whispered in his ear. He just hugged me tighter, his voice thick with emotion. "We did it, boss. We did it."

We had done it. Six wins from six. Eighteen points. We were one win away from the UEFA Youth League. One win away from immortality.

And as I stood there, in the middle of that beautiful, chaotic celebration, surrounded by my players, my staff, my family, I knew, with a certainty that resonated in the very core of my being, that this was just the beginning. The journey was far from over. But tonight, we would celebrate. Tonight, we were kings.

Later that evening, after the celebrations had died down, after the fans had finally left the stadium, after the players had showered and changed and departed into the night, I sat in my office at Beckenham, the lights dim, the building quiet.

Emma was beside me, her head resting on my shoulder, her hand in mine. We didn’t need to speak. The silence was comfortable, familiar, a shared understanding of the magnitude of what we had just witnessed.

On my laptop screen, the Group 1 of the second league stage table glowed in the darkness. Crystal Palace U18s: 18 points. Six wins from six. Top of the table. One game remaining. One win away from the UEFA Youth League.

I thought about the journey that had brought us here. The desperation of that first day, the fear of failure, the weight of the System’s presence. The early struggles, the tactical experiments, the slow, painful process of building a team, a culture, a belief.

The FA Youth Cup triumph at Wembley, the moment that had changed everything. And now, this. Six wins from six. On the brink of history. I thought about my players, about Connor and Eze and Olise and Nya and all the others.

About the boys who had become men, who had become heroes. And I felt a surge of gratitude, of love, of pride. They had believed in me. And I had believed in them. And together, we had built something special. Something that would last. One more game. One more win. And the dream would be complete.