Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 276: The Promised Land III: Notification
Now the momentum was ours. I was a conductor on the sideline, and the team was my orchestra. I used a quick hand signal to tell Nya to drop deeper, providing cover, which in turn unleashed Eze to push further forward.
The System confirmed the change, showing our attacking third entries increasing by 40%. Liverpool were in disarray. I saw Olise get the ball on the wing, and the System flashed an alert: [Opponent Weakness: Left Back - Low Composure (6/20)].
I cupped my hands around my mouth. "Olise! Take him on! He can’t handle you!" He heard me. He received the ball, surrounded by two defenders, but he knew the full-back was weak.
A shimmy, a feint, a drop of the shoulder, and he was gone. He drove to the byline. I was screaming for the cross to Connor, but Olise, brimming with a newfound arrogance, had other ideas.
He saw the keeper shuffle to the near post and, from an impossible angle, he shot. A vicious, curling, dipping masterpiece that flew into the far corner.
3-2.
The stadium exploded. I grabbed Rebecca in a hug, lifting her off her feet.
Now it was our turn to celebrate. Our turn to swagger. Our turn to play with a confidence that bordered on arrogance. We were in control. We were dominant. We were champions. And we were not done yet. In the 81st minute, we put the game to bed.
It was another blistering counter-attack, a move that started with a brilliant, one-handed save from Ryan Fletcher and ended with Connor Blake, our hero, our talisman, our gladiator, sealing the victory.
Fletcher’s save had been magnificent, a full-stretch dive to his left to deny Liverpool’s striker what looked like a certain goal. The ball broke to Tyrick Mitchell, who played a quick, first-time pass to Nya Kirby.
Nya, the calmest man on the pitch, took one touch to control it, looked up, and played a perfectly weighted, defense-splitting pass into the path of Connor’s run. The pass was a thing of beauty, a 60-yard missile that bypassed Liverpool’s entire midfield and defense. But what followed was even better.
Connor, at full sprint, took one touch to control the ball, a touch so delicate, so perfect, that it seemed to defy the laws of physics. His second touch was to flick the ball over the head of the onrushing goalkeeper, a moment of audacious, impudent genius. And his third touch was to volley the ball into the empty net.
4-2. The stadium erupted.
The fans were delirious. The academy kids were going wild, jumping up and down, screaming his name. And Connor, this time, allowed himself a small, dangerous smile. He ran to the corner flag, his arms outstretched, his face a mask of defiant, triumphant rage. He was the king. And this was his kingdom.
I don’t remember what happened next. I think I ran down the touchline, my arms in the air, screaming until my voice was hoarse. I think I was mobbed by my coaching staff, by the substitutes, by anyone and everyone in a Palace tracksuit.
I think I saw the Liverpool manager, a man with a glittering CV and a world-class reputation, standing on the edge of his technical area, his face a mask of disbelief.
But all I could really see was my players, my boys, celebrating in a wild, joyous pile in the corner of the pitch, their faces etched with a mixture of exhaustion, elation, and pure, unadulterated joy. We had done it. We had beaten the unbeatable. We had conquered the fortress. And we were on the brink of history.
The final whistle blew a few minutes later, and the celebrations began in earnest. We had done it. Seven wins from seven. Twenty-one points. We were the Group 1 champions. We were the U18 Premier League National Champions for the first time in the club’s history.
And, more importantly, we had qualified for the 2017-18 season of the UEFA Youth League. The scenes were incredible. The fans, in their thousands, streamed onto the pitch, a joyous, chaotic sea of red and blue.
My players were mobbed, lifted onto shoulders, their names sung with a passion and a love that was almost overwhelming. I saw Emma fighting her way through the crowd, tears streaming down her face, and when she reached me, I pulled her into a fierce embrace. "You did it," she whispered against my chest.
"You actually did it." I was lifted onto shoulders too, my body held aloft by a sea of hands, my face wet with tears that I didn’t even try to hold back. I looked out at the sea of faces, at the joy, the passion, the love, and I felt a sense of belonging, of connection, that I had never felt before. This was my home. These were my people. And we had made history together.
After what felt like an eternity, the pitch was finally cleared, and a makeshift stage was erected in the center circle. The trophy, a gleaming silver cup, was brought out, and the presentation began.
One by one, my players were called up to receive their medals, their names met with a deafening roar from the crowd. I watched them, my heart swelling with a pride so intense it almost hurt. Connor, Eze, Olise, Nya, Lewis Grant, Reece Hannam, Tyrick Mitchell, Ryan Fletcher, Jake Morrison, Antoine Semenyo, Brandon Aviero, Tyler Webb every single one of them, they were heroes.
They were legends. And they were mine. Then, it was my turn. "And now," the announcer boomed, "the man who made it all possible, the manager of your U18 Premier League National Champions, Danny Walsh!"
I walked up to the stage, my legs shaking, and Gary Issott placed the winner’s medal around my neck. Steve Parish was there too, shaking my hand vigorously, his face beaming with pride.
"You’ve done something special, Danny," he said, his voice thick with emotion. "Something really special." It was heavy, the cold metal a tangible symbol of everything we had achieved.
As I stood there, blinking in the glare of the floodlights, my phone buzzed in my pocket. I pulled it out, my hands trembling slightly. Two notifications. The first was a text message from the chairman’s secretary. [Mr. Parish would like to see you in his office at 9 am tomorrow morning. Please be prompt.]
A meeting with the chairman. First thing in the morning. My mind raced. The bonus. My contract had been simple: develop the players into contenders for senior football. I had done more than that. I had won two trophies. The bonus would have to be fat, and I was starting to salivate just thinking about it.
The second notification was from FotMob, the football app I used to follow the senior team. [Alan Pardew has been sacked by Crystal Palace. The club are 16th in the Premier League, 4 points above the relegation zone with 5 games to go.]
I stared at the screen, the words blurring in front of my eyes. Pardew. Sacked. With five games to go. The irony was so thick, so bitter, I could almost taste it. My tactics had bought him a few more weeks, but they couldn’t save him.
His fate was sealed. But as I looked out at my players, at my boys, celebrating with the trophy, their faces filled with a joy so pure, so unadulterated, that it almost broke my heart, I realized something. Pardew’s sacking wasn’t my problem.
The senior team’s relegation battle wasn’t my problem. My problem, my beautiful, brilliant, wonderful problem, was right here, in front of me. I had done it. I had fulfilled the promise I had made to myself all those months ago, the secret goal that had driven me, that had consumed me.
I had gotten this club into Europe. Not through the senior team, not by relying on them to qualify for the Champions League, but by doing it ourselves. By building a team, a culture, a belief that was strong enough to conquer England.
We were the champions. We were going to Europe. And we had done it our way. The journey was far from over. But tonight, we would celebrate. Tonight, we were kings. And the future, for the first time in a very long time, felt bright.
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