Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 290: The Battle at Anfield I
An hour before kickoff, the lineups were released, and the internet exploded. The backlash was instantaneous and brutal. I was on the pitch, watching the team warm up, when Rebecca came over, her face a mixture of concern and amusement. She held out her phone, showing me the social media reaction.
"He’s starting a 19-year-old with ZERO experience at Anfield? Has he lost his mind?"
"This is child abuse. He’s throwing the kids to the wolves. #SackWalsh"
"Benteke, Zaha, Townsend... and Wan-Bissaka? One of these things is not like the other. What a joke."
I handed the phone back to her, a small smile playing on my lips. "Let them talk," I said, my voice calm. "They’re not the ones who have to play the game."
My gaze drifted to Aaron Wan-Bissaka. He was going through his drills with a quiet, intense focus. He looked nervous, his movements a little stiff, but he was here. He was ready. I walked over to him, placing a hand on his shoulder.
"Aaron," I said, my voice low so only he could hear. "Forget the noise. Forget the crowd. Just do what you did to Wilf in training. You belong here. You’ve earned this."
He looked at me, a flicker of gratitude in his eyes, and nodded. That was all I needed to see.
As the teams lined up in the tunnel, I took a moment to look across at the Liverpool dugout. It was a sea of bodies. Coaches, analysts, fitness staff, assistants. A small army, all clad in the official Liverpool gear.
Then I looked down at my own attire. I was still wearing the black Crystal Palace academy staff jacket I had grabbed that morning out of habit. The small, embroidered crest felt a world away from the grandeur of this stage.
My notebook, tucked into my pocket, still had "Academy Staff" printed on the cover. It was a stark, visual reminder of the absurdity of the situation. Three days ago, I was an academy manager. Today, I was facing Jürgen Klopp, my idol, at Anfield.
Klopp caught my eye and gave me a warm, genuine smile and a small nod. It was a gesture of respect, a welcome to the big leagues. I nodded back, a surge of adrenaline coursing through me. The bell rang, and the teams walked out into the cauldron of noise.
The match kicked off, and the noise was a physical force. The famous Anfield roar, a sound I had only ever heard on television, was a living, breathing entity. It was a wall of sound that seemed to press down on you, to suffocate you.
My heart was pounding in my chest, a frantic drumbeat against my ribs. This was it. The biggest stage of my life. I took a deep breath, forcing myself to project an aura of calm I did not feel.
My players were looking at me, and they needed to see a leader, not a terrified kid. I stood on the sideline, arms crossed, a picture of calm. No frantic shouting. No wild gesticulations. Just a quiet intensity, my mind processing the game, the System feeding me data only I could see.
My plan was a complex dance of tactical fluidity, designed to exploit Liverpool’s known weaknesses. On paper, it was a 4-3-3, but in reality, it was a living, breathing system. Defensively, we settled into a compact 5-4-1 block.
Wan-Bissaka, our right-back, tucked in to form a back five, denying space for Liverpool’s potent attack. But the moment we won possession, the transformation was instant. We shifted into a 3-4-3, with Wan-Bissaka inverting into the central midfield, creating a box of four that overloaded Liverpool’s three-man midfield.
This was the key. We would dominate the transition, using our numerical advantage in the center to launch devastating counter-attacks. Zaha was positioned high and wide on the right, his job to isolate and attack the makeshift left-back, James Milner. Benteke was tasked with a relentless, thankless job: press Joel Matip, force him into mistakes, and don’t let him breathe.
But the key to the entire plan was on the right side of my defense. Aaron Wan-Bissaka versus Sadio Mané. The 19-year-old debutant against one of the most dangerous wingers in the world. The media saw it as a suicide mission. I saw it as a calculated risk.
In the 12th minute, Mané got the ball and drove at Aaron. The crowd roared, a wave of anticipation. This was the moment they had been waiting for, the moment the debutant would be exposed.
But Aaron stood his ground, his body low, his eyes fixed on the ball. He didn’t dive in. He didn’t panic. He waited, patient and poised. And at the perfect moment, his leg shot out, a clean, precise tackle that took the ball and left Mané sprawled on the turf.
The Anfield crowd fell silent for a split second, a collective gasp of disbelief, before a ripple of angry shouts erupted from the Kop. On the sideline, I allowed myself a small, internal smile.
The System flashed in my mind, a crisp, clean overlay of data confirming what my eyes had just seen: [Wan-Bissaka: Tackling 18, Concentration 19, Composure 17].
A second notification popped up: [Opponent Morale: Sadio Mané - Frustrated]. A third appeared almost instantly: [Team Morale: Inspired]. The numbers were a beautiful, objective truth. He was in the zone.
He did it again in the 18th minute. Mané tried to go past him on the outside, using his explosive pace. Aaron matched him stride for stride, his long legs eating up the ground, and then, at the crucial moment, he nicked the ball away with a perfectly timed sliding tackle.
Mané got up, shaking his head in frustration, and had a word with the referee, claiming a foul. The crowd howled in agreement, but the referee waved play on. On the touchline, I caught Sarah’s eye. She was grinning. The plan was working.
In the 25th minute, Mané tried a different approach. He cut inside, looking to use his quick feet to create space for a shot. But Aaron read it, his positioning perfect, and he shepherded Mané away from danger, forcing him into a harmless pass backwards.
It was a defensive masterclass, a young player announcing himself on the biggest stage. Mané, a world-class professional, grew visibly frustrated, throwing his arms up in the air, looking to the referee for help that wasn’t coming.
The Anfield crowd, sensing their star player’s frustration, turned their ire on Aaron; every touch he made now met with a chorus of boos.
Our shape-shifting system was causing them problems. When they attacked, they were met with a solid wall of five defenders. When we won the ball, Wan-Bissaka’s drift into the midfield created a 4v3 overload, and Liverpool’s midfield couldn’t cope.
McArthur and Milivojević were everywhere, snapping into tackles, winning second balls, and disrupting their rhythm. Cabaye, the experienced Frenchman, was the conductor, dictating the tempo, recycling possession, and keeping us calm.
We were forcing Liverpool into difficult passes, making them uncomfortable. I used hand signals to adjust the midfield’s shape, a subtle shift to the left to cover a dangerous Liverpool run. Zaha caught my eye, and I gave him the signal. He nodded. The press was on.
But this was Liverpool. This was Anfield. And their quality was undeniable. In the 28th minute, Philippe Coutinho, the little magician, found a pocket of space 25 yards out. A split-second lapse in concentration.
The System flashed a warning in my mind: [Tactical Analysis: Midfield gap exploited. Player Positioning: McArthur (5.8), Milivojević (6.1). Corrective Action: Narrow midfield shape.] I tried to signal to McArthur, but it was too late.
Before we could close him down, Coutinho had unleashed a curling, dipping shot that flew past Hennessey and into the top corner.
1-0.
A moment of pure, unstoppable genius. The Anfield crowd erupted, a deafening roar of joy and relief. In the commentary box, Jamie Carragher was no doubt feeling vindicated, his prediction of a thrashing starting to look prophetic.







