Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 327: The King of Old Trafford III: Chaos

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Chapter 327: The King of Old Trafford III: Chaos

As I stood there with my arms stretched out, my eyes drifted upwards soaking all the insults from the crowd, drawn by some instinct I couldn’t name, towards the directors’ box. And I saw him.

Sir Alex Ferguson. The greatest manager in the history of the game. The man who had built this club, this stadium, this culture of expectation and dominance. He was not angry. He was not disgusted.

He was just watching me, his expression unreadable, his sharp eyes taking in every detail. Our eyes locked across the vast, noisy expanse of the stadium, a silent, intense, private exchange between the old king and the new. A moment that lasted no more than two seconds but felt like a lifetime.

And then, he gave a slow, almost imperceptible nod.

A nod of acknowledgement. A nod of respect. From the greatest to the newest. I held his gaze for one more second, and then I turned away.

The System, which had been silent for most of the half, flashed a single, quiet notification in the corner of my vision.

[New Trait Unlocked: The Pantomime Villain. Effect: Opposition fans’ hostility generates increased focus and performance for your squad in away fixtures.]

I almost laughed.

The final few minutes were a formality, played out to the sound of thousands of United fans streaming towards the exits. But the silence they left behind was filled by a new, glorious sound.

The small pocket of Palace fans, who had been singing non-stop, found a new voice, a new anthem for this specific, beautiful moment. It started with one voice, then ten, then a hundred, then all of them, a chorus of pure, savage joy aimed directly at the figure of Mourinho, who stood, impotent, in his technical area.

"You’re not special," they sang, the words echoing around the emptying stadium, "You’re not special, you’re not special anymore!" It was the ultimate insult, the perfect, brutal, beautiful soundtrack to his humiliation.

The final whistle blew.

I saw him coming towards me, his face a thundercloud of bruised pride. The final whistle had done nothing to soften the fury in his eyes. He offered his hand, a perfunctory, almost insulting gesture. I took it. His grip was like steel, cold and unforgiving.

But then, something changed. He didn’t let go. He held on, his fingers tightening, and gave a sharp, sudden tug, clearly intending to pull me off balance, to make me stumble and fall at his feet in one last, pathetic act of dominance. It was a classic bully’s move, a final, physical attempt to assert his superiority when all other methods had failed.

A year ago, it would have worked. A year ago, I was a skinny, unassuming youth coach with the physique of a chess player. But a year ago was a lifetime ago.

The System, the relentless training, the endless hours in the gym... they had forged a new foundation of strength within me.

My core was solid, my legs were rooted to the turf. I didn’t move. I didn’t even flinch. I stood my ground, my feet planted, and met his pull with an immovable, granite-like resistance. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢

His eyes widened in genuine surprise. He had expected a boy, and he had found a man. He tugged again, harder this time, his face contorting with the effort. I held firm, my own grip tightening on his hand, and I looked him dead in the eye with a cold, pitying smile. The message was clear: Your games don’t work on me anymore.

That was when he snapped. With a guttural roar of pure, frustrated rage, he lunged forward, his other hand grabbing my arm. It was no longer a handshake; it was a full-blown physical assault. Instantly, we were swarmed.

Zaha and Dann were there first, pulling him off me. His own players, Ibrahimovic and Pogba, grabbed him from behind. Sarah and the rest of my staff formed a protective wall around me. It was an ugly, chaotic, undignified end to the match, a final, desperate tantrum from a fallen king.

The cameras flashed, capturing every sordid detail. He was dragged away, still screaming insults in Portuguese, a man utterly consumed by his own defeat.

I ignored the chaos of Mourinho’s exit. My focus was singular. I turned to my players, who were scattered across the pitch, lost in their own private moments of joy and exhaustion. I raised my arm and gestured for them to come to me. "Lads! Together!" I roared, my voice hoarse but clear.

They came. One by one, they jogged towards the centre circle, their faces beaming, their arms around each other’s shoulders. When they were all there, a band of brothers forged in the fires of a relegation battle, and I stood before them.

"Look at them," I said, pointing towards the away end, a small, beautiful island of blue and red in a sea of empty seats. "They were with us when we were broken. They were with us when we were written off. They are with us now. We go to them. Together."

I started to clap, a slow, rhythmic beat. Dann joined in. Then Zaha. Then the whole team. A single, unified, powerful clap that echoed around the empty stadium. And then, as one, we began to walk towards them. A slow, deliberate, triumphant march.

But as we got closer, I noticed something strange. The fans were not just celebrating our arrival. They were staring at their phones. Not all of them, but enough to create a weird, disconnected energy.

Clusters of people, their faces illuminated by the blue light of their screens, their expressions a mixture of utter, ecstatic, almost frightened disbelief. Notifications were pinging everywhere, a digital chorus under the sound of their singing. They were pointing at their screens, grabbing each other’s arms, screaming things I couldn’t hear over the noise.

What was going on? What could possibly be more important than this moment?

Just then, I felt a hand on my arm. I turned. It was Rebecca, our fitness coach, and Sarah, my assistant. They were both there, and they were both wearing the same expression as the fans: the same wild, impossible, barely-contained look of shock and joy. Sarah was holding the team tablet in both hands, her knuckles white.

"Gaffer," she said, her voice barely above a whisper, her eyes shining with a light I had never seen in them before. "You need to see this."

She held out the tablet. On the screen was the final, updated Premier League table. The results from all the other games that had been played simultaneously had just come in.

I looked at it.

And my world stopped.

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