Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 374: Coming Home I

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Chapter 374: Coming Home I

The air that hit us as we stepped out of the terminal at Heathrow was the first thing that told me we were home. It was six in the morning, the sky a uniform, unforgiving grey, and the air was cool and damp and smelled of jet fuel and wet tarmac.

After two weeks in the thick, floral humidity of Singapore, it felt like stepping into a refrigerator. I saw Chilwell, who had been half-asleep for the entire fourteen-hour flight, physically flinch.

Zaha, who had been holding court at the back of the plane for most of the journey, pulled the hood of his tracksuit up over his head and shoved his hands deep into his pockets, his face a mask of quiet disgust.

The bus journey to Beckenham was a study in silence. The M25 was already beginning to thicken with the morning commute, a slow-moving river of red tail-lights under a sky the colour of old concrete.

The players were scattered through the bus, each one lost in their own world. Pato was asleep again, his head against the window, looking nothing like a man who had just been named Player of the Tournament in a pre-season friendly against two of the biggest clubs in Europe.

Blake, the academy kid who had scored his first senior goal this season against Atlético Madrid, was staring out at the familiar, dreary landscape of suburban London with the wide, unblinking eyes of a man who had just returned from another planet.

James had his headphones on and his eyes closed, his face a mask of serene, untroubled peace. Neves was reading, a paperback held at a careful angle to catch the weak morning light. Even Zaha was quiet, his usual boisterous energy contained for now, his head bowed over his phone.

I sat at the front, next to Sarah, and watched the familiar landmarks slide past: the turn-off for Croydon, the IKEA towers, the slow, creeping sprawl of South London.

The noise and the heat and the impossible, glittering skyline of Singapore felt a million miles away. It felt like a dream we had all shared. This... the grey sky, the damp air, the traffic... this was reality. And I was, to my own surprise, glad to be back in it.

The System pinged, a quiet, unobtrusive notification in the back of my mind.

> System Notification: [Welcome Home]

> Travel Fatigue: High

> Squad Morale: Stable

> Next Fixture: Europa League 3rd Round Qualifier (First Leg) - July 27th (6 days)

> Days to Premier League Season Opener: 22

> Recommendation: Light training session. Focus on recovery and tactical review.

I had already made the same decision. The first session back was never about intensity. It was about resetting the body clock, flushing the travel out of the legs, and reminding everyone what it felt like to be home.

Beckenham was exactly as we had left it... green and quiet and professional. The ground staff had the pitches looking immaculate.

The air smelled of cut grass and rain. The players moved through the familiar changing rooms with the easy, unconscious comfort of men returning to their own space. The Singapore tour had been a brilliant, necessary adventure. But this was home.

The session itself was light and sharp. Sarah took the main group, running them through a series of low-intensity technical drills: passing patterns, possession games in tight spaces, the kind of work that got the brain firing without putting any unnecessary strain on the body.

She was in her element here, her instructions precise and clear, her whistle sharp, her eye for detail missing nothing. I saw her pull Townsend aside at one point and spend two minutes correcting the angle of his body as he received a pass, a tiny, almost imperceptible adjustment that would give him an extra half-second on the ball. He listened, nodded, and did it perfectly the next time.

Rebecca had the players who had played the most minutes in Singapore on a separate, individualised programme.

She moved between them with the quiet authority of a woman who would not be argued with, monitoring heart rates, checking body language, pulling players off for a stretch or a massage without negotiation.

I saw her have a long, quiet word with Tarkowski, who was trying to push himself too hard, too soon. He listened to her with the grudging respect of a man who knew she was right, and then he went and did exactly what she told him to.

Kevin Bray had already prepared a full set-piece analysis of our Europa League opponents. While we had been in Singapore, Brøndby IF had been quietly doing their own work: grinding through the first and second qualifying rounds, dispatching two sides who had underestimated them, and earning the right to face us in the third qualifying round on the 27th.

They were not a glamorous name. They were not a team that would make the back pages. But they were a Danish side already three weeks into their competitive season, sharp and organised and well-drilled, and they would be fitter than us on the night.

Bray had the penalty-takers from the Milan game at one end of the pitch, running through the routine again and again — the walk-up, the visualisation, the shot. Benteke, Milivojević, Pato, Eze, James. Five perfect penalties. He was making sure it was not a fluke.

Marcus Reid, our analyst, was on the touchline with his laptop, tagging clips from the session in real time, building the video package for the debrief tomorrow. Michael, the goalkeeping coach, was at the far end of the training ground with Hennessey and Mandanda, putting them through a brutal, close-range shot-stopping drill that had both of them gasping for breath.

Every part of the machine was working. The tour had forged a new level of cohesion in the squad, a new layer of tactical understanding. The pressing was sharper, the movement more instinctive.

James moved through his first Beckenham session with the quiet, professional ease of a man who had been here for years, his first touch immaculate, his weight of pass perfect, his vision a constant, unfolding map of the pitch that only he could see.

He was, I thought, watching him play a one-two with Eze that was so quick and so clever it made me laugh out loud, going to be worth every single penny.

The squad was in a good place. But the Europa League qualifier was in six days. There was no time to ease back in gently. The real work was about to begin.

After the session, I sat down with Freedman in my office. The room was exactly as I had left it: clean, minimalist, the tactics board on the wall still showing the notes from the last training session before we left for Singapore. Freedman looked tired. He had been working the phones for the entire two weeks we had been away.

"The left back situation," he said, without preamble. "It’s a bust."

***

Thank you Sir nameyelus for the constant support.

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