Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 380: The Road to Brøndby II
We landed in Copenhagen in the early afternoon and were bussed to a hotel in the city centre. The city was clean, bright, and full of bicycles. The players had a few hours to rest, to acclimatise, to reset. Then, in the early evening, we took the bus to the Brøndby Stadion for a light familiarisation session.
The stadium was empty, but you could feel the history of the place. It was a proper football ground, a tight, enclosed bowl with steep stands that felt like they were right on top of the pitch.
The ground staff were watching us from the tunnel, their arms folded, their expressions unreadable. The pitch was immaculate, a perfect, green carpet under the evening sky.
The session was short and sharp, just forty-five minutes. A warm-up, some light passing drills, and a chance to get a feel for the surface. Kevin Bray took the set-piece group to one end of the pitch and walked them through Brøndby’s defensive shape from corners and free kicks. He had a laptop on a tripod, showing them clips from Marcus Reid’s analysis.
At the other end of the pitch, the five penalty takers from the Milan game went through their routine. Benteke, Milivojević, Pato, Eze, James. Five perfect penalties, each one dispatched with a cold, clinical precision. The message was clear: we were leaving nothing to chance.
As the session ended, I walked to the centre circle and stood there for a moment, alone, looking around the empty stadium. I could already imagine it full, a sea of yellow and blue, the noise echoing around the concrete bowl. This was what we had worked for. This was the prize.
With forty-eight hours until kick-off, the real work began. The next morning’s session was all about tactical shape and pressing triggers. Sarah was in her element, her voice sharp and clear, her instructions precise.
I stood on the touchline with a notepad, making constant, small adjustments. The System was tracking the pressing efficiency in real time. It started at 55%. By the end of the session, it was up to 65%. Better, but not good enough.
The afternoon session was the most important of the week: a full, eleven-a-side tactical rehearsal against a scout team of academy players who had been drilled to replicate Brøndby’s 4-4-2.
We played for sixty minutes, the intensity high, the focus absolute. I was on the touchline with Sarah, and we were a constant, two-person coaching unit.
I would see a structural issue; she would see the individual error that caused it. I would call for a tactical shift; she would translate it into a precise instruction for a single player. At one point, the scout team broke through our press with a quick one-two and their winger was in behind Chilwell. I was about to shout, but Sarah was already there.
"Ben! Your starting position is too high! They’re playing it... in behind you every time!"
Chilwell nodded, took a deep breath, and adjusted his position. The next time the scout team tried the same move, he was there to intercept it. By the end of the session, the pressing efficiency was at 68%. Still not perfect. But it was progress.
The evening was a film session in the hotel conference room. Marcus Reid presented the full Brøndby analysis, his voice calm and methodical as he walked the squad through their strengths and weaknesses.
He showed a clip of their number nine winning a header from a long ball, and then another of their number ten finding a pocket of space between the lines. The players were sharp, attentive, and asking smart questions. They understood the challenge. They were ready.
Match day. The morning was a light activation session in the hotel gym: stretching, foam rollers, and a few sharp, explosive movements to wake the muscles up. Lunch was at midday, a quiet, focused meal. The pre-match meeting was at four in the afternoon, in the same conference room where we had watched the Brøndby analysis the night before.
I stood at the front of the room and looked at them. The starting eleven for the first competitive match of the season. Hennessey in goal. A back four of Ward, Tomkins, Dann, and Chilwell.
A midfield three of Milivojević, McArthur, and Neves. A front three of Townsend, Benteke, and Zaha. Digne was on the bench, ready. James was on the bench, a weapon in reserve. Pato was on the bench, a different kind of threat. We had options. We had depth. We were ready.
My team talk was short and precise. I didn’t talk about history. I didn’t talk about pressure. I talked about the first five minutes.
"They will come out fast," I said. "They will press us high. They will try to intimidate us. The crowd will be loud. They will be in our faces. Do not be surprised by it. Expect it. Welcome it. Win the first tackle. Win the first header. Make the first pass a simple one. Control the tempo. Make the crowd irrelevant. Earn the right to play our game. The first five minutes will set the tone for the entire match. Win the first five minutes, and we will win the game."
I looked around the room, meeting each player’s eye. Ward, Tomkins, Dann the old guard, the leaders. Chilwell, Neves, Zaha... the new core. Benteke, the focal point. They were ready. I could see it in their eyes.
"Let’s go," I said.
The bus journey to the stadium was quiet. The city of Copenhagen slid past the windows, a blur of bicycles and clean, modern architecture. Then, in the distance, we saw it. The Brøndby Stadion, rising out of the suburban landscape, the four huge floodlight pylons blazing against the darkening evening sky.
I looked at it through the window and felt the familiar, electric knot of anticipation tighten in my chest. The pre-season was over. The friendlies were done. This was real. This was Europe. And we were here to win.
***
Thank you for 300 power stones.







