Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 404: The First Question

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Chapter 404: The First Question

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VOLUME 4: The Proving Ground

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The press conference room at the Beckenham training ground was a sweatbox. Every seat was taken, the air thick with the smell of stale coffee and the low, expectant hum of a hundred whispered conversations.

There were journalists here who had never set foot in this building before reporters from L’Équipe, from Marca, from Gazzetta dello Sport drawn by the James Rodríguez signing, by the story, by the sheer, improbable spectacle of what Crystal Palace had become.

The cameras were a bank of unblinking eyes, all trained on the empty chair behind the microphone. This was it. The first press conference of the new season. The first since I had signed the permanent contract. The first as the manager, not the interim, not the caretaker, not the kid in the academy tracksuit. The manager.

The System, quiet all morning, offered a brief, almost amused observation.

[Pre-Match Press Conference. Attendance: 114 accredited journalists. Previous record for a Crystal Palace press conference: 38. This is a 300% increase. You are, statistically speaking, more interesting than you have any right to be.]

I walked in, flanked by the club’s press officer, and a sudden, almost blinding, flash of cameras erupted from the back of the room.

I was wearing the new first-team training jacket: Palace red and blue, my initials embroidered discreetly on the chest and it felt different from the academy gear I had worn for those five miraculous matches last season. It felt like armour. I smiled, a calm, easy smile that I didn’t fully feel, and took my seat. The room fell silent. The first question. It always set the tone.

A hand went up. Tom Kershaw from The Athletic, a man I respected, a man who always asked the right questions. I nodded at him.

"Congratulations on your new contract, Danny," he said, his voice clear and steady. "A question, if I may. You weren’t here with us two days ago when Ms. Martinez was taking the pre-match press conference, and we know you were taking your UEFA A final assessment. How does it feel to finally be here, not as an interim, but as the man in charge, and what was the first thing you did after you passed?"

I let the question hang in the air for a moment. I took a sip of water. I looked out at the sea of faces, at the notebooks poised, the recorders running, the red lights of the cameras steady and unblinking. This was the other game. The one played in headlines and soundbites. The one I was still learning.

"Thank you, Tom," I said, my voice calm and measured. "It feels good. It feels right. But to be honest, not much has changed. The work is the same. The ambition is the same. The only difference is that the contract is a little longer." A ripple of laughter went through the room. I let it settle.

"As for the other day, I have to say, I watched Sarah’s press conference from my hotel room at St. George’s Park, and I thought she was magnificent. Sarah Martinez is a world-class coach, a vital part of this team, and I have no doubt she could do this job standing on her head. I am lucky to have her." I paused. "And the first thing I did after I passed? I called my mum. She told me not to mess it up."

More laughter. The tension had broken. I had them. Now, to business.

"As for the game today," I said, my voice sharpening, the smile fading into something harder, more focused, "we are ready. The squad is hungry. We respect Stoke, we respect Mark Hughes, but we are at home. And we are not here to make up the numbers."

The questions came thick and fast after that. The contract. The budget. The signings. The Europa League group stage draw, which was scheduled for the following week. I batted them all away with the same calm, controlled efficiency. I was not going to give them a headline. Not today.

Then a journalist from the Daily Mail, a woman with sharp eyes and a sharper tone, leaned forward.

"Danny, there’s been a lot of talk on social media about you being the greatest English manager of this generation. Some fans are already comparing you to Clough. You’ve managed seven official top-flight matches. Seven. Five in the Premier League last season, two in the Europa League qualifiers against Brøndby. You’ve won all seven, scored twenty-five goals, and conceded two. How do you respond to that kind of hype?"

The room went very quiet. Every pen stopped moving. Every camera tightened its focus.

I looked at her for a long moment. I could feel the trap in the question, the sharp edges of it. One wrong word and the headline would write itself: "Walsh Compares Himself to Clough" or "Walsh Dismisses Fan Support." I took a breath.

"I’ll tell you what I’d say to that," I said, my voice quiet and deliberate.

"Brian Clough won two European Cups, a league title, and managed over a thousand matches. I’ve managed seven. Seven. I appreciate the love from the fans... it means the world to me, it really does but let’s have a bit of perspective. I haven’t earned those comparisons yet. I might never earn them. What I have earned is the right to be here, in this chair, preparing for this match. And that’s enough for me. That’s more than enough." I paused. "Ask me again in ten years. Maybe I’ll have a different answer."

The room murmured its approval. A few of the older journalists, the ones who remembered Clough, nodded to themselves. I caught Tom Kershaw’s eye. He gave me the faintest nod. I had handled it.

One more. A man I didn’t recognise, from the back row, raised his hand. "Danny, Manchester United have spent over two hundred million this summer. Do you feel like a club like Crystal Palace can compete with that kind of financial firepower?"

I looked at him for a long moment. I smiled, a slow, deliberate smile. "I think," I said, my voice quiet and even, "that football is not always about how much money you spend. It is about how wisely you spend it. And I think, if you look at our squad, at the quality and the depth we have assembled this summer, you will see that we have been very, very wise." I stood up. "Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a game to prepare for."

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Thank you Sir nameyelus for Luxury Car.