Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 411: Zaha Update

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Chapter 411: Zaha Update

That afternoon, I drove to the training ground for a light recovery session. The players who had started against Stoke were on a reduced programme: gentle jogging, stretching, pool work, and massage.

No contact, no intensity, no risk. The players who hadn’t featured: Dann, Mandanda, Navas, Tarkowski, Ward, Digne, Nya Kirby, Connor Blake, and Tammy did a full session with Sarah, sharp and competitive, keeping their edge.

I stood on the sideline, watching both groups, my mind already running through the Fenerbahçe puzzle. But my eyes kept drifting to one player. Zaha.

He was in the recovery group, doing his stretches, but he was moving gingerly. The ankle. The one Pieters had gone through in the twelfth minute yesterday.

Rebecca had cleared him after the match minor bruising, no structural damage, available for Thursday but I could see the way he was favouring it.

The slight hesitation when he planted his left foot. The almost imperceptible wince when he rotated the joint. It was the kind of thing that a player hides from the medical staff and a manager has to see through.

I walked over. "How’s the ankle, Wilf?" I asked, keeping my voice light, casual.

"Fine, gaffer." He said it too quickly. The automatic response of every footballer who has ever been asked about an injury.

"Show me," I said.

He rolled down his sock. The bruising was visible a purple-and-yellow bloom across the outside of the ankle, the kind of mark that comes from a studs-up challenge from a man who weighed fourteen stone. It looked angry.

"It’s fine," he said again, his jaw set, his eyes daring me to disagree. "I’ll be ready for Thursday."

I looked at the ankle, then at his face. I could see the hunger there, the desperation to play, the fear of being left out. Fenerbahçe away. Istanbul. The biggest match in the club’s history. Of course he wanted to play. Every fibre of his being was screaming at him to play.

The System processed the visual data and the fitness metrics from yesterday’s match with its usual cold precision.

[Player Assessment: Wilfried Zaha. Ankle contusion lateral malleolus. Grade 1. Pain level (estimated from gait analysis): 3/10.]

[Risk of aggravation if played within 72 hours: 22%. Risk of aggravation if played within 96 hours: 8%.]

[Recommendation: REST for Fenerbahçe first leg. Deploy Gnabry or Townsend on the left wing. Zaha’s long-term availability is more important than any single match. The season is 50+ games. Protect the asset.]

Twenty-two percent. One in five. If this were a coin flip, I’d take those odds. But it wasn’t a coin flip. It was Wilfried Zaha’s ankle. It was our best player. It was a season that stretched all the way to May.

"I’ll make a decision on Wednesday," I said. "After we see how it responds to treatment. Rebecca will monitor you every day between now and then. If it’s right, you play. If it’s not, Gnabry starts."

Zaha’s jaw tightened. He wanted an answer now. He wanted me to tell him he was playing. But that wasn’t how I worked. Decisions based on emotion get players injured. Decisions based on data keep them on the pitch.

"Trust me, Wilf," I said quietly. "I’m not going to risk your season for one match. Not even this one."

He held my gaze for a long moment, then nodded. A single, reluctant nod. He trusted me. That was enough.

---

Later, back at the apartment, Emma was curled up on the sofa, her laptop open, her reading glasses perched on her nose a detail she was self-conscious about but which I thought made her look impossibly attractive, the kind of quietly intellectual beauty that caught you off guard.

She was wearing a white linen shirt, unbuttoned one button further than strictly necessary, and her red hair fell in loose waves over one shoulder. She was reading something intently, her brow furrowed, her lower lip caught between her teeth.

"Research?" I asked, dropping onto the sofa beside her.

"Fenerbahçe," she said, not looking up. "Their last five European home matches. Their press officer. Their manager’s post-match tendencies. The English-language Turkish sports media." She glanced at me over the top of her glasses. "I’m not writing about it. I’m just... informed."

"You’re always informed," I said. "It’s one of your more dangerous qualities."

She smiled, closed the laptop, and took off her glasses. "Speaking of dangerous," she said, tucking her legs underneath her and turning to face me. "Can we talk about something that isn’t football?"

"I’m not sure I know how to do that." 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝚠𝕖𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝕖𝚕.𝚌𝗼𝗺

"Try."

"Okay." I took a breath. "I called my mum this morning."

Her expression softened immediately. "How is she?"

"She’s good. She’s... retired."

Emma stared at me. "What?"

"I paid off her mortgage. Called her boss. She doesn’t have to go back. Ever." I paused. "And Jessica booked her a holiday. Two weeks, first class, the Maldives. She leaves Friday."

Emma’s hand went to her mouth. Her green eyes filled, the tears appearing suddenly, without warning, the way they did when something bypassed her journalist’s defences and hit her directly in the heart. "Danny..." she whispered.

"She cried for twenty minutes," I said, my own voice thicker than I wanted it to be. "I could hear her in that little kitchen, the one with the yellow tiles and the window that doesn’t close properly. She kept saying she couldn’t accept it. And I kept telling her she didn’t have a choice."

Emma didn’t say anything. She just moved across the sofa and wrapped her arms around me, her face pressed against my chest, her body warm and close.

I held her for a long time, the room quiet, the city humming below us, and for a moment I thought about the distance between that kitchen in Moss Side and this penthouse in Dulwich, and how the only thing that connected them was a woman who had worked three jobs so her son could have boots that fit.

**

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the constant support.