Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 419: The Beautiful War I
Michael Oliver’s whistle cut through the roar and the ball rolled back to City’s defence. The chess match began.
The last time I had stood on this touchline, four months ago, I had been a twenty-seven-year-old in an academy tracksuit managing a team of players who mostly aren’t at the club anymore.
Cabaye, Flamini, Delaney, Puncheon... veterans who had given everything they had left just to survive. That night, we had parked the bus, defended for our lives, ridden our luck, and stolen a 1-0 win that felt like a bank heist.
It was ugly and desperate, and I had loved every second of it. But that team was gone. Those players were gone.
The academy tracksuit was gone. Tonight, we were not here to steal. We were here to fight. To attack. To prove that Crystal Palace, in the black away kit with the red-and-blue sash, belonged on the same pitch as the best team in England.
The opening fifteen minutes were a spectacle. City, in their sky-blue home kits, were everything Guardiola preached: fluid, mesmerising, a vortex of movement and geometric passing designed to pull you apart.
Their players didn’t occupy positions; they inhabited spaces. De Bruyne drifted, Silva floated, the full-backs inverted. It was like trying to defend against smoke.
But we were not here to admire the music. We were here to smash the instruments.
The 4-2-3-1 gegenpress was a suffocating blanket of black shirts. Rodríguez led the press on their centre-backs, his work rate a surprise to anyone who thought he was just a luxury player. He forced Stones into two hurried clearances in the first five minutes.
The five-second rule was absolute. Every time we lost the ball, we swarmed. Navas, on the right, was a man possessed from the first whistle running at Mendy, his former teammate, with a fury that went beyond tactics.
This was personal for him, and the City left-back knew it. In the eighth minute, Mendy clattered into Navas from behind, a frustrated, cynical challenge born of being beaten twice in three minutes. Oliver reached for his pocket. Yellow card. The Etihad groaned. The Palace fans, three thousand strong in the corner, roared.
[8’ Yellow Card: Benjamin Mendy (Manchester City). Foul on Navas. Navas has completed 3 successful dribbles in 8 minutes more than any City player managed in the entire first half against Liverpool last week.]
From my technical area, I watched Neves shadow De Bruyne like a ghost. The plan was working. For sixteen minutes, the best midfielder in the world was contained no killer passes, no half-turns, no oxygen. Sarah, beside me on the bench, murmured: "Neves is perfect. De Bruyne’s touched it nine times. Three of them were backwards."
And then, in a single moment, the plan broke. De Bruyne pulled wide, dragging Neves with him. A yard of green opened in the centre.
De Bruyne checked back, received the ball, and before Neves could recover, threaded a pass of impossible geometry between Konaté and Chilwell. A pass that had no right to exist. Agüero, dormant for sixteen minutes, exploded into the space and finished past Hennessey with the cold precision of a man who had scored two hundred Premier League goals.
Manchester City 1–0 Crystal Palace. Agüero. 17 minutes.
The Etihad erupted. Fifty-five thousand people on their feet. Guardiola allowed himself a single, satisfied nod. A problem identified, a solution found.
[GOAL CONCEDED. Agüero. xG: 0.68. De Bruyne key pass broke the Neves shadow with a lateral drift. This is world-class improvisation. Adjustment required.]
I did not panic. I had told the squad this would happen. You cannot contain City for ninety minutes. The question was never whether they would score. The question was what we did next. I stepped to the edge of the technical area and made the signal a flattening gesture to Milivojević, two fingers forward at Rodríguez. The shift was on.
The 4-2-3-1 gegenpress dissolved. In its place, a compact 4-4-2 mid-block solidified, instant and seamless, like a school of fish changing direction. This was Walshball... not one system but many, the ability to change shape without stopping play.
Zaha and Navas dropped to become wide midfielders. Rodríguez pushed up alongside Benteke, the two of them screening City’s centre-backs. The aim: clog the middle, deny De Bruyne space, force City wide where they were less dangerous. It was a tactical retreat designed to bait a trap.
[Tactical Shift 18th minute. 4-2-3-1 → 4-4-2 mid-block. Objective: absorb pressure, invite City wide, counter through the channels when they overcommit.]
The trap took ten minutes to spring. City probed, their passing less incisive now, their frustration visible. Stones, the centre-back, tried to force a pass down the left. Chilwell, who had been waiting for exactly this, pounced. He intercepted and fired the ball into Rodríguez’s feet in the centre circle. What happened next was the moment the football world sat up.
Rodríguez, a defender at his back, produced a turn of such exquisite grace that he seemed to phase through the man. He lifted his head and sprayed a fifty-yard through ball into the right channel... a curving, perfectly weighted invitation for a man who knew this pitch better than anyone alive.
Navas was flying. The years melted away as he pinned his ears back and sprinted onto the pass, running against his old team, on his old pitch, the roar of the crowd a confused, conflicted sound half cheer, half groan.
He bore down on goal, Ederson rushing out to narrow the angle, but Navas was a man possessed. He smashed the ball with a ferocity that defied his slender frame. It flew past Ederson and ripped into the net.
Manchester City 1–1 Crystal Palace. Navas. 28 minutes.
The away end exploded. Three thousand Palace fans, a riot of black and red and blue. Navas let out a primal roar, then caught himself raised a hand in apology to the home fans, a conflicted hero haunting his former kingdom.
On the touchline, I punched the air, the release physical and violent. Behind me, Kevin Bray was on his feet. Sarah was writing something furiously on her clipboard. Marcus Reid’s voice crackled in my earpiece from the gantry: "Their shape’s broken. They’re rattled. Go now."
[GOAL. Jesús Navas. xG: 0.19. Counter-attack from Chilwell interception. Rodríguez through ball: 52 yards. Navas finish: right foot, 71mph. Against his former club. This goal will lead every bulletin tonight.]
I didn’t need Marcus to tell me. I could feel it the shift in the stadium, the anxiety seeping into City’s passing, the crowd growing quiet. Guardiola was on his feet now, barking instructions, his arms windmilling. Good. Let him worry.
In the thirty-fifth minute, the intensity boiled over. Fernandinho, City’s midfield enforcer, went through the back of Rodríguez with a challenge that was agricultural at best, malicious at worst. Oliver didn’t hesitate. Yellow card.
Rodríguez was slow to get up, testing his ankle, but his eyes were burning. He wanted the ball. In the stands, the Palace fans were singing "James Rodríguez, na na na na!" three thousand voices trying to out-sing fifty-five thousand, and somehow, impossibly, making themselves heard.
[35’ Yellow Card: Fernandinho (Manchester City). Reckless challenge on Rodríguez. City now have two players booked.]
Six minutes later, Fernandinho’s frustration became our fortune. Milivojević, that snarling, snapping warrior, won the ball off him with a tackle of pure Serbian steel. The ball broke loose, spinning to Rodríguez, twenty-five yards from goal. The world slowed down.
One touch with his right foot. Soft. Velvet. Setting the ball on a tee.
A second to shift it onto his left foot, creating the angle.
A third to unleash a strike of such beauty it belonged in a gallery. The ball left his boot in a perfect, curling, dipping arc, evading Ederson’s desperate dive and nestling in the absolute top-left corner of the net. The sound it made hitting the stanchion was like a gunshot.
Manchester City 1–2 Crystal Palace. Rodríguez. 41 minutes.
Silence. Fifty-five thousand people, mute. The only sound was pandemonium from the away end wild, joyous, disbelieving. Rodríguez didn’t celebrate with the fans. He turned, walked to the centre circle, picked up the ball, and placed it on the spot. His face said everything: We are not finished.
I allowed myself one pump of the fist. One. Then I was shouting again. "Shape! SHAPE! Don’t switch off!" Because this was Guardiola. This was City. And the second half hadn’t even started.
[GOAL. James Rodríguez. xG: 0.04. Shot distance: 24 yards. Top corner. This is the lowest xG goal scored in the Premier League this season. When a player of this quality decides to shoot from distance, the data becomes irrelevant. This is genius.]
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