Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 421: The Machine I: Leg 2 of the Playoffs

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Chapter 421: The Machine I: Leg 2 of the Playoffs

The Etihad took a piece of our souls. You don’t go toe-to-toe with Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City, trade blows for ninety minutes, and walk away without leaving something of yourself on the pitch. The 3-3 draw was already being called an early classic of the Premier League season. But classics leave you exhausted.

We got back to South London in the bleak, unforgiving hours of Tuesday morning. The bus from Manchester was silent, the adrenaline long since evaporated, leaving behind the heavy reality of lactic acid and bruised muscles.

I sat in the front seat and stared at my phone. Three matches in six days. City on Monday. Fenerbahçe on Thursday. Swansea on Saturday. It was a schedule designed to break squads. The System had already run the numbers.

[Fixture Congestion Alert: 3 matches in 6 days. Monday 21st → Thursday 24th → Saturday 26th August. Recovery window between Match 1 and Match 2: 68 hours. Recovery window between Match 2 and Match 3: 44 hours. Minimum safe recovery for high-intensity players: 72 hours. Squad rotation is not optional. It is essential.]

And the cruellest part? We had no time to recover. Welcome to the reality of European football.

By Wednesday afternoon, I was sitting in my office at Beckenham, staring at the fitness data Rebecca and Sarah had compiled.

It was a sea of red and amber warnings. Neves, Milivojević, Zaha, Wan-Bissaka, Sakho, Konaté, Navas, Rodríguez, Chilwell, Benteke, Hennessey, every player who had started at the Etihad was deep in the red zone. Playing them again forty-eight hours later was an invitation for hamstring tears, muscle strains, and the kind of injuries that derail seasons.

"We rotate," I told Sarah, tapping the screen. "All of them." 𝒇𝒓𝙚𝒆𝔀𝓮𝓫𝒏𝓸𝙫𝓮𝓵.𝓬𝙤𝙢

She looked at me. "All eleven?"

"All eleven."

"Danny, it’s a European playoff. Second leg. If we lose this..."

"We won’t lose it. We’re 2-0 up from Istanbul. And if I play the lads who ran themselves into the ground at the Etihad, I’m not respecting the competition, I’m disrespecting their bodies." I leaned back. "We spent the entire summer building a squad. Not a starting eleven. A squad. Twenty-eight players. It’s time to find out if the machine actually works."

When the team sheet was handed to Michael Oliver who had, by some scheduling quirk, drawn the Fenerbahçe assignment too the press box went into a minor frenzy. I had changed the entire starting lineup. Every single player. Eleven changes.

[Team Selection: Fenerbahçe (H), Europa League Playoff, Second Leg. 11 changes from Manchester City (A).]

[GK: Mandanda. DEF: Ward, Tomkins, Tarkowski, Digne. MID: McArthur, Nya Kirby. ATT: Bowen, Eze, Gnabry. ST: Abraham.]

[Bench: Pope, Dann, Sakho, Townsend, Bojan, Connor Blake, Pato.]

[Players resting: Hennessey, Wan-Bissaka, Konaté, Chilwell, Neves, Milivojević, Navas, Rodríguez, Zaha, Benteke. All recovering from Etihad.]

As I stood in the dressing room before kick-off on Thursday night, looking at this entirely different set of faces, I didn’t feel a shred of anxiety. I felt vindicated.

"The media think this is a B team," I said, my voice echoing off the tiled walls.

"They think I’m taking a risk. I’m not. I look around this room and I see Premier League starters. I see internationals. I see players who would walk into half the teams in this division." I looked at Nya Kirby, eighteen years old, about to make his first European start at Selhurst Park.

I looked at Tammy Abraham, on loan from Chelsea, desperate to prove himself. I looked at Jarrod Bowen, the two-million-pound steal from Hull, burning to show he belonged. "Tonight is not about resting the other lads. Tonight is about you proving that there is no A team and B team at Crystal Palace. There is only the team. Go out and end this tie."

They didn’t just end it. They obliterated it.

Fenerbahçe came out aggressively, hoping to catch a disjointed, heavily rotated side cold. Instead, they ran into a buzzsaw. The tactical framework the 4-2-3-1 gegenpress remained exactly the same.

The personnel changed, but the software running the machine was identical.

The press triggers, the five-second rule, the shape in and out of possession... it all functioned as though the same eleven players had been doing it for months. Because the system didn’t belong to individuals. It belonged to everyone.

Serge Gnabry was unplayable. The German winger, who had scored on his debut against Stoke and tormented Fenerbahçe’s right-back in Istanbul, played with a point to prove.

In the eighteenth minute, he cut inside from the left, dropped his shoulder, and unleashed a vicious, swerving shot that tore into the top corner. Selhurst Park erupted. The Holmesdale, who had been singing from the moment the gates opened, went berserk.

Crystal Palace 1–0 Fenerbahçe. Gnabry. 18 minutes. (3–0 on aggregate.)

Ten minutes later, Eberechi Eze decided to introduce himself to European football. Receiving a calm, mature pass from Nya Kirby and the maturity of that pass, from an eighteen-year-old in his first European start, was itself a story Eze simply glided.

He didn’t seem to run; he hovered above the grass, drifting past two Fenerbahçe midfielders with a drop of the shoulder and a flick of his hips, before slotting the ball past the goalkeeper with the nonchalance of a man posting a letter. Pure liquid silk.

Crystal Palace 2–0 Fenerbahçe. Eze. 28 minutes. (4–0 on aggregate.)

[Aggregate: 4–0. The tie is effectively dead. Fenerbahçe would need five unanswered goals. Probability of Crystal Palace progression: 99.8%.]

By half-time, the atmosphere at Selhurst Park had transformed from a European knockout tie into a celebration. The fans were singing for fun. Beach balls appeared. The drum in the Holmesdale never stopped.

The second half was a procession. Abraham, who had spent the first forty-five minutes bullying their centre-backs outmuscling one, outrunning the other, making both of them wish they had retired in the summer got his reward on the hour.

Lucas Digne, the Barcelona loanee, delivered a pinpoint cross from the left, and Abraham rose highest to power a header home. His first European goal. He ran to the Holmesdale, cupped his hands to his ears, and let the noise wash over him. Nineteen years old, on loan, playing in his first European campaign, and the crowd were already singing his name.

Crystal Palace 3–0 Fenerbahçe. Abraham. 60 minutes. (5–0 on aggregate.)

Gnabry added his second and our fourth in the seventy-third minute, a clinical finish after a driving run from Bowen down the right.

The two of them had developed their own understanding: Bowen’s direct, fearless running creating the space, Gnabry’s lethal finishing exploiting it. It was a partnership that had cost the club seven million pounds combined. It was worth fifty.

Crystal Palace 4–0 Fenerbahçe. Gnabry. 73 minutes. (6–0 on aggregate.)

***

Thank to Sir nameyelus for the constant support and a great end to March.