Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 431: The Week Before the Storm I

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Chapter 431: The Week Before the Storm I

The Sunday after the Brighton match was supposed to be a recovery day. For the players, it was light stretching, pool work, massage, the gentle, unglamorous business of putting broken bodies back together. For me, it was anything but quiet.

The JJ story had exploded.

Someone in the press box had done their homework and connected the dots between Danny Walsh, Moss Side Athletic, and the nineteen-year-old Brighton substitute who had scored against his former mentor.

By Sunday morning, it was everywhere. The back pages ran with it. The Mail on Sunday had the headline: "THE KID HE LEFT BEHIND: JJ Johnson scores against the man who discovered him."

The Sunday Times ran a long-form piece with quotes from Terry Blackwood about the hundred-thousand-pound transfer that saved Moss Side Athletic. Even the broadsheets, who normally wouldn’t touch a human-interest football story with a bargepole, couldn’t resist the narrative the boy from Moss Side, sold to save a club, coming back to haunt the man who let him go.

My phone had been buzzing since six a.m. Jessica had already fielded requests from Sky, BT Sport, and the BBC for interviews about JJ. I told her to decline all of them.

"The story speaks for itself," I said. "I’m not going to sit in a studio and perform emotion for the cameras. JJ played well. He scored. I’m proud of him. That’s it."

"That’s exactly the right answer," Jessica said. "Saying nothing is the strongest statement you can make. The mystery is more powerful than the interview." 𝘧𝑟𝑒𝑒𝘸𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝓁.𝘤𝘰𝓂

[Media Analysis Sunday, September 10th. JJ Johnson coverage: 47 articles across UK outlets. Brighton’s social media engagement has increased by 340% since Johnson’s goal.]

[The narrative is: "Walsh discovers them, Walsh develops them, Walsh’s fingerprints are on talent across the football pyramid." Ironical but this is beneficial to your reputation. No action required.]

By Monday morning, the JJ story was already fading, replaced by the next wave of the news cycle. Good. Because Monday was when the real work began.

Marseille.

I arrived at Beckenham at seven a.m. and walked straight into the analysis room, where Sarah and Marcus Reid were already set up.

Three screens glowed on the far wall, one showing Marseille’s last five matches, one displaying their defensive structure in freeze-frame, and one running a live data dashboard of their player profiles. The room smelled of coffee and the faint electrical hum of overworked hardware.

"Morning, gaffer," Sarah said, not looking up from her screen. "I’ve been here since five."

"Of course you have."

She stood and walked to the main screen, picking up a stylus. "Right. Olympique de Marseille. Rudi Garcia’s system. Let me walk you through it."

For the next ninety minutes, she took me through Marseille’s tactical architecture with the precision of a surgeon explaining an operation. Their formation: a 4-3-3 that shifted into a 4-2-3-1 when they had the ball, with Payet dropping into the spaces between the lines as a de facto number ten.

Their pressing triggers: aggressive but disorganised when Payet didn’t engage, which happened more often than their fans would like to admit. Their build-up: patient, left-side dominant, heavily reliant on their left-back Jordan Amavi overlapping to create width.

"Amavi is the key," Sarah said, circling his name on the screen. "He’s aggressive in the tackle, but he gets caught upfield constantly. When he commits forward, there’s a thirty-yard channel behind him. If we can get Navas running into that space on transitions, we’ll have a two-on-one against their left centre-back every time."

Marcus jumped in, pulling up a scatter graph on his screen.

"Their centre-back pairing Rami and Gustavo in the recent matches, sometimes Rolando are strong in the air but slow to turn. Any ball played in behind them, they struggle. They’ve conceded the third-most chances from through balls in Ligue 1 this season. Rodríguez in the pocket between their midfield and defence will be a nightmare for them."

I nodded, absorbing it all. "What about set-pieces?"

Marcus and Sarah exchanged a look. "We’ve saved the best for last," Sarah said. She called Kevin Bray, who had been waiting in the corridor. He walked in with his notepad the same battered, spiral-bound notepad he had been carrying since the first day of pre-season, now thick with diagrams, angles, and delivery zones.

"Kev," I said. "Talk to me."

He opened the notepad to a page covered in hand-drawn diagrams and sat down at the desk. "Marseille defend set-pieces zonally," he said, his voice precise and measured. "Three markers on the near post, two on the back post, two in the centre. Standard continental setup. But there’s a weakness."

He drew a quick diagram on the whiteboard six dots in a defensive shape, two arrows showing movement.

"The gap is between the near-post marker and the second man. It’s about two yards wide. It opens up every time the near-post runner makes an aggressive run, because the near-post marker follows the runner instead of holding his zone. It’s a discipline issue. They’ve been doing it all season in Ligue 1 I’ve watched fourteen set-piece situations and the gap appears in eleven of them."

"What’s the play?" I asked.

"Dann makes the near-post run as the decoy. Aggressive, committed, pulling the marker with him. The gap opens behind him. Sakho attacks the space. Rodríguez delivers it low and hard not a cross, a pass. Sakho meets it at chest height."

I stared at the diagram. It was elegant. Simple. The kind of set-piece that looked obvious once you saw it but required hours of video analysis to find and days of training to execute.

"How confident are you?"

Bray looked at me. "If we get the delivery right, it’s a goal."

"Then we drill it every session between now and Thursday."

[Set-Piece Analysis: Kevin Bray Marseille zonal marking weakness identified. Near-post gap between Zone 1 and Zone 2 markers. Probability of exploitation: HIGH. Routine designated: KB-M1 (Marseille-specific).]

[Training sessions required: 3 (Monday PM, Tuesday PM, Wednesday AM). This could be the difference in a tight match.]

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Super Gift.