Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 434: Europa League GS I: Marseille

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 434: Europa League GS I: Marseille

The Europa League anthem. Those opening bars the strings, the rising melody, the sense of occasion filled the tunnel, and for a moment, the noise from the crowd dimmed, as if even the Virage Sud felt the weight of the ritual. I closed my eyes.

I thought about the Railway Arms. The mud. The cold. The sheer, ridiculous impossibility of the journey from a Sunday league pitch in Moss Side to this tunnel, in this stadium, on this night. The anthem swelled, and I opened my eyes, and the two lines of players began to move.

We stepped out into the Vélodrome, and the wall of sound hit us like a physical assault. Sixty-seven thousand voices, unified into a single, deafening, terrifying roar. The stadium was a bowl of white concrete and blue and white flags, the floodlights so bright they turned the pitch into a luminous green rectangle that seemed to float above the noise.

The Virage Sud had prepared their tifo a giant banner that covered the entire south stand, depicting a snarling blue and white wolf devouring a football, with the words "ON NE PASSE PAS" They shall not pass.

Camera flashes strobed from every corner of the ground, a blinding, flickering constellation that made the stadium feel like it was pulsing with electricity. The smell smoke, sweat, beer, the chemical burn of flares was overpowering. It was sensory warfare, and it was designed to break you before the match even started.

I walked to my technical area, my hands in my pockets, my face a mask of calm that cost me everything to maintain. Behind me on the bench, Sarah had her clipboard. Rebecca had her tablet. Kevin Bray had his notepad.

Marcus Reid was in the gantry above, headset on, ready to feed data. Michael Steele was standing behind the substitutes, his massive frame a reassuring presence. My staff. My team behind the team.

In the BT Sport commentary gantry, the voices of the broadcast team cut through the noise. "Welcome to the Stade Vélodrome," the commentator said, his voice barely audible above the crowd.

"It is a cauldron tonight in Marseille. Crystal Palace, in their first-ever European group stage match, face perhaps the most daunting away fixture in the Europa League. Danny Walsh’s side are unbeaten in thirteen matches this season, but they have never experienced anything like this."

The referee, a stern-faced Slovenian named Damir Skomina, blew his whistle, and the romance ended. The reality of European football began.

For the first thirty minutes, it was brutal. Marseille came at us like a tidal wave, roared on by the Vélodrome.

They pressed high, they tackled hard, and they tried to bully us off the ball. Payet was orchestrating everything dropping deep, spraying passes, trying to find the space behind our full-backs.

In the sixth minute, he played a curling, bending through ball that sent their right winger clean through on the overlap. Chilwell scrambled across to cover, got a toe on the ball, and conceded a corner. The crowd erupted, sensing blood.

This was not the open, flowing football we had played against Manchester City. This was trench warfare. And in the trenches, you need a general.

Sakho was magnificent. He was a one-man army, a colossus in the Palace defence. Every time Marseille pumped a ball into the box, his massive frame rose above the crowd to head it clear. Every time their striker tried to turn him, Sakho was there a wall of muscle and bone, refusing to yield an inch.

The Marseille fans booed his every touch, a relentless, venomous chorus that grew louder each time he won a header, each time he made a tackle, each time he had the ball at his feet. Former PSG man. Enemy. Traitor.

The insults rained down from the Virage Sud in French that I didn’t need to translate. But Sakho didn’t shrink from it. He fed on it.

Every boo made him bigger, louder, and more commanding. In the fourteenth minute, he won a crunching aerial duel against Marseille’s striker, landed on his feet, and carried the ball thirty yards out of defence before calmly laying it off to Neves.

The Virage Sud whistled and jeered. Sakho didn’t even look at them. He just jogged back into position, pointed at Konaté, barked an instruction in French, and reset. The general, commanding his army.

[Match Analysis 30:00. Possession: Marseille 63% Palace 37%. Shots: Marseille 7 Palace 1. Shots on target: Marseille 2 Palace 0. Sakho: 100% aerial duels won (6/6). 4 clearances. 2 interceptions. He is having a defining performance. The defensive structure is holding under extreme pressure. Patience is required.]

"Hold the line!" I screamed from the touchline, my voice already hoarse, the words barely audible above the noise. "Discipline! Do not break!" On the bench, Sarah was calm, scribbling tactical notes. Beside her, Kevin Bray was watching the Marseille set-piece positioning with forensic attention, his pen moving across his notepad in quick, precise strokes.

We didn’t break. We bent, we suffered, we absorbed everything Marseille threw at us, and we stayed standing. By the thirty-fifth minute, the noise in the Vélodrome had changed. The triumphant roars had become laced with frustration.

The songs from the Virage Sud had an edge of desperation. They had thrown their best punch, and we were still on our feet. I could feel it the moment when a hostile crowd stops being a weapon and starts becoming a burden. The fire was dying.

Half-time. The dressing room was a scene of exhausted, disciplined silence. Sweat-soaked shirts draped over benches. Water bottles drained. Sakho sat in the corner, his chest heaving, a towel over his head, the quiet focus of a man who had been in a war and was preparing to go back.

"They are throwing everything at us," I said, pacing the centre of the room. "And we are standing firm. This is what Europe is. You have to suffer. You have to win ugly. They expected us to crumble. We haven’t. And now their crowd is turning. Keep your shape. Keep your discipline. The chance will come."

I looked at Kevin Bray. "Kev. First set-piece in their half, we go with the routine."

Bray looked up from his notepad. "Their zonal marking on the left side has a gap between the near-post marker and the second man. It’s been there all half. When we get the corner or the free kick, I want Dann to make the near-post run as the decoy and Sakho to attack the space behind him."

The room stirred. Every player in that room wanted Sakho to score. In this stadium. Against this crowd. It would be the perfect script.

[Half-Time: Marseille 0–0 Crystal Palace. xG: Marseille 0.87 Palace 0.09. Palace are absorbing pressure at elite European levels. The defensive shape has conceded zero clear chances. The set-piece routine is the most likely avenue to goal.]

The second half was a mirror of the first, only tighter, more intense, the spaces smaller, the tackles harder. Marseille pushed. We resisted. 𝗳𝐫𝚎𝗲𝚠𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝘃𝚎𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝗺

Payet tried to unlock us with a series of increasingly ambitious passes, but Neves and Milivojević were a double wall in front of the defence, intercepting, breaking up play, recycling possession with a calm intelligence that refused to be rattled.

Navas, on the right, was doing exactly what Sarah had identified, exploiting the channel behind Amavi, who had been booked for a reckless challenge on Wan-Bissaka in the fifty-second minute and was now playing with the caution of a man on a tightrope.

In the sixty-eighth minute, Zaha, who had been starved of service all night, tracking back, defending, doing the thankless work that the cameras never showed, found a pocket of space on the left. He drove at the Marseille right-back, his quick feet a blur of motion, and drew a foul just outside the penalty area. The referee pointed to the spot where the free kick would be taken, twenty-two yards out, slightly left of centre.

Kevin Bray stood up from the bench. He caught my eye and gave a single, sharp nod. This was his moment. The routine he had been building all week, the gap he had identified, the play he had drawn in his notepad in that cramped away dressing room at half-time.

Rodríguez stood over the ball. The Vélodrome held its breath, sixty-seven thousand people, the smell of smoke and sweat, the floodlights blazing, the camera flashes strobing. The moment felt suspended, hanging in the Mediterranean night air like a held note in a symphony.

Rodríguez whipped the ball in. Not towards the goal, towards the near post. Low, hard, driven, with vicious inswing. Dann made his run, attacking the near post at full speed, dragging two Marseille defenders with him, pulling them out of the zonal structure like threads being yanked from a tapestry. The gap opened.

And into the gap stepped Mamadou Sakho.

He didn’t have to jump. The ball arrived at chest height, perfectly placed, and he met it with a thumping, unstoppable header that left the Marseille goalkeeper rooted to the spot. The ball flew into the net with the sound of a cannon being fired. The stanchion shook. The net billowed. And then, for one extraordinary, impossible second the Vélodrome was completely, utterly silent.

Sixty-seven thousand people. Mute. The shock was absolute.

And then, from high up in the stadium, from the tiny corner of the stadium where six hundred Crystal Palace fans had been singing themselves hoarse for sixty-eight minutes, a roar erupted. A wild, delirious, life-affirming explosion of noise that echoed around the silent bowl of the Vélodrome like a thunderclap in an empty cathedral.

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus and icoi for the support