Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 436: The Gauntlet I
What I didn’t tell you about the Vélodrome is what happened after.
The dressing room celebrations were brief and professional handshakes, quiet words, the muffled satisfaction of men who had done something extraordinary and were too exhausted to shout about it.
Sakho sat in the corner, a towel over his head, his massive chest still heaving. Dann was having his ribs strapped by the medical staff, wincing slightly but refusing painkillers.
Hennessey was sitting with his gloves still on, the quiet ritual of a goalkeeper who wouldn’t take them off until the clean sheet was officially recorded. I moved through the room, a word for each of them, a hand on a shoulder, a look that said more than language could.
Before I could settle, the UEFA press officer appeared at the dressing room door. The post-match media obligations waited for no one, not even a man whose instincts were already telling him to get his players out of this stadium as fast as possible.
I walked down the corridor to the press conference room, a cramped, overlit space beneath the main stand, and sat behind the microphone. The room was packed with French journalists, their faces a mixture of disbelief and hostility.
I kept it short. "A disciplined performance. We executed our game plan. Marseille are an excellent side and we had to suffer, which we expected. The players showed enormous courage." Three questions. Polite, clipped answers. I gave them nothing to twist into a headline. In and out in four minutes.
On my way back, the UEFA delegate stopped me in the corridor. "Mr. Walsh, the Man of the Match award."
He held out the small, weirdly shaped trophy with the Europa League logo. "Mr. Sakho. Could you pass it to him?" I took it, turned it over in my hands.
Sakho’s name was already engraved on the base. I carried it back to the dressing room and placed it in Mama’s hands without a word. He looked at it, looked at me, and nodded once. He didn’t need a speech. The trophy said everything.
Then I turned to Sarah. "How quickly can we be on the bus?"
She checked her phone. "Coach is in the underground car park. Police escort confirmed. We should be moving in twenty minutes."
"Make it ten."
I had a feeling. Nothing the System could quantify, nothing Sarah could put on a clipboard. Just a feeling, the kind you develop when you’ve spent your life in and around football crowds, the instinct that tells you when the mood has turned from hostile to dangerous.
The Vélodrome crowd had been furious after the final whistle. The boos had been personal, aimed at Sakho, aimed at me, aimed at the six hundred Palace fans who had dared to celebrate in their cathedral. The ultras in the Virage Sud had not dispersed. They had stayed, watching, their scarves still raised, their faces hard. There was an energy in the building that I did not like.
The players showered and changed in eight minutes. A record. We filed through the concrete corridors beneath the stadium, our footsteps echoing, the distant rumble of the crowd still audible through the walls.
The underground car park was harshly lit, the air thick with exhaust fumes. Our bus was waiting, engine running, the driver, a local man hired by the travel company, was looking nervous.
I was the last one on. As I stepped up, I looked back down the corridor. Two French police officers were standing at the entrance to the car park, their hands resting on their belts. One of them caught my eye and gave a small, almost imperceptible shake of his head. I understood.
I walked to the front of the bus and sat down. "Everyone seated. Phones away. Curtains closed."
Some of the younger players: Wan-Bissaka, Chilwell, and Eze didn’t understand. The older ones did. Sakho was already pulling his curtain shut, his face grim. Dann did the same. Milivojević, who had played European away matches in Greece and Turkey with Olympiacos, reached across the aisle and closed the curtain beside Neves without being asked.
The bus moved. We rolled up the ramp from the underground car park and turned onto the Boulevard Michelet, and for the first thirty seconds, it was quiet. The stadium was behind us, the road ahead was clear, and I allowed myself a breath of relief.
Then the first bottle hit the windscreen.
The sound was a sharp, violent crack that made everyone on the bus flinch. A glass bottle, full, thrown from somewhere to our left, struck the windscreen just above the driver’s line of sight. The glass didn’t shatter, reinforced, but a spiderweb of cracks spread across the surface, distorting the streetlights into jagged, fractured shapes.
"Keep driving," I said to the driver. My voice was calm. My heart was not.
The bus crept forward the road was narrow, lined with parked cars, and the driver was rattled. Through the cracked windscreen and the gaps in the curtains, I could see them. Not the casual supporters who had gone home.
These were the ultras: young men in dark clothes, hoods up, scarves pulled over their faces, moving in groups of ten and twenty along both sides of the road. They had been waiting.
The second volley came all at once. Bottles, cans, stones a hail of projectiles that hammered against the side of the bus like a drumroll. The noise inside was terrifying, a constant, rattling barrage. I heard a shout from the back of one of the younger players and then Sakho’s voice, deep and commanding, cutting through the panic: "Stay in your seats. Do not look out. Stay low."
And then the fireworks.
The first one hit the roof. A percussive crack, followed by a shower of sparks that cascaded down the windscreen like molten rain. The second landed beneath the bus with a deafening bang that shook the floor and made several players grab the armrests.
A third, not a banger but an industrial-grade rocket, arced through the air and struck the side panel three metres from where Rodríguez was sitting. The explosion left a blackened, dented mark on the metalwork and filled the cabin with bitter, acrid smoke that seeped through the ventilation.
Rodríguez didn’t flinch. Eyes closed, headphones on, the posture of a man who had played away matches in South America and considered this mildly inconvenient. Navas was equally calm... he had lived in this country; he knew the fury.
But across the aisle, Ben Chilwell was white as a sheet, his hands gripping the seat in front of him, his eyes wide. He was twenty years old. He had never experienced anything like this.
I stood up. I walked down the aisle, steadying myself against the seats as the bus rocked from another impact. I stopped beside Chilwell and put my hand on his shoulder. "You’re safe, Ben," I said, my voice low and even.
"The glass is reinforced. Nothing is getting through. Just breathe." He looked up at me, his jaw tight, and nodded. I moved on. I touched Wan-Bissaka’s arm the boy was rigid, staring straight ahead, his face blank but his knuckles bone-white.
I stopped by Konaté, who was gripping Sakho’s arm, the eighteen-year-old’s composure finally cracking. Sakho had his other arm around the boy’s shoulders, pulling him close, murmuring something in French. I’ve got you. You’re okay.
"Danny." Sarah’s voice, from the front. Urgent but controlled. "The police."
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the super gift.







