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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 217: The Surge I: Leicester City
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ACT 4 OF VOLUME 2
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The two-week international break was a strange, suspended period, a caesura in the relentless rhythm of the season. For the players, it was a chance to rest their weary bodies, to see their families, to momentarily escape the suffocating pressure cooker of professional football.
For me, it was a period of a quiet, almost unnerving calm. The frantic, day-to-day chaos of training sessions, match preparations, and post-mortems was replaced by a gentle, unassuming rhythm of a life that felt almost normal.
I woke not to the shrill, demanding cry of my 5:30am alarm, but to the soft, golden light of a late autumn morning filtering through the bedroom curtains, the scent of freshly brewed coffee a gentle, welcoming aroma that was becoming the new, beautiful soundtrack to my life.
Emma was already up, a whirlwind of a quiet, focused energy in the small kitchen, her red hair tied up in a messy bun, her brow furrowed in concentration as she typed away at her laptop, a half-eaten piece of toast sitting forgotten on a plate beside her.
She was a journalist on the rise, her articles for the London sports website gaining a reputation for their sharp insight and their beautiful, lyrical prose, and yet, every morning, without fail, she would make me breakfast, a small, simple act of love that was a constant, grounding reminder of the beautiful, ordinary life we were building together, a life that was a world away from the mad, chaotic, beautiful world of football.
This was the new me. The man who no longer needed the pre-dawn runs as a form of a self-awareness, the man who could sit at the breakfast table and simply be present, listening to Emma talk about her latest article, her eyes full of a passion and a fire that mirrored my own.
The anxiety that had been my constant companion for so long, the gnawing, gut-wrenching fear of failure, had not disappeared entirely, but it had receded, its once-deafening roar now a quiet, manageable hum in the background.
The first quarter of the season had been a brutal, beautiful, heartbreaking education. It had taken me to the brink, had shattered my confidence, had forced me to confront my own demons.
But it had not broken me. It had forged me into something new, something stronger, something better.
I was no longer just a manager. I was a leader. And as the players returned from their break, their faces fresh, their eyes full of a new, dangerous hunger, I knew that they were ready to follow me into the fire.
The first training session back after the international break was a revelation. Connor and Eze returned from their stint with the senior team with a new swagger, a quiet confidence that came from training alongside professional footballers, from being treated, even if only for a few days, as equals rather than apprentices.
But they had not been seduced by the glamour of the first team. They were still mine, still hungry, still desperate to prove themselves at this level before they made the inevitable step up.
The rest of the squad, far from being intimidated by their return, seemed energized by it, their competitive fire stoked by the knowledge that they were training alongside players who were on the cusp of greatness.
Sarah and Rebecca were in perfect sync, their coaching a seamless, complementary blend of tactical nous and physical conditioning.
Michael, our gruff goalkeeper coach who was also temporarily handling the fitness coaching duties while we searched for a permanent appointment, had the players running drills that would have broken lesser men, but they loved him for it, their respect for his expertise a testament to the culture we had built.
Training in the weeks that followed was a joy to behold.
Training in the weeks that followed was a joy to behold. The international break had been a reset, a cleansing of the palate, and the team had returned with a renewed sense of a purpose, a quiet, unshakeable belief in themselves and in each other.
The three league matches that followed were not just victories; they were statements, a declaration of intent to the rest of the league that we were not just a flash in the pan, not just a feel-good story, but a genuine force to be reckoned with.
We played with swagger, confidence, a joy that was infectious, and a beautiful, flowing, attacking style of football that was a testament to the hard work, dedication, and sheer, undeniable talent of my players.
The first match, a home game against Leicester, was a masterclass in a controlled, clinical dominance. The pre-match atmosphere was electric, the crowd buzzing with an anticipation that was palpable, a far cry from the sparse, polite smattering of applause that had greeted us at the start of the season.
I stood in the technical area, Sarah to my left, Rebecca to my right, the three of us a united front, a calm, composed, authoritative presence. The match started exactly as we had planned. Our pressing was relentless, a furious, swarming entity that gave Leicester no time to breathe, no space to think.
"Stay tight! Don’t let them turn!" I shouted, my voice clear and firm, no longer the frantic, desperate screaming of a man on the edge. Nya Kirby was a revelation in the midfield, his energy and his intelligence a constant, disruptive force. "Nya! Great work! Now push up!"
Sarah leaned in, her voice a quiet, analytical presence. "They’re dropping deeper. We can exploit the space behind their midfield."
I nodded, a silent acknowledgment, and then turned to the pitch. "Eze! Drop into the pocket! Connor, make the run!"
The goal, when it came in the eighteenth minute, was a thing of beauty, a perfectly executed move that was a testament to the hours of work we had put in on the training pitch.
Eze, receiving the ball in the pocket of space behind Leicester’s midfield, turned on a sixpence and slipped a perfectly weighted through ball into the path of Connor Blake, who had made a sharp, intelligent run in behind the back line. Connor took one touch to control the ball and a second to slot it coolly past the onrushing goalkeeper.
1-0.
The crowd erupted, and I allowed myself a small, satisfied smile. Connor scored again in the thirty-fourth minute, a carbon copy of the first goal, and then Leicester pulled one back just before half-time, a sloppy, avoidable goal that was a reminder that we were not yet the finished article.
But in the second half, we were relentless, our control absolute, and when Jake Morrison scored a thunderous, long-range effort in the sixty-seventh minute to make it 3-1, the match was over as a contest.
We won 3-1, but the scoreline flattered them. Connor’s league tally was now at nine goals, and as I watched him celebrate with his teammates, I felt a profound sense of pride.
I watched from the touchline, no longer a frantic, pacing, screaming figure of a barely-controlled chaos, but a calm, composed, authoritative presence. I trusted my players. I trusted my staff. And most importantly, I trusted myself.
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Thank you to nameyelus and chisum_lane for the gifts.







