Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 325: The King of Old Trafford I

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Chapter 325: The King of Old Trafford I

The away dressing room at Old Trafford was a small, functional, soulless box.

The walls were a neutral grey, the benches were hard plastic, and the fluorescent lights hummed with a sterile indifference. It was a room designed to remind visiting teams that they were guests, not equals. But at that moment, it felt like the most important room in the world.

My players were slumped on the benches, their chests heaving, their kits dark with sweat. The room was a symphony of exhausted breathing, of men who had just run through a wall.

James McArthur had his head in his hands, not in despair but in the private, quiet ritual of a man who was already preparing himself to go again.

Aaron Wan-Bissaka, was staring at the ceiling, his eyes wide, processing the enormity of what he had just survived. Scott Dann, my captain, was sitting with his elbows on his knees, his gaze fixed on the floor, the quiet, focused stillness of a man who had been in wars before and knew this one wasn’t over.

They had done it. They had weathered the storm. They were 1-0 up at the Theatre of Dreams.

I walked into the centre of the room, and the low chatter died instantly. Every eye found me. They were looking for answers, for reassurance, for the next part of the plan. I could see the questions in their faces. What now? What happens when the beast comes back out of its cage?

I didn’t shout. I didn’t roar. I walked over to the tactics board with a cold, deliberate calm, picked up a marker, and turned to face them. Mourinho’s words in the tunnel still echoed in my ears. "The game is ninety minutes." It wasn’t a threat. It was a promise. He was telling me that the first half was merely the opening act. The real test was coming.

"Forget the score," I said, my voice low but carrying to every corner of the room.

"One-nil is nothing. It’s a lie. We haven’t won anything yet. The next forty-five minutes will be the hardest forty-five minutes of your lives. He..." I said, jabbing a thumb towards the door, towards the home dressing room somewhere down the corridor, "...will have them foaming at the mouth. He will make changes. He will bring on pace. He will tell them to be more direct. He will demand a reaction. And they will give him one."

I wiped the first-half formation off the board and began to draw. "So, we don’t give them the game they want. We don’t sit back and try to absorb pressure. We don’t invite them onto us. We set a trap." I drew a circle in the centre of the pitch.

"We let their centre-backs have the ball. We let them feel comfortable. We let them get arrogant. But the second the ball goes into this zone," I said, drawing a line across the midfield, "that’s the trigger. That’s when the trap springs. We hunt. We press. We suffocate them. We turn their comfort into panic."

I looked around the room, my eyes locking with each of my senior players in turn. "Scotty, Tomkins," I said to my two centre-backs. "You are warriors. You will win every header, you will make every block. You are the wall they break themselves against." Dann gave a single, firm nod. Tomkins cracked his knuckles.

"Macca," I said, turning to McArthur, who lifted his head from his hands. "I need you to be a machine for forty-five more minutes. Can you do that?"

"Aye," he said, his Scottish accent thick, his voice hoarse. "Aye, I can."

"Wilf," I said, turning to Zaha. "You were magnificent. But I need more. I need you to be the dagger in their heart. The moment we win it, you run. No hesitation. No mercy."

Zaha, who had been staring at the floor, lifted his head. A slow, dangerous smile spread across his face. "They can’t handle me, gaffer. They couldn’t in the first half, and they won’t in the second."

"I know," I said simply. "And they know it too. That’s what terrifies them."

I stepped back from the board, my voice dropping to a near-whisper. "They came out today to teach us a lesson. To put the noisy new kid back in his box. They disrespected you. They disrespected this club.

They think they are gods in their own theatre." I paused, letting the silence do its work. "They have the Theatre of Dreams. For the next forty-five minutes, you will turn it into their own personal, living nightmare."

I let the words hang in the air. A burning, collective fire replaced the exhaustion in their eyes.

"Now get out there and finish the job."

---

As I walked back towards the dugout for the second half, the roar of the home crowd was a physical wave of hostility. The boos and insults rained down on me from the fans near the tunnel entrance, a torrent of Mancunian fury.

"Your four-game fairytale ends today, Walsh!" one man bellowed, his face purple with rage. "Back to coaching schoolboys where you belong!" another screamed. I kept walking, my face a mask of absolute, infuriating calm.

I reached the edge of my technical area. I turned to face the pitch. And then, slowly, deliberately, I reached up and took off my suit jacket. I folded it neatly once and placed it on my seat on the bench. I loosened my tie.

Then I squatted down on the touchline, my forearms resting on my knees, my eyes fixed on the pitch with a laser-like intensity. The message was clear. The suit was off. The fight was on.

The second half started exactly as I had predicted. It was a siege. Mourinho had brought on the blistering, electric pace of Marcus Rashford for the aging Wayne Rooney, and United came out with a furious, wounded intensity.

They were a team of wounded pride and desperate urgency. The game descended into a chaotic, brutal, physical war of attrition. Tackles flew in from all angles, bodies were put on the line, and the referee’s whistle was a constant, shrill punctuation mark in the symphony of violence.

I lived every second of it on the touchline. I was a blur of motion, squatting, rising, pointing, screaming instructions into the noise. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶

"Aaron, tighter! Don’t let him turn!" I roared as Rashford tried to spin on Wan-Bissaka. The young right-back, to his enormous credit, held firm, his body perfectly positioned, his concentration absolute.

"Macca, he’s drifting! Stay with him!" I bellowed as Herrera tried to slip his marker. McArthur, his lungs burning, his legs heavy, tracked back and stuck to him like a shadow. "Wilf, stay high! Be ready!" I called to Zaha, who was doing the thankless, invisible work of holding his position, waiting for the moment that I knew would come.

I was a conductor trying to orchestrate a masterpiece in the middle of a hurricane, my voice raw, my hands shaping the game in the air in front of me. Rebecca, our fitness coach, crouched beside me for a moment, her tablet in hand.

"Kirby’s running out of road," she said quietly, showing me a graph of his output. His high-intensity sprint count had dropped off a cliff. "Five more minutes," I said. "Then we’ll make the change."

United were relentless, but we were unbreakable. The wall was holding. Scott Dann was a colossus, winning every aerial duel, throwing his body in front of every shot with the selfless, magnificent fury of a man who understood exactly what was at stake. James Tomkins, beside him, was a rock of calm defiance. They were magnificent. They were everything I had asked them to be.

Then, in the sixtieth minute, the trap sprung.

United’s centre-backs, growing in confidence, had crept higher and higher up the pitch, just as I had anticipated. The ball was worked to Michael Carrick, just inside our half. He had time. He had space. He looked up to spray a pass. And then the world collapsed around him.

It was the trigger. McArthur and Eze, moving as one, swarmed him from both sides. Carrick, a player who has seen everything the game has to offer, panicked. He tried to force a pass into the channel, but it was too late. The press was too intense, too well-drilled. The ball cannoned off McArthur’s shin and fell perfectly to Nya Kirby, who was lurking just behind the press.

Nya didn’t hesitate. He didn’t take a touch. He played a sharp, first-time pass forward to Eze, who had already spun away from his marker and was facing goal.

The young playmaker took one touch to control, one touch to set, and then, from thirty yards out, he unleashed a strike of such savage, audacious, breathtaking beauty that it seemed to defy the laws of physics.

The ball flew through the air, swerving, dipping, and then crashing into the top corner of the net. David De Gea, the best goalkeeper in the world, didn’t even move. He just stood there, watching the ball ripple the net, a helpless spectator to a moment of pure, uncut genius.

0 - 2.

The stadium was stunned into a new, deeper, more furious silence. The only sound was the explosion of pure, unadulterated joy from the corner of Palace fans, a sound that was now laced with a giddy, disbelieving delirium. They were jumping on each other, strangers hugging strangers, grown men with tears streaming down their faces.

***

Thank you for 300 Power Stones.