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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 346: The Reckless One II
There was a pause. "And what is the next signing?"
"I’m flying to Spain tonight," I said.
Another pause. Longer this time. "Navas," Freedman said. Not a question. A realisation.
"Navas," I confirmed.
"He’s going to Sevilla," Freedman said. "His family is there. He’s been talking to them all summer. It’s all but done."
"I know," I said. "But I’m going to offer him something Sevilla can’t."
Freedman was quiet for a moment. I could hear him thinking. "What’s that?" 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
"I’ll tell you when it works," I said, and hung up.
I booked the flight during the afternoon session. A late evening departure from East Midlands Airport. I would be in Seville by midnight.
I packed a bag in the hotel room after dinner, moving quickly and quietly, the way I had learned to move when I needed to get something done before the world had a chance to talk me out of it.
I did not tell anyone where I was going except Freedman. I did not post anything on social media. I did not speak to the press. I just went.
The flight was short and quiet. I sat by the window and watched the lights of England disappear beneath the clouds. I thought about the day at the Etihad. May 14th. The final whistle.
The explosion of joy from our players, our fans, our staff. The long, respectful handshake with Pep Guardiola. And then, my eyes drifting past him to the figure of Jesús Navas, standing alone on the pitch, his hands on his hips, staring at the celebrating Palace fans.
A World Cup winner. A European champion. A man who had won everything the game had to offer. And he had looked like a man who had lost his home.
The System had shown me his profile in that moment. Unprompted. Contract expiry. Status. Primary motivation. I had read it and I had known. I had just been waiting for the right moment. The right moment was now.
I landed in Seville just before midnight. The air was warm and thick with the smell of orange blossom, a scent so strong and so particular that it felt like a physical thing.
I took a taxi to my hotel, a small, anonymous place in the old city, and I lay on the bed without sleeping, going over the conversation in my head. What I would say. What I would not say. How I would frame it. How I would make him understand.
I was not going to talk about money. I was not going to talk about contracts or wages or signing-on fees. I was going to talk about something that no other club had thought to offer him. Something that Sevilla, with all their history and all their love, could not give him. A different kind of purpose. A different kind of legacy.
The next morning, I took a taxi out to the outskirts of the city, to a quiet residential neighbourhood where the streets were lined with orange trees and the houses were modest and warm and surrounded by gardens.
I knocked on the door of a house that looked exactly like the kind of house a man who had grown up in Andalusia and spent four years in Manchester would dream about coming home to.
Navas opened the door himself. He was smaller than I expected. Quieter. He had the shy, gentle manner of a man who had never quite got used to being famous. He looked at me with cautious, dark eyes and said nothing for a moment.
"Mr Walsh," he said finally. "I was not expecting you in person."
"I know," I said. "I hope that’s alright."
He considered this for a moment. Then he opened the door wider and stepped back. "Come in," he said.
We sat on the terrace at the back of the house. The garden was full of orange trees, their fruit still green and small in the June heat. His wife brought us coffee and then disappeared quietly into the house. The city was a low hum in the distance. The morning was warm and still and beautiful.
He was polite. He was professional. But he was also clear. "I have given my word to Sevilla," he said, his voice gentle but firm. "My family is here. My children are settled. I have been away for four years. I need to come home."
"I understand that," I said. "And I’m not here to ask you to give up your home. I’m here to ask you a different question."
He looked at me, waiting.
"I have a team of young players," I said.
"The oldest of my new signings is twenty-four. The youngest is eighteen. They are talented. They are hungry. They are fearless. But they have never played in Europe. They have never stood in a tunnel on a Thursday night in some city they’ve never heard of and heard that anthem play. They don’t know what it takes to win in that world. They need someone who does."
He was listening. His hands were wrapped around his coffee cup, his eyes fixed on my face.
"I’m not asking you to be just another player," I said.
"I’m asking you to be a teacher. I’m asking you to be the man who takes a group of brilliant, reckless, fearless young players and shows them how to be winners. Crystal Palace have never been in European football. Not once. Not in their entire history. And now they are. And the first time they walk out onto a European pitch, I want them to have someone beside them who has won the World Cup and the European Championship and the Premier League. Someone who knows what it takes. Someone who can look at them in the tunnel and tell them, from experience, that they can do this."
I leaned forward slightly. My voice dropped.
"Sevilla can give you a home," I said. "I am offering you a legacy."
He was quiet for a long time. He looked out at the orange trees. At the garden his grandfather had planted. At the home he had longed for through four grey Manchester winters. The offer sat between us on the table, in the warm Andalusian morning, and I let it sit there. I did not push. I did not add to it. I had said what I had come to say.
He looked back at me. His eyes were unreadable.
"I will think about it," he said.
I nodded. I stood up, shook his hand, and left. I walked back through the orange-tree streets to find a taxi, the morning sun warm on my face, and I felt the particular, quiet confidence of a man who has made his best argument and is prepared to live with the result.
The seed was planted. Now I had to wait.







