Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 385: The Echo Chamber II

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Chapter 385: The Echo Chamber II

[SKEPTICISM]

The Daily Mail (Richard Keys): "It’s Only Brøndby! Let’s Not Get Carried Away With This Kidology. This is what modern football has become: a 28-year-old with a laptop getting praised for beating a team of Danish part-timers. Unbelievable."

TalkSPORT Radio (Transcribed): "Honestly, Jeff, my old pub team could have given them a better game. Palace were decent, yeah, but let’s see them do it against a proper team before we start handing out trophies. It’s embarrassing, the hype around this kid."

I read both columns with the same detached, analytical coldness. The praise was pleasant but irrelevant. The skepticism... the skepticism was fuel. I felt the familiar, cold fire ignite in my gut. Kidology. Pub team with part-timers. Hype. I saved the snippets to a file on my desktop. A private collection of receipts to be cashed in later.

My work phone buzzed. A text from Dougie Freedman, our Sporting Director. It was a picture. A smiling Serge Gnabry, holding up a Crystal Palace shirt at our Beckenham training ground, with the caption:

"He’s here. And he’s ours."

I felt a surge of cold, hard satisfaction. Dougie was a football man, through and through. He understood the project. He had been instrumental in getting the Gnabry loan deal done last season, and it was his foresight that had ensured the £5m release clause was non-negotiable.

A second text came through a moment later.

"Pope deal also done. £1.5m. Signed this morning. Goalkeeper’s union is complete. Talk later."

I texted back a simple reply: "Perfect. Thank you, Dougie."

I hung up and closed the laptop. The echo chamber of the media faded into irrelevance. Praise and criticism were just noise. The only thing that mattered was the work. The project continued, relentless and unsentimental.

The next two days were a study in controlled professionalism. We used a state-of-the-art local training facility, pre-arranged weeks in advance by our logistics team. The Danish press were kept at a distance.

On day one, the focus was the body. Rebecca was in her element, a conductor orchestrating a symphony of recovery. The starting eleven from the Brøndby game were in the Olympic-sized swimming pool, the water a cool, therapeutic blue. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮

They moved through a series of light stretches and hydrotherapy exercises, the tension and soreness of the match slowly leaching out of their muscles. On the pristine training pitch outside, it was a different story.

The substitutes and non-playing squad members were being run through a brutal, high-intensity session by Sarah. The passing was sharp, the pressing was aggressive, the finishing was clinical. The contrast was stark and deliberate. There were no days off at this club. There was only work, tailored to individual needs.

On day two, the focus shifted to the mind. We gathered the entire squad in a lecture theatre. Marcus Reid stood at the front, his laptop connected to the projector. The data from the 5-0 win filled the screen.

He praised the numbers that were, frankly, astonishing. The 81% pressing efficiency in the first half. The fact that Brøndby had completed only twelve passes in our final third. But then he brought up the clips from the first ten minutes. He highlighted two instances where a lazy pass from one of our full-backs had almost allowed Brøndby to break the press. He showed a moment where Neves had been caught slightly too high up the pitch, leaving a gap.

I took over. "Perfection is the standard," I said, my voice echoing in the quiet room. "Last night, for long periods, we were close. But ’close’ is not good enough. These small mistakes against a better team a Champions League team will be punished. We don’t celebrate the result. We analyze the process. And the process can always be better."

At the end of the session, as the players were getting ready to leave, I held them back for one last announcement.

"As of this morning," I said, "we have two new players. Serge Gnabry has joined us from Arsenal, and Nick Pope has joined us from Charlton."

A buzz went through the room. They knew about Gnabry. The rumours had been swirling for weeks.

"Serge will provide elite competition on both wings," I explained. "He is fast, direct, and he scores goals. He makes us stronger. He makes us more dangerous. Nick Pope joins us as our third-choice goalkeeper. He is a talented young keeper with a fantastic attitude who will push Steve and Wayne every single day in training."

I saw Wilfried Zaha and Andros Townsend exchange a look. It wasn’t hostile. It was the look of two top professionals acknowledging that a new shark had just been dropped into the tank. It was the look of competition. It was perfect.

The flight back to London on Saturday evening was unlike any post-match flight I had ever been on. The usual boisterous energy was gone. It was replaced by a calm, focused professionalism.

The two days in Copenhagen had worked. The emotional high had been processed and filed away. The players were reading, listening to music, or talking quietly with the coaching staff about the next game.

We landed at a private terminal at Gatwick, bypassing the inevitable media scrum. A luxury team bus was waiting for us on the tarmac. The journey back to our Beckenham training ground was quiet, the streets of South London dark and empty.

As the bus pulled through the gates, I saw two figures waiting for us at the main entrance, illuminated by the headlights.

One was Dougie Freedman, his face etched with the quiet satisfaction of a plan coming together. The other was a young man, lean and athletic, dressed in a brand-new Crystal Palace tracksuit. He had a confident, almost cocky smile on his face.

As the players began to file off the bus, he caught my eye and gave a single, sharp nod. It was Serge Gnabry.

I looked at our new weapon, the final piece of the attacking puzzle I had been building all summer.

> The machine had a new part. And the work continued.

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the massage chair.