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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 409: First Win
Sixty-eighth minute. Gnabry fouled twenty-five yards out. Bray’s routine FK-12. Townsend stood over the ball deliberate misdirection.
Every team in the league had scouted Neves as our set-piece taker. The wall jumped. The ball went under, a low, driven technique Bray had drilled with Townsend for two weeks. It bounced once and hit the bottom corner. Butland was still in the air.
4–1. Crystal Palace. Townsend. 68 minutes.
[GOAL. Townsend. Free kick FK-12. Conversion rate for under-the-wall free kicks in the PL: 2.1%. Townsend’s accuracy in training: 7 from 10. Competitive advantage: SIGNIFICANT.]
Townsend slid on his knees to the corner flag. The crowd behind the goal were delirious, reaching over the hoardings, scarves whipping in circles. 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚
A chant started in the Whitehorse Lane End and swept through the ground in seconds "Can we play you every week? Can we play you every week?" aimed at the Stoke fans, who had gone very, very quiet. Kevin Bray stood with his arms raised. I turned to him: "That’s why we hired you."
Final changes with twenty minutes to go. The board went up twice more in quick succession. Number 9 Benteke OFF. Number 17 Pato ON. Benteke walked off to a thunderous ovation, the crowd chanting his name, kids reaching over the advertising boards for a high-five as he passed.
He slapped every hand, pointed to the badge, and took his seat. Then: Number 4 Milivojević OFF. Number 22 Bojan ON.
The Holmesdale, who had adopted Bojan as one of their own since his arrival, greeted him with a roar that was disproportionate to a seventy-minute substitute. "Bojan! Bojan! Bojan!" He acknowledged them with a raised hand, then his face went flat, focused, professional. He was here to work.
I was reshaping the team for the third time in ninety minutes something no other Premier League manager had attempted on the opening weekend. The 4-5-1 mid-block morphed back into a 4-2-3-1, but a different version now: low-tempo possession, designed to keep the ball and manage the clock.
Bojan slotted into the number ten, Rodríguez shifting wide right, and immediately the rhythm changed. Where Rodríguez had been the artist all improvisation and audacity Bojan was the architect: structure, efficiency, metronomic one-touch passing that Stoke simply could not disrupt. It was like changing the channel from a war film to a chess match.
[Tactical Shift 70th minute. Phase 3: 4-2-3-1 low-tempo possession. Three distinct tactical identities in a single match. Stoke have used one. This is the difference between coaching and managing.]
In the eighty-third minute, the goal of the day. Bojan won the ball with a trademark press in the Stoke half. Played it to Pato, who flicked it first-time with the outside of his boot a piece of Brazilian ingenuity that belonged on a beach in Rio rather than a pitch in South London.
Rodríguez collected, back to goal, controlled on his chest, spun his marker with a single effortless pirouette, and played a through ball that split the defence in two. Gnabry ran onto it and finished low into the far corner. Five players, six touches, three seconds. The kind of goal that makes people fall in love with football.
5–1. Crystal Palace. Gnabry. 83 minutes.
[GOAL. Gnabry. xG: 0.42. Bojan press → Pato lay-off → Rodríguez through ball → Gnabry finish. 3.1 seconds. This goal will be on every highlight reel in Europe tonight. For £5 million, Gnabry may be the signing of the decade.]
Selhurst Park lost its mind. The Holmesdale End was a sea of bouncing, swaying, delirious humanity. I saw a man in the front row openly weeping. I saw a child on her father’s shoulders, waving a flag bigger than she was. The noise was no longer a roar it was something you felt in your bones, in your teeth, in the soles of your feet.
---
The final whistle. 5–1. My eighth consecutive win. The record. Guardiola’s mark of seven from the start of an appointment broken.
[FULL TIME: Crystal Palace 5–1 Stoke City.]
[Goals: Zaha 27’, Konaté 38’, Benteke 52’, Townsend 68’, Gnabry 83’. Stoke: Crouch 61’.]
[Manager Record: P8 W8 D0 L0. GF: 28. GA: 3. Win Rate: 100%.]
[NEW RECORD: Most consecutive wins from the start of a PL managerial appointment. Previous: 7 (Guardiola, 2016). New: 8 (Walsh, 2017).]
[Player Ratings: Zaha 8.7 (MOTM). Rodríguez 8.4. Neves 8.1. Konaté 8.0. Benteke 7.9. Bojan 7.8. Townsend 7.7. Milivojević 7.6. Sakho 7.6. Wan-Bissaka 7.5. Chilwell 7.4. Hennessey 7.2. Gnabry 7.9. Pato 7.1. McArthur 6.8.]
[Fitness: Zaha minor ankle bruising, available for Fenerbahçe. Neves full recovery expected by Wednesday. All others: GREEN.]
"Glad All Over" rang out across South London as the players walked to the Holmesdale to applaud the fans, and this time the song was different louder, slower, more emotional, twenty-five thousand voices holding every note like they never wanted it to end.
The Holmesdale Fanatics had lit red and blue smoke flares that drifted across the stands in thick, colourful clouds, giving the whole scene the feel of a carnival finale. Sakho lifted Konaté’s arm the young defender’s first Premier League goal, a moment he would remember forever.
Zaha, ankle wrapped in ice, had come back out of the tunnel in his tracksuit to join the celebrations, clapping slowly at the edge of the group. Rodríguez was surrounded by photographers, his name chanted by fans who still couldn’t believe he was theirs.
Gnabry, the substitute who had scored on his debut, was being serenaded by the Whitehorse Lane End: "Serge Gnabry, na na na na! Serge Gnabry, na na na na!" a melody they had invented on the spot, raw and tuneless and absolutely perfect.
Pato was filming the crowd on his phone, spinning slowly, capturing the panorama of noise and colour. Even Hennessey, the goalkeeper who had barely been tested after the first half, was bouncing on the spot, conducting the singing with his gloved hands.
The tannoy announced the man of the match Zaha and the stadium erupted one final time.
Then the PA played it again, the song that started it all, the song that would soundtrack the drive home and the pints in the pub and the conversations at work on Monday morning, the song that was Crystal Palace: "I’m feelin’... glad all over..."
And every voice in the ground sang along, word for word, note for note, as though they had been rehearsing for this moment their entire lives.
Hughes shook my hand at the tunnel entrance. His grip was firm, his eyes tired but honest. "Three shapes in one game," he said quietly. "Your lot are the real thing."
He held my gaze for a moment not warmth exactly, but the professional acknowledgement of a man who had played at the very highest level and knew quality when he saw it. Then he walked away, Bowen and Niedzwiecki falling in behind him.
Sarah appeared beside me. "Three formations in one match. Not bad for opening day."
Kevin Bray on my other side. I put an arm around his shoulder. "Two set-piece goals from two routines."
He laughed. "Wait until you see what I’ve got for Fenerbahçe."
"Tell me on Monday. Tonight, we celebrate."
Rebecca appeared, tablet in hand. "Full fitness report by eight a.m. But the headline is good. Everyone came through. We’re clear for Thursday." She paused, then allowed herself a rare smile. "The sprint data on Gnabry is absurd, by the way. He covered more ground in thirty-two minutes than some of the Stoke players managed in ninety."
Istanbul. Fenerbahçe. The Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium. Fifty thousand Turkish fans and a cauldron of noise that would make Selhurst Park look like a library. That was the next test. The next mountain.
But that was Monday’s problem. Tonight, the only thing that mattered was the sound still echoing around this ground: "Glad All Over," fading now, but not gone, never truly gone and the knowledge that we had done exactly what we said we would do.
The System offered one final notification.
[Next Match: Fenerbahçe SK vs Crystal Palace. Europa League Playoff, First Leg. Istanbul. Thursday. The season has begun. 50+ matches ahead. Do not look back. Do not look too far ahead. Always the next match.]
This is only the beginning.
***
Thank you Sir nameyelus for the luxury car.







