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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 429: The Prodigal Son II
The second half began, and I pushed Rodríguez deeper, into the pockets between Brighton’s midfield and defence, the spaces they couldn’t cover without breaking their shape.
He drifted, floated, found half-yards of space that shouldn’t have existed. Brighton’s midfielders didn’t know whether to follow him or hold their positions, and that indecision that half-second of hesitation was all a player of his quality needed. 𝕗𝕣𝐞𝐞𝘄𝐞𝚋𝚗𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹.𝚌𝕠𝚖
The breakthrough came in the sixty-second minute. It wasn’t a sweeping team move. It was a moment of pure, individual genius that no amount of defensive organisation could prevent.
Neves played a sharp, vertical pass into Rodríguez’s feet. He was thirty yards from goal, surrounded by three Brighton players. There was no obvious pass. There was no obvious shot. So he invented one.
With his first touch, he flicked the ball up into the air: a delicate, almost arrogant dink that took it over the outstretched leg of the nearest midfielder. Before the ball could hit the ground, he swivelled his hips and struck it on the volley with his left foot.
It was a missile. The ball dipped and swerved, a vicious, curving trajectory that left the Brighton goalkeeper clawing at thin air as it crashed into the top corner. The net shuddered. The sound of the ball hitting the stanchion was sharp enough to cut glass.
Crystal Palace 1–0 Brighton. Rodríguez. 62 minutes.
Selhurst Park erupted. Twenty-five thousand people on their feet, the noise a physical wave that rolled across the pitch.
Peter Drury’s voice rose above it all, the words tumbling out with the urgency of a man who knew he was describing something special. "Oh, it’s magnificent! James Rodríguez, the man with the golden left foot, has picked the lock that would not open! What a goal! What a moment of genius from the man on loan from Real Madrid!" Beglin was shaking his head.
"There is no defence against that, Peter. That is a World Cup-quality finish. Three Brighton defenders did everything right, and it didn’t matter. That is the difference between very good players and world-class ones."
[GOAL. James Rodríguez. Volley. xG: 0.03. Shot distance: 28 yards. Top corner. When a player of this calibre creates his own opportunity from nothing, expected goals become irrelevant. This is art.]
But Chris Hughton is a smart manager. He knew the low block was dead. Brighton had to change. In the seventieth minute, he made his move. He looked to his bench and called for pace. He called for directness. He called for the one player who could hurt us on the counter.
He called for JJ Johnson.
When the electronic board went up Number 27, Johnson, ON I felt a strange tightness in my chest. The Selhurst Park crowd barely noticed the substitution.
They didn’t know who he was. They didn’t know the story. But I knew. And on the bench behind me, Sarah Martinez, who had been at Moss Side Athletic with me, who had watched JJ grow from a Sunday league kid into a professional footballer, leaned forward in her seat.
JJ stepped onto the pitch and the dynamic of the game shifted like a weather system changing. He played on the shoulder of our last defender, a constant, terrifying threat in behind. His movement was extraordinary a series of sharp, angular bursts that were almost impossible to track.
He didn’t run like other forwards. He accelerated in a way that seemed to break the rules of physics, going from standing still to full pace in three strides, his body low, his centre of gravity impossibly balanced, changing direction without losing speed. It was the kind of raw, explosive athleticism that came once in a generation.
But he was also nineteen, and you could see the rough edges. His first touch was occasionally heavy under pressure. His positioning in the build-up was sometimes too narrow, too eager, leaving himself marked when patience would have found him space.
He overran one pass completely in the seventy-fourth minute, his pace taking him beyond the ball rather than onto it. These were things I could have coached out of him. These were things that, if he had come with me to Palace, I would have spent a year refining.
But the talent the raw, blinding, terrifying talent was undeniable. In the seventy-fifth minute, he collected a throw-in on the halfway line and ran at Konaté. The eighteen-year-old French defender, who had been immaculate all afternoon, tried to show JJ down the line.
JJ sold him a dummy, shifted the ball onto his left foot, and accelerated past him so quickly that Konaté was left reaching at empty air. Sakho had to come across to cover, and the danger was cleared, but the message was sent. JJ was here. And he was not afraid.
Peter Drury noticed immediately. "The substitute, Johnson, is causing problems. There’s a raw, explosive quality to this young man the burst of acceleration, the willingness to run at defenders, the sheer audacity of youth. He looks like he was born to play at this level."
In the seventy-eighth minute, the moment arrived. The moment I had been dreading and, in a way I couldn’t fully explain, hoping for.
A long, hopeful ball was pumped over the top of our defence. Konaté, who had been magnificent all match, misjudged the flight by a fraction. JJ didn’t.
He was already moving before the ball was struck the anticipation of a born goal-scorer, the instinct I had recognised on that rain-soaked pitch in Moss Side three years ago. He accelerated past Konaté as though the Frenchman were standing in cement, his pace absolutely frightening, and suddenly he was clean through, one-on-one with Hennessey.
I stood on the touchline, my heart in my mouth. I felt a bizarre, conflicting surge of emotion terrified he was going to score, and at the exact same time, desperately proud that the kid I had found was doing this on a Premier League stage.
JJ bore down on Hennessey. He didn’t panic. He didn’t snatch at it. He opened his body, shaping to curl it into the far corner the exact finish I had taught him on the training pitch at Moss Side, the one we had drilled a hundred times on dark winter evenings. His left foot struck the ball cleanly, and it curled past Hennessey’s dive, kissed the inside of the far post, and nestled in the net.
Crystal Palace 1–1 Brighton. JJ Johnson. 78 minutes.
The away end, a small pocket of blue and white in the corner, erupted. JJ turned and ran towards them, sliding on his knees, the celebration of a young man who had just scored his first Premier League goal. But then he stopped.
He turned and looked at me. Across thirty yards of grass, through the noise and the chaos, he found my eyes. He didn’t point at me. He didn’t make a grand gesture. He just held my gaze for a second, and then he touched his chest, once, with his right hand. Over his heart. I understood. This one’s for you, gaffer. For everything.
I couldn’t smile. Not in public, not with my team just conceding an equaliser. But inside, somewhere deep in the place where football is more than results, something burned with a fierce, painful pride.
Peter Drury’s voice was almost reverent. "And there it is! JJ Johnson, nineteen years of age, scored on his first Premier League start! The young man from Moss Side, discovered by Danny Walsh himself, has come to Selhurst Park and scored against his mentor’s team! What a story! What a moment! Football writes the scripts that Hollywood can only dream of!"
Beglin added, "Look at Walsh on the touchline. He’s not celebrating, obviously, but look at his face. There’s something there. There’s a history between these two that goes beyond this match."
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the constant support.







