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Now reading: Chapter 149 149: Endings and Beginnings from From La Masia: Was Always Destined for Greatness, a Drama novel by DavidAdetola.

"They are still outside?"

Ed Woodward sat behind the wheel of his latest Chevrolet SUV, the one that had arrived three months ago through the club's sponsorship arrangent, and stared out the windshield at the gathering before him. The car had pulled in through the underground passage, the secret one, the route the security team had set up after the protests began two days ago. The route most of the public did not know existed. The route that was supposed to allow him to enter Old Trafford without being identified by the crowd at the front.

Even from the underground entrance, he could see them. So of them at least. The mass had spilled around to every accessible side of the stadium. The shouts carried even down here, muffled by concrete and distance, the chant of Glazers Out, Glazers Out, Glazers Out moving in waves over the building.

He parked his car. His brows were furrowed. He got down from the driver's side in a hurry, the engine still pinging behind him in the quiet of the parking level.

So focused was he on the gathering above that he did not notice, parked three spaces down from his own bay, a black Rolls Royce. A car he had ridden in many tis. A car whose presence in this building, at this hour, on this morning, should have stopped him cold.

It did not register. He walked past it.

He was confused.

Not just angry. He was angry, sure, anger was sitting in him at a low simr the way it had been sitting in him since yesterday morning, but mostly he was confused. It had been more than twenty-four hours since Manchester United had publicly withdrawn from the Super League project. Twenty-four hours since the formal statent had gone out, since the apology had been issued, since the line about "listening to our supporters" had been added in by the PR draft team at his specific instruction. The story should have been receding. The protests should have been thinning. The supporters should have been celebrating their victory, going ho to their families, posting selfies of themselves at the gates and moving on with their week.

That was not what was happening.

In fact, looking at the crowd outside as he had pulled in, looking at the size of it, the mass of it, the energy still alive in it after a full night, Ed had seen what every executive in his position dreaded seeing.

The crowd was bigger than yesterday.

Bigger than when Manchester United had still been in the Super League. Bigger than when the announcent had first dropped. The withdrawal, which was supposed to have ended this, had instead given the crowd what every protest movent needed to keep growing, which was the tangible evidence that protest worked. They had pushed and the club had moved. So they had pushed again. And now they were pushing harder.

'This is why you never compromise', He thought too late.

He had called this morning to say he would be out today. He had a eting with an external PR firm scheduled at the firm's offices in central Manchester. The plan had been to spend the day there, working with their senior team on a communications recovery strategy, on how to rebuild the institutional image that had been damaged across the last seventy-two hours. It was the kind of eting he should not be missing.

But then he had seen the morning's photos. Then he had seen the size of the crowd that had stayed overnight. Then he had decided, in his car on the way to the PR firm, that he needed to be on site. So he had turned the car around. So he was here.

He walked into the building through the lower entrance and his face was hard.

The employees who saw him registered the face first. Then the walk. Then the speed. The receptionist on the lower floor opened her mouth to say good morning. She closed it again before the word ca out. Two security n by the elevator nodded at him without speaking. The catering staff mber with the tray in the corridor stepped sideways and let him pass.

Nobody said anything to him. Nobody offered the usual pleasantries.

He did not register that they were not offering pleasantries. He did not register that they were watching him. His mind was upstairs already, in the etings he was about to have, in the calls he was about to make, in the work that needed to be done by lunchti to get this thing back under so kind of control.

He stepped into the executive elevator. The doors closed.

The doors opened.

What t him on the executive floor was the face of his assistant Tristan, hovering at the top of the corridor, his expression doing the thing it did when Tristan had been waiting for him for fifteen minutes and had been preparing whatever he was going to say in those fifteen minutes and was now ready to deliver it.

Ed saw the face. Saw the agitation on it. And whatever frustration had been sitting in him on the drive in, whatever low-simring anger, ca out before Tristan could even open his mouth.

"They are growing."

Ed said it as he walked past. Tristan turned and followed him, half a step behind, already trying to get a word in.

"Sir, I—"

"I don't get what their problem is."

Ed scoffed. He was walking fast now, his shoes loud on the executive floor's polished tile.

"Trust, late, forced." He said it in a mocking, sing-song voice, mimicking what he had heard the protesters chanting on the morning radio. "Trust late forced. What does that even an."

"Sir, it's—"

"I an what more do they want. They don't even understand what's going on. Half of them have not read a single article past the headline."

Tristan opened his mouth again.

"Sir—"

"And I an they even got what they wanted. We pulled out. The club pulled out. We did the thing they were demanding. So what is this whole thing about."

Despite the fact that Manchester United, in the eyes of a man like Andrea Agnelli of Juventus, was firmly in the bracket of vultures destroying European football, Ed knew that Manchester United's actual situation was more in line with the old legacy clubs than with his Premier League neighbours. Despite the fact that they all had rich sugar daddy owners, the cause for the difference was simple, and the difference was the entire reason Ed had pushed for the Super League in the first place.

He just did not have ti to articulate any of that right now.

He sighed.

"At least the PR team has decided to take the case."

He stopped walking. He turned to face Tristan. The sudden turn startled the assistant, who had been mid-step.

"That reminds . The PR team is sending so people over here tomorrow. They are going to move in coordination with our internal dia team. Make sure you facilitate the cooperation. I do not want any friction between our people and theirs. The internal team can be a bit territorial, you know how they are. So manage it."

"Okay, sir, I will do that. Also, sir, I want to—"

"I want everything sorted out direct with them. Be hands-on with the project. Give them anything they need. Office space if they need it, our internal docunts within reason, access to our communications archive. Whatever they require."

Ed had turned back and was walking again, his pace not slowing.

The other employees on the floor were watching now. Two senior staff at the open desks near the eting room had paused mid-conversation. The communications director had stepped halfway out of her office and was watching Ed pass without saying anything. They were looking at him the way you look at an unfolding event, the way you look at sothing that is happening that you are not going to interrupt because interrupting it does not feel safe.

Ed did not notice any of it.

"The overall image they should—"

He had pulled up to the entrance of his own office, the corridor leading directly to the executive suite where his desk was. Tristan was still trailing him, still trying.

"Yes, sir, but sir, I really need to—"

Ed kept talking. The thoughts were pouring out faster than he could organise them.

"The overall image they should focus on is rebuilding trust with the supporters. Not the press, not the partners. The supporters. We have the press handled in the dium term. The partners are not going anywhere. The supporters are who we have lost and the supporters are who we need to recover. Tell them that. Tell them that is the brief. They need to lead with that—"

He paused.

His eyes had drifted to the front of his desk. Or rather, to the person who was standing there.

His sentence trailed.

Tristan, finally seeing his mont, rushed in.

"Sir, that is what I have been trying to say. You have—"

Ed put a hand on Tristan's shoulder.

"It's okay."

He said it quietly. The frustration that had been driving the entire walk down the corridor had drained out of him in the space of a single second.

"Just go for now. I will call you."

He looked at the person standing by the door. His voice trailed.

"When I need you."

He started walking toward the doorway. Tristan was still trying.

"Sir, I—"

But Ed was already walking. The assistant stood in the corridor for a mont, the breath he had been about to use still in his chest, and then slowly turned and walked back the way they had co, the questions he had been trying to ask still unanswered.

Ed walked toward the man at the doorway.

His mind was going in twelve directions at once. The state of him could only be described as pure and utter shock. Not because of who the man was, exactly, although that was part of it. But because of what the presence of this particular man in this particular doorway, on this particular morning, signalled. The specific institutional vocabulary of a presence that should not be here.

He walked the last few steps.

He stopped.

"What are you doing here?"

He said it to the man in front of him.

The man was wearing black on black. Suit. Shirt. Tie. Black sunglasses, even indoors. The cheekbones were strong. The fra underneath the suit was muscular in the specific way of soone whose physical condition was a job requirent. He looked exactly like what his job was. There was no way you could stand in front of this man and think anything other than bodyguard.

The bodyguard did not answer.

Ed had not really expected him to. He knew what bodyguards did and what bodyguards did not do, and answering questions from the people they were not specifically guarding was not on the list. The question had been asked anyway. Reflexively. Because the human brain does what the human brain does when it is presented with information it has not yet processed, which is to ask questions it already knows the answer to.

A bodyguard was here. That ant only one thing.

Ed took a breath.

"Is he inside?"

The bodyguard did not answer this either, which was its own kind of answer.

Ed stepped past him.

The office was Ed's. He had occupied it for nine years. He knew every surface, every angle. The Manchester United crest on the back wall, large, in the club's specific shade of red, mounted above the bookshelf. The desk in the centre, the leather chair he had picked himself, the frad photo of his children on the corner. The two armchairs by the window that he used for informal etings. The bar cabinet on the side wall, mostly for show, mostly for guests who expected the gesture.

The familiar room. The room he had walked into thousands of tis.

In the centre of it, by the window, with his back to the door, was the second familiar thing.

Joel Glazer.

The two familiar things, in combination, felt wrong. The room he knew, with the man he knew, in the configuration he had not seen in this room in literal years. The contrast of the two familiar elents together produced the specific sensation of a thing being out of place that the brain registered before it could explain why.

Ed pulled himself together.

"Joel. What brings you here?"

He smiled as he said it. He had been weird for a mont in the corridor and he knew it, and now he was course-correcting, putting the warmth into his voice, putting the smile on his face, doing the thing a senior executive does when an owner walks in unexpectedly.

The man at the window was Joel Glazer. The co-chairman of Manchester United. One of the six Glazer brothers who collectively owned the club through the family trust. And Ed's close friend, going back almost two decades.

Ed had been brought in by Joel personally back in 2005, when Ed was a senior executive at JP Morgan and the family had needed banking expertise to structure the leveraged buyout that had given them control of Manchester United in the first place. Ed had been the key personnel on that buyout from the JP Morgan side. He and Joel had spent eight months working closely together through it. And when the buyout closed, and the family needed soone to actually run the financial operations of their new acquisition, Joel had recomnded Ed.

That had been 2005.

In 2012, when the executive vice chairman role had opened up, Joel had recomnded Ed for that too. Pushed for him within the family. Made it happen against so internal opposition from his older brothers, who had wanted soone with more direct sports business experience. Joel had vouched for Ed. Joel had said Ed was the right man. Ed had taken the job.

That history was the foundation of why Ed was now standing in this doorway feeling the specific shock he was feeling.

Because Ed knew, from those nineteen years of close professional and personal proximity, exactly how little Joel Glazer and the Glazer family actually cared about Manchester United.

They cared. Of course they cared. Manchester United was one of the largest single investnts in the family's portfolio. They cared the way a real estate magnate cared about a high-value property. They monitored the financials. They took the dividends. They received the briefings.

But Ed who knew them personally knew THEY DIDN'T CARE.

Even Joel. Joel was the fifth youngest of the six Glazer brothers. Within the family hierarchy, he had been pushed into managing Manchester United precisely because Manchester United was, for the family, a less prestigious portfolio asset than the real estate operations or the financial holdings or the family's actually beloved possession, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Joel had been given Manchester United Cause the others didn't really want it. He was the chairman, well Co- Chairman. He had the title. But the title was the consolation prize of a younger sibling, not the trophy of a chosen heir.

The number of tis since 2005 that Joel had actually stepped into the executive wing of Old Trafford in person could be counted on both hands. Conference calls, yes. Emails, yes. The occasional appearance at a major match in the directors' box. But this corridor, this office, the place where the actual day-to-day operations of the club were run? Joel did not co here. He had not been here in nearly three years.

Which was why the sight of his back, frad against the window, looking out over Old Trafford, was the most disorienting visual Ed had registered in months.

He pulled himself together.

"You didn't tell you were coming. Matter of fact I didn't even know you were in the country."

Ed was moving across the room now, toward Joel at the window, the smile still on his face.

"You should have said sothing. Are you okay? Do you need anything? Let get you so water."

Joel and Ed were friends. That was true. But friendship did not change the fact that Joel was Ed's employer, that the Glazer family paid Ed's salary, that Ed worked for them. The instinct to offer water, to play the host, to defer to the visitor, was a deep professional instinct that nineteen years of close friendship had not erased.

"Let just tell Tristan to bring a bottle of—"

"Leave it."

The voice was heavy. Solemn. The kind of voice that did not co out of Joel often, and when it did co out of him, it did not invite continuation of whatever conversation it had interrupted.

Ed stopped.

He looked at Joel. The back of Joel's head, still facing the window, had not turned.

"Oh. Okay."

He said it softly.

In the sa solemn tone, Joel's voice ca again.

"Look at this."

Ed stood there for a beat, processing the instruction. Joel still had not turned around. His eyes had not left the window. Ed started walking toward him, slowly now, the smile gone from his face.

He reached the window.

The window of Ed's office on the executive floor of Old Trafford overlooked the main approach to the stadium, the entrance plaza, the wide concourse where on matchdays the supporters massed before kick-off. From this height, with the angle of the glass, you could see the whole front of the building. You could see the gates. You could see the security cordons. You could see the protesters.

There were hundreds of them.

The crowd Ed had glimpsed from the underground entrance was visible now in its full extent. The placards held up. The banners stretched between groups. The chant moving through the mass like a wave, the cycle of it audible even through the glass at this distance, the Glazers Out repeating and repeating.

Ed had seen all of this when he pulled in. He looked at it again now, beside Joel, and felt the sa tight, frustrated knot in his chest that he had been carrying since the morning.

He turned to Joel.

"I know how it looks. But I already—"

"See what they are holding."

Joel cut him off.

The sa way Ed had cut Tristan off in the corridor twenty minutes earlier. The cycle continuing. Ed not letting his assistant get a word in. Joel not letting Ed get a word in. The institutional hierarchy doing what the institutional hierarchy always did, which was to flow downward from whoever was higher in the room.

"Holding?"

Ed's train of thought broke. He looked out again. He squinted against the morning light coming through the glass.

The placards.

Most of them carried various ssages. Listen to the fans. Football belongs to us. Withdraw or perish. The standard repertoire. But one phrase appeared more frequently than any other, on board after board after board. Painted in red. The kind of red that, in places, had been allowed to drip down the white background of the placard, deliberately, to look like blood.

GlazersOut.

Hundreds of them. Hundreds of placards with the sa two words. The most repeated phrase in the entire crowd. Not No to the Super League. Not Withdraw. Not even Listen to us.

GlazersOut.

Of course Ed did not say the answer out loud. He looked at Joel again, and as Joel still had not turned to face him, Ed started talking. The professional voice arriving on autopilot, the executive register kicking in, the years of crisis communication training surfacing.

"Like I was saying. I know it's bad. But we already have Edelman, the best PR firm in the country, coming tomorrow. They have done this before. They handled the Murdoch situation in 2011. They handled the BP gulf spill recovery from the corporate side. They know how to manage exactly this kind of multi-front backlash. The brief I have given them is to lead with humility, acknowledge the misstep in clear terms, and pivot to a series of community-facing actions that demonstrate the family's continuing commitnt to the club."

He was warming up now. The professional was speaking.

"Within ten days I expect to see a asurable shift in sentint online. Within thirty days I expect the protests to have receded to a manageable baseline. By the start of next season I expect the news cycle to have moved entirely. We have done this before, Joel. The 2005 protests recovered. The Avram interview situation in 2014 recovered. Every brand crisis can be managed if the response is structured and disciplined and the people running it are professionals. We are professionals. The PR firm is professionals. We can do this."

Joel had not moved.

When he spoke, he cut Ed off again.

"You brought this idea of the Super League."

Ed stopped.

Joel was still looking at the window. His voice was quiet. The kind of quiet that arrived only when the person speaking had been sitting with sothing for a long ti and had decided exactly what they were going to say before they had walked into the room.

"I told you we shouldn't do this. I told you. From the first conversation. I said the political risk was too high. I said the family did not need this kind of exposure. I said our position with the Premier League and with UEFA was already complicated and we did not need to make it more complicated."

He paused, turned as stared at Ed with a little bit of resent in his eyes.

"You were the one who pushed on it. You were the one who said it was needed. You were the one who said the financial guarantees would solve the wage problem and stabilise the recovery plan. You were the one who said the family would benefit. I fought for you. With my brothers. With Avram. With the legal team. They did not want to do this. None of them. I was the one who said we should listen to Ed. I was the one who said Ed knows the football industry better than any of us. I was the one who put my na behind your na."

He paused again. The next breath was heavier.

"And now look at what they are holding."

Joel finally turned.

His eyes were not soft. They had the specific quality of a friend's eyes when the friendship was on the wrong side of a professional disaster.

"They are dragging my family na. My na. The na of my father. The na my brothers carry. They have spray-painted it on placards in red paint to look like blood. There are people in that crowd who would tell you, if you asked them, that they want my family physically removed from this country. There are people writing things online that I will not read because if I read them I will not sleep. I have a fourteen-year-old son who saw a tweet about yesterday and asked what it ant."

His voice was building now. Not loud. The opposite. Lower, denser, the pressure underneath the surface visible in the way the words ca out.

"This is what your idea has produced. This is the cost of the project I trusted you on. I am the one absorbing it. My family is the one absorbing it. And you are standing here telling that Edelman can fix it in thirty days."

Ed felt the venom in the words. He felt it land. The professional posture he had been holding for the last several minutes started to crack, not all at once, just a hairline fracture appearing along the seam.

"I know. I know. I'm sorry. I really thought—"

The words were spilling out faster than he could organise them.

"I know this is spiralling out of control. But I promise. No. I assure you. I already have a plan. All of this, all of it, will be stopped. Give ti."

He took a step forward.

His tactic shifted. The professional voice gave way to sothing else. Sothing more raw.

"Joel. You know . You have known for nineteen years. You brought in. We have been through the buyout. We have been through every major mont this club has had since 2005. Through the crises and the recoveries and the title wins and the failures. You know . Just trust . Once more. Just one more ti. Please."

He took another step.

His voice dropped.

"I just need ti."

Joel closed his eyes.

He raised his head. He rubbed both hands over his face, the heels of his palms pressing into his eye sockets, the fingers spread over his forehead. He held the position for a mont. Then he released a long, very heavy sigh, a sigh that ca from sowhere deeper than his lungs, and stepped away from the window.

He moved to the middle of the room. His back to Ed now in a different way, no longer the back of a man looking out at a problem, but the back of a man preparing to deliver sothing.

Ed stood at the window watching him.

When Joel spoke, his voice was almost broken. The words ca out of him like he was forcing each one into the air against the resistance of his own preference.

"Ti is the one thing I cannot give."

Ed's brows furrowed. He opened his mouth. Nothing ca out. He closed it again.

Joel continued. Unfortunately.

"Last night a group of protesters were able to identify Avram on his way back from a dinner in Central Park. They followed his car. They blocked it. He was stuck for fifteen minutes, Ed. Fifteen minutes in his own car, in New york, with the windows up and the doors locked and a crowd of people he did not know banging on the glass."

Ed's eyes widened.

"Is he okay?"

"He is okay. They were not violent. Or, they were not violent in the way that requires hospitals. They threw so paint pellets at the car. The blue and red of United, which was, I will admit, a particular kind of insulting choice. The driver eventually got the car moving. The police arrived approximately twelve minutes in and helped clear the road. Avram ca out of it with paint on the car and a bad night's sleep. Nothing else."

A breath.

"We were able to bury the news. The dinner host was a discreet person. And Thank God there was no press there and the people didn't seem to into giving away their identities."

Ed exhaled. The relief was small and imdiate. Then it was gone.

"But Ed. This is unacceptable. Things have gotten way out of hand. Avram is sixty-four years old. He should not be sitting in a parking lot in central London at midnight wondering if a crowd of protesters is going to break the glass on his car. That is not the position any of my brothers should be in. Because of a football club."

Ed nodded slowly.

"I know. I'm sorry. I will personally make sure I convey my apologies to Chairman Avram. I will call him today. I will fly out if he wants to et in person."

Avram. The eldest of the six Glazer brothers. The official co-chairman of Manchester United alongside Joel, a title that had beco largely honorary as Avram's interest in the day-to-day had drifted to the family's other holdings. Compared to Avram, Joel could be said to be an attentive chairman. Joel an attentive chairman That alone showed how the bar was very low.

"We are way past the point of sorry."

Joel turned. He looked at Ed directly.

He sighed once more.

"This morning, while I was on the plane here, the family completed an ergency damage control session. Avram, the brothers, the legal team, our communications consultants on the US side. The session ran for four hours. By the ti I was landing at City Airport, the eting had concluded."

Ed's voice ca out dry. Patched. The voice of a man who had read the writing on the wall and was making himself ask the question anyway because there was no version of this room in which he did not ask it.

"And the plan is."

Joel looked him straight in the eye. His voice ca out firr than it had been at any point since Ed had entered the room.

"They reached the conclusion that to appease the supporters, To recover institutional standing, To draw a line under this episode in a way that allows the family to move forward, there has to be a public accountability mont. Soone has to wear this publicly. Soone has to be the face of the strategic decision that the supporters are protesting. Soone whose departure from the club signals to the supporters that their voices were heard."

Ed felt everywhere shaking.

His body language had started moving without his permission. The weight had shifted onto his back foot. His hand, which had been at his side, had risen halfway to his chest and then stopped, frozen, in the middle. His mouth had gone dry. He swallowed a thick spit.

Before he could speak, Joel continued.

"Ed. By today the board would really appreciate it if you could tender your resignation."

Joel said it carefully. The words spaced. The phrasing entirely professional, the kind of phrasing the legal team would have signed off on, the kind of language that would survive in minutes and in legal correspondence and in the eventual press release. Tender your resignation. The three-word euphemism that ant we are removing you and giving you the dignity of doing it yourself.

"No."

Ed said it before he had decided to say it. The word arrived in the room before the thought.

"No."

He took a step forward. Toward Joel.

"No, we don't need to go that far."

He was speaking faster now. The sentences running into each other.

"Joel, with the plan, with Edelman, with the PR coordination, we can still salvage this. We can still recover the position. The brand is not destroyed. The institutional relationships are not destroyed. The Premier League will not pursue further sanctions if we are seen to be in proper recovery mode. We have a Champions League qualification that we can lean on. We have the new shirt sponsor cycle coming up. We have the stadium plans in the next eighteen months. We have everything we need to reset. We just need—"

He moved closer.

"Joel. Just call Avram. I know I fucked up. I know. I am not pretending I did not. But this does not need to go this far. This has not reached the point where I have to. We can recover this. I can recover this. Just give the chance to."

Joel shook his head slowly.

"I'm sorry. The decision has already been made."

His voice broke on the last word, just slightly. A small crack, the kind of crack that surfaced when a man was forcing himself through a sentence he did not enjoy delivering.

"I'm sorry, my friend."

Ed stood frozen.

Joel sighed once more. A heavy, slow sigh. Then he stepped forward, the small distance closing between them, and put both hands on Ed's shoulders.

"I know this isn't ideal. I know. But I want you to know. I am still behind you. I promised you, when you left JP Morgan to co to us in 2005, that the family would always look after you. I am not breaking that promise now. When you are done with everything here, when the transition is complete, you can co back to my side. The US side. There are roles within the family's portfolio that would suit you. Real estate. Strategic advisory. You na it."

He smiled. A small, slightly forced smile, the kind a man wore when he was trying to lighten sothing that could not actually be lightened.

"I'm sure you miss the US. I am sure you miss the weather at the very least. Hahaha."

Joel laughed. A short, dry laugh.

"That Super League thing. I am still even confused why you went with it in the first place. I an, I get the financial logic, but the political risk was so obvious from the start. Well, it's—"

"Why?"

The voice that ca back was small. So small Joel did not catch it.

Ed had said the word. He had said it without looking up. He had said it almost to himself. The word had co out of him at a volu that the air of the room had not registered.

"Pardon?"

Joel said it kindly. The way you said it to soone whose voice had not carried.

"Ptsss. Ha ha ha."

Ed started laughing. A small, dispirited laugh. He shook his head as he laughed. He laughed again. Then again, slightly louder.

"You are seriously asking why?"

He raised his head. His eyes were wet at the corners but he was not crying. He was sothing else. Sothing past crying.

"Are you for real?"

He pushed Joel's hands off his shoulders.

"Ed?"

Joel was startled. The shoulders he had been holding a second ago were now stepping back from him, and the man whose shoulders they were was looking at him with sothing that was not the dispirited resignation of a mont ago.

It was the start of anger.

"You seriously have the mind to ask why I did that."

Ed's voice ca out controlled, but only just.

"Joel. I get you are hurt right now—"

"Hurt? Hurt? No. Forget that. We are way past hurt."

Ed got angrier. The voice climbing.

"You want to know why I pushed for the Super League. You. Want. To know. Joel. Let remind you. When the club made three hundred million euros in operating profit in 2017, your family ca in and took one hundred million euros out of that to buy a shopping centre in Tampa. A shopping centre. Not for the club. Not even for the family's main holdings. For a side investnt in a city your team plays in."

He was building now.

"And the ti before that. When the money was already budgeted for the East Stand renovations. Already budgeted, already allocated, already approved by the planning committee. You all pulled it. To fund a hedge bet on tech stocks that you did not even fully understand. I was in the eting where that decision was made. I argued against it. I lost. The renovations got pushed back two years."

He stepped forward.

"Or the ti that the dividend payout was structured specifically to extract capital from the club at the highest possible leverage point. Or the ti the manager wanted four players in a window and we delivered him two because the third and fourth were too expensive at exactly the mont that the family was making private acquisitions in Florida. Or the ti I had to explain to Sir Alex why we could not match City's wage offer for a midfielder we had been chasing for two years."

His voice was raised now. His body was shaking. Not from fear. From the seventeen years of compressed frustration finally finding the only door it had ever been allowed to find.

"And the list goes on. And on. And on."

He stepped closer to Joel.

"And you. Dare. Stand. Here. Asking. . Why?"

His finger ca up. Not pointing, exactly. Hovering.

"You are why. Your whole family is why. You have ti and ti and ti again set back months. Years. In planning. In rebuild cycles. In transfer windows. In stadium investnt. In comrcial developnt. Every single one of you, every single ti the club has produced surplus capital, has reached your hands in and pulled it out for whatever else you wanted to spend it on. And now you want to be the fall guy. For trying to save your club."

He was almost shouting now.

"Are you all playing with ?"

This was the reason Ed had fought for the Super League. Unlike the rest of his Premier League counterparts, whose billionaire owners funnelled hundreds of millions of pounds of personal capital into their clubs season after season, the Glazers were the opposite. They only took. They only took. And they took, and they took, and they took. Every year they took. Putting Manchester United in a financial position that was always slightly more constrained than the position the club's comrcial revenues would otherwise have allowed for. Setting back Ed's plans by years at a ti. Forcing him, season after season, to manage downward expectations that should not have needed to be downwardly managed at all.

The Super League had been the only proposal he had been able to find that would have allowed him to break that cycle. A guaranteed revenue stream of a magnitude that the family would not have been able to fully extract. A structural change to the financial model that would have, at least partially, locked the family out of the cookie jar.

That was why he had pushed for it.

That was why he had spent eighteen months on the project.

That was the why.

Joel stood there.

His face had gone through several stages in the last sixty seconds. The shock of the first push-back. The flicker of his own anger rising. The recognition, sowhere in the middle of Ed's monologue, of how true so of what was being said actually was. The defensive instinct of a man who had never in his adult life been spoken to this way by an employee.

In his life, no one had spoken to him this way. He was a Glazer. He was the co-chairman of Manchester United. He was the fifth-youngest brother of a family that controlled multiple billions of dollars in assets. People did not say these things to him. People said the cleaned-up versions of these things, in writing, through lawyers, behind his back, in private rooms he was not in.

Ed was saying it to his face.

For a mont, Joel was about to step forward. The instinct was there. The body was preparing. Ed was, frankly, an employee. Ed was soone Joel had treated with a friendship that had been, in retrospect, perhaps too generous given the actual professional dynamic. Ed had been offered, even now, a role on Joel's side back in the US, because Joel had wanted to take care of him. And this was the response.

Joel took half a step forward.

Ed did not back away. Ed's face was square to him. Ed was ready. Ed had been waiting, on so level, for nineteen years, to say all of this out loud.

Joel saw it.

He stopped.

He raised his hands slightly. The opposite of a fighting stance. The shoulders coming down.

He shook his head.

"No."

His face cald. The instinct of confrontation released itself. Whatever had been about to happen, did not happen.

"I won't do this with you, Ed."

He took a breath.

"I know this is not you. I have known you for nineteen years. This is not how you speak. This is not how you operate. This is the version of you that has been carrying the weight of this morning, of these last seventy-two hours, of frankly probably a great deal more than I am giving you credit for, and it is coming out now. I understand it. I am not going to take it personally. I am not going to engage with it. We are not going to do this here."

He looked Ed straight in the eye. His voice steadied into the institutional register, the chairman's voice, the voice he had not used in this conversation until exactly now.

"You will be professional about the next few days. The board expects your formal resignation to be submitted today. By the close of business. The communications team will issue the public statent tomorrow morning, along with your final remarks, which we will prepare for you. You will remain in role for a transition period of approximately three to four weeks while we identify and onboard your replacent. You will train them. You will oversee the handover. You will make this clean for the institution."

He paused.

"And when you have done that, when the transition is complete, the offer I made stands. There is a place for you on my side back ho. I will be waiting for you."

He raised his hand, started to bring it up to Ed's shoulder again.

He stopped. Mid-air. He saw Ed's face and he stopped. The hand pulled back.

He shook his head, just slightly.

He turned, and walked to the door.

At the door, he paused. He looked back.

"I'm sorry."

He left.

The bodyguard followed him out. The door closed behind them.

Ed stood there.

He did not move.

His hands were shaking. Not visibly, but he could feel it inside his fingers. The amount of force he was exerting through them, fingers clenched into fists, was producing the small fine tremor that ca when a body had decided to physically restrain itself but had not been told what to do with the restraint.

He turned and faced his desk.

He raised his right hand. The fist ca up. He looked at the desk in front of him. The leather pad. The frad photo of his children. The phone. The closed laptop.

He brought the fist down.

It stopped in the air halfway. The aggression drained out of him in the last six inches of the swing. He let the hand land on the desk softly, more like a tap than a strike. He bounced it twice on the leather pad. Then once more.

He sat down.

He leaned back in his chair. He looked at the ceiling. He stayed there for a long minute. Then another. Then a third.

A knock on the door.

Tristan.

"Sir? Sir, are you alright?"

Ed did not answer.

Another knock.

"Sir. The PR firm has called. They want to confirm the eting tomorrow. Should I take a ssage?"

Ed closed his eyes.

"Send him away."

His voice ca out flatter than he intended it to. Tristan, who knew that voice, who had heard it across nine years of working together, recognised what kind of voice it was. There was a small pause on the other side of the door. Then footsteps, retreating.

Ed sat there for five full minutes.

He stared at the ceiling. At the corner of his office. At the photograph of his children on the desk in front of him. At the frad match shirt that Sir Alex Ferguson had given him the year he retired.

His head was very quiet.

What is wrong with .

The thought arrived without invitation. It sat there.

He thought about the day he had first been offered this role. 2012. He had been at JP Morgan still, doing the strategic advisory work he had been doing for the family for years. The vice chairman role had opened up. Joel had called him personally. And Ed, sitting in his Manhattan office, had been against it. He rembered that specifically. He had not wanted to be tied down in a sports club. He had said no the first ti. He had said no the second ti. He had said yes the third ti, with significant reservations, and only after Joel had personally talked him into it across a dinner in New York that had gone past midnight.

A sports club. He had used those words. He rembered using them.

What changed.

He sat there, and the answer arrived. Slowly. Without ceremony.

He had changed.

This sport, this club, had been more contagious than he had given it credit for. He could not even rember when, exactly, the job had stopped being a job. When it had turned into sothing he thought about on weekends. When the Manchester United crest on the wall had stopped being a piece of office decoration and had started being a thing he looked at in the morning when he ca in.

He was looking at the crest now. The large red shield mounted above the bookshelf. The sa shield he had been looking at, on and off, for nine years.

He muttered to himself.

"I guess it's all over now."

He leaned forward.

He opened his laptop. The screen lit. The Manchester United wallpaper he had been using for three years stared back at him. He clicked on the Word icon.

A blank docunt opened.

The cursor blinked.

He sat with his hands on the keyboard. They were heavy. They had been heavy ever since Joel had said the word resignation, but now, with the white space in front of him and the cursor blinking at the top left of the page, the heaviness of his hands was the actual physical weight of the mont. He could not move them. He could feel each finger separately. He could feel the cool of the keys under the pads of his fingertips.

He stared at the blank space.

He did not type.

He stared.

And just like that, he was the first, and what would not be the last, victim of the Super League fallout.

After seven years and eight months in the role, Ed Woodward 'resigned' from his position as Executive Vice Chairman of Manchester United Football Club.

The story would, in the days and weeks that followed, be presented in the press as exactly what it was officially being presented as. A senior executive taking responsibility for a strategic misjudgnt. A clean transition. A man stepping aside to allow new leadership to lead the recovery.

Nobody would write the version that included the conversation in his office that Tuesday morning. Nobody would write the version that included the seventeen years of capital extraction, the cycles of frustration, the projects that had never been allowed to land. Nobody would write the version that included a friend laying both hands on a friend's shoulders and removing him from a job, and a friend pushing those hands off and saying the things that should have been said years earlier.

That version would never make a paper.

The official version would be the one that survived.

After seven years and eight months, the Glazer family's most senior football executive was gone. The man who had built the comrcial machine that had made Manchester United the most lucrative football brand on Earth, who had restructured the kit deals and the global partnerships and the matchday revenue and the Asia tour cycles, who had presided over more transfer windows than any other executive in the modern history of the club, was no longer one of its officers.

He was, simply, finished.

His career in football was over.

It would not, in his case, restart. He would not, in any aningful way, work in the sport again. He would take Joel's offer. He would go back to the US. He would manage real estate portfolios in Florida and make occasional contributions to industry publications and would, over the years, beco exactly the kind of figure that football's comrcial side produced when the people inside it were used up by it.

But that was later.

Right now, on this morning, in this office, with the cursor still blinking on the blank Word docunt, Ed Woodward sat at his desk and did not type.

Outside, the chant continued.

Glazers Out. Glazers Out. Glazers Out.

It would continue for many more years.

It had not, in any way, been about him.

...

anwhile in Spain. Barcelona, to be precise. Today was also in a fit or irony the start of soone else's true beginning with world football.

"Mateo. Dude. Everyone is waiting for you. The match is about to start. What are you doing?"

Pedri stood in the doorway. He had been looking for him for ten minutes.

"Are you on your phone?"

He said it surprised, eyebrows up.

Mateo looked up from where he was sitting. The phone was still in his hand. The smile on his face was a smile Pedri had not seen on him before.

He put the phone down.

"I was just wrapping sothing up."

He stood. He moved toward Pedri.

"Where are the rest?"

"They are by the tunnel already. Waiting for you."

Pedri tilted his head.

"What were you doing? The match is about to start."

Mateo's smile stayed.

"It's a surprise."

He tapped Pedri on the shoulder as he passed.

"Okay. I am going. Later."

He took off down the corridor, leaving Pedri standing in the doorway with the question still in his mouth and the answer running ahead of him toward the pitch.

A/N

If you want to read chapters ahead with uploads and to support subscribe to my Patreon below There is also a picture of how mateo looks like posted and later there would be votes and all on the site so you wont need to pay to vote but you can if you want to support thanks

patreon/David_Adetola

Thank You your support is greatly appreciated thank you all

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