In midfield, the battles were fierce. McArthur and Milivojević were snarling, competitive animals, their tackles echoing around the stadium. Bojan, the tactical engine, was everywhere, his intelligent pressing a masterclass in defensive forward play.
Eze, a box of tricks, was a joy to watch, his quick feet and audacious skills drawing gasps from the crowd. Navas, the wily veteran, was a calming influence, his experience a vital counterpoint to the youthful exuberance around him.
Gnabry was a livewire, his direct running and explosive pace a constant threat. Even the goalkeeping union: Mandanda, Hennessey, and Pope were putting on a show, a series of breathtaking saves in their own specialized drills, coached by the ever-enthusiastic Michael Steele.
But the star of the show, the man everyone had co to see, was Jas Rodríguez. He was playing a different ga to everyone else. He floated around the pitch, an ethereal presence, the ball seemingly attached to his feet by an invisible string.
There was a languid grace to everything he did, a sense that the chaos around him was rely a backdrop for his private symphony. He produced a mont of such subli, breathtaking genius that the entire stadium fell silent. He received a pass on the half-turn, about thirty yards from goal.
Without looking, he played a first-ti, outside-of-the-boot reverse pass that curled around two defenders and landed perfectly in the path of the onrushing Pato. It was a pass that defied geotry, a piece of art painted on a canvas of green.
Pato, to his credit, finished the move with a clinical, first-ti shot into the bottom corner. But the crowd wasn’t cheering for the goal. They were cheering for the pass. They were cheering for the artist.
Jas just smiled, that shy, boyish grin, and gave a thumbs-up to Pato. It was all so easy for him. I glanced at the U18s on the sideline. Their mouths were hanging open. Good. Let them see what the summit looks like.
I blew the whistle, calling a halt to the session. The players, drenched in sweat, their chests heaving, walked over to the stands to applaud the fans. The noise was deafening.
The players spent the next half an hour signing autographs, posing for selfies, their faces a picture of genuine happiness. I saw Zaha give his training top to a young boy in a wheelchair. I saw Sakho lift a small girl onto his shoulders so she could see better. It was a club united, a family.
As I walked towards the tunnel, my mind was already turning to the final pieces of the puzzle. The UEFA A Licence final assessnt was looming, a huge, terrifying hurdle on the 9th of August, just three days before the season opener against Stoke.
The pressure was imnse. I had been waking up at three in the morning, my mind churning through session plans and tactical presentations, rehearsing answers to questions that hadn’t been asked yet. I was so lost in my own world that I didn’t see Dougie Freedman until he was right beside , a phone pressed to his ear.
He finished his call and turned to , a strange, almost giddy look on his face. "You’re not going to believe this," he said.
"Try ," I replied, my curiosity piqued.
"That was Michael Enalo at Chelsea," he said. "They want to loan us Tammy Abraham for the season. No loan fee. And they’re covering his entire salary."
I just stared at him. The words hung in the warm sumr air between us, almost too good to be real. It was a gift from the footballing gods. A free swing. The System, my silent, ever-present companion, confird it with a cool, logical ping.
[Opportunity Alert: High Potential Signing. Player: Tammy Abraham. System Fit: 95%. Financial Risk: 0%. Recomndation: Accept Imdiately.]
[Context: Chelsea have just signed Álvaro Morata. They need Tammy Abraham to get a full season of Premier League football to continue his developnt. This is a strategic move on their part. It is also a huge opportunity for you.]
I didn’t need the System to tell what to do. I looked at Dougie, a wide, incredulous grin spreading across my face. "Get it done," I said. "Right now. Before they realize what they’re doing."
Dougie was already dialling before I’d finished the sentence. He gave a quick nod and walked briskly back towards the offices, the phone clamped to his ear, his free hand gesticulating as he began the negotiation that was, in truth, barely a negotiation at all.
Later that day, the second road presented itself. It wasn’t a gift from a superclub; it was a discovery, a piece of pure, old-fashioned scouting, albeit with a modern, data-driven twist. Marcus Reid, my lead analyst, ca into my office, his laptop under his arm, a missionary zeal in his eyes.
"Gaffer," he said, his voice trembling with excitent. "I’ve found him. The one."
He opened his laptop and for the next twenty minutes, he walked through a presentation on Jarrod Bowen, a 20-year-old winger from the recently relegated Hull City. It was a symphony of data.
Heatmaps, scatter graphs, percentile rankings. He showed that Bowen’s off-the-ball movent, his pressing stats, his expected goals and assists... they were all in the top five percent for his position in the Championship.
He was a statistical anomaly, a world-class player hiding in plain sight. Marcus pulled up video clips to accompany the numbers, and what I saw confird everything. Bowen attacked the channels with a hunger that couldn’t be coached. He anticipated where the ball would be half a second before it arrived. He was relentless.
"He’s a perfect system player, gaffer," Marcus concluded, his face flushed with passion. "He’s fast, he’s direct, he works his socks off, and he’s got an eye for goal. And because Hull have gone down, we can get him for a bargain. I’ve spoken to their sporting director. Two million pounds. It’s a robbery."
I looked at the numbers, at the irrefutable, black-and-white evidence on the screen. The System confird it with a quiet, satisfied chi.
[Player Profile: Jarrod Bowen. Potential Ability: 165. System Fit: 92%. A perfect, low-risk, high-reward signing.]
I leaned back in my chair, a sense of profound clarity washing over . The two roads. One, a gift from a footballing giant, a logical, zero-risk move that had fallen into our lap. The other, a hidden gem, was unearthed by our own hard work, our own intelligence, our own system. Both were essential. Both were a part of the new Crystal Palace we were building.
I picked up the phone and called Dougie. "I’ve got another one for you," I said, a smile in my voice. "Get your chequebook out."
That evening, as I drove away from the training ground, the sky a bruised, beautiful purple, I felt a sense of completion. The squad was done.
The pieces were in place. The fans were with us. The new season was a blank page, waiting to be written. The journey was far from over. In many ways, it was just beginning. But for the first ti, I felt like we were on the right road. Both of them. And I couldn’t wait to see where they would take us.
***
Thank you to Sir nayelus for the constant support and dedication to the story.
User Comments
0 comments from readers