The referee, Michael Oliver, raises the whistle to his lips. The sound is a sharp, clean cut through the roaring cacophony of the Etihad.
It is the sound of the beginning, the single note that starts the symphony of battle. And as the sound reaches my ears, standing on the precipice of my technical area, the world seems to fracture, to fold in on itself, and for a fleeting, disorienting second, I am not here at all.
I’m back in my room at The Lowry Hotel, just a few hours ago. The pre-match al is a warm, settled feeling in my stomach, the tactical briefing complete, the players in their rooms going through their final private rituals.
There is a nervous energy thrumming through the hotel, a low hum of anticipation. But in my room, it is quiet. I am alone, the television on, the volu low. Sky Sports, the Monday Night Football pre-show was in full swing.
On the screen, David Jones is flanked by the two high priests of football punditry, Jamie Carragher and Gary Neville. They are standing in front of a giant, glittering touchscreen showing the two team lineups. The mood is jovial, but with an undercurrent of serious tactical analysis.
It’s strange watching them. Two weeks ago, before the Stoke match, these sa two n had sat in the sa studio and discussed Crystal Palace as the story of the sumr. Carragher had called our transfer window "a masterclass."
He had compared our squad depth favourably to Manchester United’s. He had said my recruitnt was "unlike anything I’ve seen from a young English coach." And Neville, more cautious as always, had praised the results but added his caveat: "Let’s see where Crystal Palace are in February."
Now, here they are again. Sa studio. Sa pundits. Different question. Not *can Palace compete?* but *can Palace compete at the Etihad, against the best team in England, on the biggest stage of the season so far?*
"Let’s talk about the visitors, then," David Jones says, leaning forward. "Crystal Palace. Nine wins from nine under Danny Walsh. Two-nil in Istanbul on Thursday. They’ve beaten Stoke five-one at ho. They’ve looked sensational. Jamie... you were full of praise for them two weeks ago. Do you still feel the sa way tonight?"
Carragher shifts in his seat, and I can see the conflict on his face. This is a man who has nailed his colours to the Palace mast on national television and now has to reconcile that with the cold reality of a Monday night at the Etihad.
"Look," he says, and the Scouse accent is asured now, more careful than it was in the Stoke preview.
"I stand by everything I said before. The squad Walsh has built is outstanding. The recruitnt, the depth, the coaching... it’s all first-class. But this is a completely different proposition. This is Manchester City. At the Etihad. Under the lights. And the question tonight isn’t whether Palace are a good team. They are. The question is whether they’re good enough to co here and go toe-to-toe with Guardiola."
He pauses, jabbing a finger at the touchscreen.
"And I’ll be honest, David. I don’t think they will. I think Walsh is too smart for that. He’s got the pace of Zaha and Navas on the wings, he’s got Benteke to hold the ball up, and he’s got Rodríguez to find the killer pass on the break. This is a team built for the counter-attack. And I think that’s exactly what we’ll see... a deep block, two banks of four, and Palace trying to hit City on the transition. It’s what worked here last season. The question is whether Pep has learned from it."
David Jones turns to Neville. "Gary?"
Neville nods, his expression serious.
"I agree with Jamie on the setup. Walsh will be pragmatic. He proved that last season... he ca here with a squad that was, frankly, nowhere near the level of what he has now. He played a low block, a classic smash-and-grab, and he got away with it. It was a one-nil that could have been three or four to City on another day."
He pauses. "But here’s the thing. Pep Guardiola does not make the sa mistake twice. He will have studied that defeat all sumr. He’ll have a plan for the low block. He’ll have a solution for the counter. City were complacent that night. Tonight, they will be ruthless."
"Score prediction?" Jones asks.
"Three-nil City," Neville says without hesitation. "I said after the Stoke match that we should wait and see. This is the see. This is where the fairytale ets reality."
Jones turns to Carragher. "Jamie?"
Carragher blows out his cheeks. "It pains to say it, because I’ve been banging the drum for this lad all sumr. But Gary’s right. You can’t pull the sa trick on Pep twice. The squad is better, the talent is better, but the approach will be the sa... and City will be ready for it."
He holds up three fingers. "Three-one. Palace might nick a goal from a set-piece or a mont of magic from Rodríguez. But it’ll be a comfortable night for the champions."
I lean forward and turn off the television. The screen goes black, my own reflection staring back at .
*Predictable.*
The word hangs in the silent room. They had praised the squad. They had praised the recruitnt.
They had even praised . But when it ca to the biggest test of the season, they had looked at the team sheet, seen the 4-2-3-1, and seen a defensive shell. They had assud I would play the sa way I played four months ago, with a different squad, a different system, and a different ambition.
They didn’t see the press triggers. They didn’t see the tactical flexibility... the six-phase system we had deployed against Stoke, the mid-block-to-counter-attack shift that had dismantled Fenerbahçe.
They didn’t see the hours of work that had gone into evolving Walshball from a defensive survival tool into a multi-faceted weapon that could change shape three, four, five tis in a single match.
They saw Navas on the right wing and assud he was there to sit deep and defend. They didn’t know he was there to run at ndy, his forr teammate, with the fury of a man who had been discarded.
They saw Rodríguez in the number ten and assud he would drop deep and screen. They didn’t know he was there to lead the press, to force errors, to play fifty-yard through balls in the spaces their high line would leave behind.
They were expecting a smash-and-grab. They were expecting a low block. They were expecting a team that had co to survive.
A slow, dangerous smile spreads across my face. I stand up, the quiet confidence of a man who knows a secret that no one else does. Carragher, for all his praise, had made the sa mistake as every other pundit in the country. He had judged the plan by the last ti he saw it. He hadn’t considered that the plan had evolved. That the manager had evolved.
Let them think that. Let them all think that.
The world snaps back into focus. The roar of the crowd, the vibrant green of the pitch, the electric tension in the air. Michael Oliver’s whistle is still echoing in my ears. The ga is on. And we are not here to survive. We are here to play.
***
Thank you to Sir nayelus for the support.
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