[GOAL CONCEDED. JJ Johnson. xG: 0.41. Through ball exploiting Konaté’s misjudgent of flight. Johnson’s acceleration: 0 to top speed in 2.8 seconds elite level, comparable to the fastest forwards in European football.]
[Finish: left foot, inside of far post. The technique is identical to drills logged in the Moss Side Athletic training database. He learned this from you.]
[Personal assessnt: Johnson’s raw talent is exceptional. His decision-making and positional awareness require developnt. With 18-24 months of elite coaching, he could beco a top-level striker. Note this for future transfer windows.]
But this was Crystal Palace. We did not fold. Not under Danny Walsh.
I stepped to the edge of my technical area. "PUSH! Width! Wilf, go at them! They’ve opened up now EXPLOIT IT!"
Brighton, buoyed by the equaliser, had abandoned the low block. They were pushing for a second, believing the montum had shifted. It was the worst mistake they could have made. Because a Brighton team that attacks is a Brighton team that leaves space. And space was where we lived.
In the eighty-third minute, Neves won the ball in midfield and played a quick, incisive pass to Navas on the right. Navas drove forward, drew two defenders, and slipped the ball inside to Rodríguez.
The Colombian, operating on a different plane to everyone else on the pitch, played a disguised, no-look reverse pass into the path of Zaha, who was storming in from the left wing. Zaha took one touch, looked up, and hamred a low, hard shot across the goalkeeper and into the far corner. The technique was devastating. The timing was perfect. The noise was deafening.
Crystal Palace 2–1 Brighton. Zaha. 83 minutes.
[GOAL. Wilfried Zaha. xG: 0.22. Counter-attack initiated by Neves recovery. Rodríguez assist disguised reverse pass. Zaha finish: low, driven, across the goalkeeper. Brighton’s decision to abandon the low block after equalising has been punished within 5 minutes. This is tactical Darwinism.]
Zaha sprinted to the corner flag, sliding on his knees, the Holsdale bouncing behind him. I turned to Kevin Bray on the bench. "One more, Kev. Kill it."
And in the eighty-ninth minute, Bray delivered. A corner from the right. Rodríguez’s delivery flat, hard, vicious, aid at the near post. Dann, the captain, got a flick-on, the ball deflecting off his head and looping towards the back post.
Benteke, who had been manhandled by Dunk and Duffy all afternoon and hadn’t complained once, rose above both of them, his body a monunt to physical power, and thundered a header into the roof of the net. The ball nearly tore through the netting. It was the goal of a man who had been waiting all match for one chance, and had taken it with savage, beautiful violence.
Crystal Palace 3–1 Brighton. Benteke. 89 minutes.
[GOAL. Christian Benteke. Header. Set-piece routine KB-22 (Kevin Bray). Near-post flick: Dann. Finish: Benteke. xG: 0.34. Benteke has now scored in consecutive ho matches. Kevin Bray’s set-piece portfolio: 5 goals from designed routines in the first 4 Premier League matches. This is an extraordinary conversion rate.]
Peter Drury brought it ho. "And Crystal Palace have put this beyond doubt! Benteke rises, Benteke conquers! Three-one, and Danny Walsh’s remarkable, relentless, unbeaten machine rolls on! Thirteen matches played. Twelve wins. One draw. No defeats. This is not a fairytale anymore. This is a dynasty in the making."
The final whistle blew. I shook Hughton’s hand a good man, a dignified manager, a handshake that said well played, no hard feelings. Then I walked onto the pitch. The players were celebrating, the fans were singing, but I was looking for one person.
I found him near the centre circle. JJ was standing with his hands on his hips, his chest heaving, sweat glistening on his forehead.
He looked exhausted but alive, the look of a young man who had just had the best twenty minutes of his life. I walked up to him and pulled him into a hug. Not a manager and an opposing player. Two n from Moss Side who had made it to the promised land.
"You scored against , you little sod," I said into his ear.
He laughed, breathless and genuine. "You taught that finish, gaffer. Bla yourself."
I pulled back and looked at him. "You were brilliant, JJ. The pace, the movent, the goal you belong at this level. But you know what I’m going to say."
His smile faded slightly. He knew. "The positioning."
"The positioning," I confird.
"You were too narrow in the build-up. You overran that pass in the seventy-fourth minute because you were too eager. And when you collected the throw-in, you should have laid it off and spun you’re fast enough to get behind anyone, but you don’t always need to beat them from the front. Sotis the smart run is the one they don’t see."
He listened, his eyes locked on mine, absorbing every word. The Gaffer’s Player. Even now, even in a Brighton shirt, even after scoring against my team, he was still listening to like I was the only coach in the world.
"You’ve got the talent to play at the very highest level, JJ," I said quietly, making sure the caras couldn’t hear.
"The pace, the instinct, those things can’t be taught. But the intelligence, the positioning, the patience, those things can. And they’re what separate good players from great ones." I held his gaze. "Keep working. Keep learning. Because one day, I’m coming back for you."
His eyes widened, a flash of ambition crossing his face. He didn’t say anything. He just nodded. Then he grabbed my hand, held it, and said: "I’ll be ready, gaffer."
I watched him walk towards the tunnel, his Brighton shirt already halfway over his head, and I thought about the distance between a mud-soaked pitch in Moss Side and the pristine grass of Selhurst Park. Two years. Two worlds. And a kid who had followed into one of them and found his own way into the other.
[FULL TI: Crystal Palace 3–1 Brighton & Hove Albion.]
[Goals: Rodríguez 62’, Zaha 83’, Benteke 89’. Brighton: JJ Johnson 78’.]
[Manager Record: P13 W12 D1 L0. GF: 42. GA: 7. Unbeaten in 13.]
[Player of Note: JJ Johnson (Brighton). 20 minutes played. 1 goal. 3 sprints exceeding 34km/h. Raw acceleration: elite tier. Tactical awareness: developing. Decision-making: inconsistent. Overall assessnt: exceptional potential, 18-24 months from top-level readiness. Transfer recomndation: MONITOR. Reassess in January.]
[Next Match: Olympique de Marseille (A).]
[Europa League Group H, Matchday 1. Thursday, September 14th. Velodro Stadium. The first group stage match in Crystal Palace’s history. Five days to prepare.]
Five days. Marseille. We were going to the Velodro Stadium. The first European group stage match in the club’s 112-year history.
But as I walked towards the tunnel, the roar of the crowd fading behind , my mind kept drifting back to a nineteen-year-old kid in a Brighton shirt who had touched his chest and looked at across thirty yards of grass, and I knew with a certainty that went beyond the System, beyond the data, beyond anything I could quantify that the story of Danny Walsh and JJ Johnson was far from over.
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