The January air at Carrington was sharp enough to bite through layers of thermal clothing, but out on Pitch One, the temperature was running incredibly hot.
The winter transfer window was still wide open for the rest of Europe, with clubs frantically negotiating loans and panic-buying strikers. But for Manchester United, the heavy lifting was completely finished. The incoming business was done, and the final piece of the outgoing puzzle was being filed as Anthony Martial officially signed a loan deal with an option to buy for Sevilla.
Out on the grass, the new arrivals were already integrating.
Marcus was suspended thirty feet in the air, sitting comfortably on the edge of the tal basket of the industrial cherry picker. Following his successful tactical experint the previous week, Marcus had instructed Alexander Vance to purchase the machine and make it a permanent fixture on Pitch One.
From his bird's-eye view, Marcus wasn't just watching the starting eleven. Knowing the brutal, congested calendar that awaited them in future, he was actively rotating the defensive pairings every five minutes. He paired Harry Maguire with Eric Bailly, then swapped Bailly for Victor Lindelöf. He mixed Alex Telles with Diogo Dalot, then brought Luke Shaw in. He was ensuring every single defender understood the exact spacing required, regardless of who was standing next to them.
"Harry. Step up," Marcus's voice bood calmly through the mounted speakers. "You're retreating too much."
Maguire imdiately took two steps forward, closing the gap.
"Good," Marcus echoed. "Dalot. Tighter. Don't leave the channel open."
Down in the center of the pitch, the midfield drill was underway. The physical presence of Denis Zakaria made itself known instantly. The towering Swiss midfielder didn't ease himself into his first English training session. When Fred took a slightly heavy touch, Zakaria closed the distance with terrifying speed, stepping firmly into the challenge and winning the ball cleanly.
A few yards away, the other new arrival was attempting to dictate the tempo. Bruno Guimarães had the ball at his feet, constantly scanning his shoulders.
However, there was a slight disconnect.
"Bruno! Shift left, cover the passing lane!" Michael Carrick shouted from the grass, gesturing toward the flank.
Guimarães paused for a fraction of a second, looking confused by the rapid, heavy English instruction. In that split second, Jadon Sancho pounced, poking the ball away.
Up in the sky, Marcus pressed the hydraulic release. The cherry picker hissed, slowly lowering the basket to the earth. Marcus unclipped the safety chain, stepped onto the damp grass with his hands in his pockets, and wandered over to the new Brazilian midfielder.
"You are holding the ball too long because you are trying to translate the shouts in your head," Marcus said.
He didn't speak in English. He spoke in rapid, flawless, native Portuguese.
Guimarães's eyes widened in surprise. He knew the manager was Portuguese, but hearing his native tongue delivered with such crisp fluency in the middle of a freezing English training session instantly lowered his anxiety.
"I am trying to learn the words, boss," Guimarães replied in Portuguese, looking slightly embarrassed. "The English lessons are going well, but on the pitch, it is too fast."
"He wants you to slide into the left channel to block the passing lane the mont you release the ball," Marcus explained softly in Portuguese, placing a reassuring hand on the midfielder's shoulder. "Do not worry about the language barrier right now. Watch the boots, not the mouths. Play your natural ga."
Guimarães nodded, a relieved smile breaking across his face. "Understood, boss. Thank you."
Marcus turned back to the rest of the squad, seamlessly switching back to English.
"We have a minor communication issue we need to resolve imdiately," Marcus announced lazily, looking between his two playmakers. "We cannot have two Brunos on the pitch. When Carrick shouts the na, both of you stop running."
Bruno Fernandes laughed, wiping sweat from his forehead. "I was here first, boss. I keep the na."
"Fair enough," Marcus smiled, turning to the new Brazilian. "From now on, on the grass, he is Bruno. You are Gimma. If you hear 'Gimma,' you move. Clear?"
"Clear," the squad echoed.
"Good. Restart the drill. Faster this ti," Marcus ordered, strolling back to the touchline.
While the squad worked on their passing rhythms, a black luxury SUV pulled up to the front entrance of the main Carrington building.
Paulo Dybala stepped out into the Manchester drizzle. The Argentine forward had spent the morning undergoing rigorous dical checks at a private facility in the city. The eighteen-million-pound fee had been wired to Juventus, securing the forward on a permanent deal before his contract expired in the sumr.
Dybala was escorted into the building, surrounded by club photographers capturing his arrival. He walked down the main corridor, pausing to look at the portraits of club legends lining the walls.
As he turned a corner, he practically bumped into Cristiano Ronaldo, who was heading toward the indoor turf after a gym session.
"Paulo!" Ronaldo bead, his face lighting up with genuine warmth as he saw his forr Juventus teammate.
"Cristiano!" Dybala smiled widely, dropping his bag to accept a firm, brotherly embrace from the Portuguese star.
"Welco to Manchester, my friend," Ronaldo said, clapping him on the back. "It is so good to see you. You will like it here."
"I am ready for it," Dybala replied, looking excited. "I missed playing with you. Where is the manager?"
"He is in his office," Ronaldo pointed down the hall. "But be careful. He is... unique."
Dybala raised an eyebrow at the warning but continued down the hall alongside Alexander Vance, who had co out to greet him. They reached the door with a small silver plaque reading First Team Manager.
Vance knocked twice and opened the door without waiting for a response.
Dybala stepped inside, expecting to find a stern, intimidating figure hunched over tactical whiteboards.
Instead, he found Marcus Vale sitting in his desk chair, his feet propped up casually on the edge of the desk. His head was tilted back, his arms crossed over his chest, and his eyes were completely closed. Soft, rhythmic breathing filled the quiet room.
He was fast asleep.
Vance stopped in his tracks, letting out a long, incredibly exasperated sigh. "Marcus."
The loud sigh caused Marcus to jolt. His feet slipped off the desk, hitting the floor with a thud. He sat up quickly, blinking, running a hand through his slightly ssy hair and offering a goofy smile.
"Were you sleeping?" Vance asked, rubbing his temples in disbelief. "We are signing one of the best forwards in Europe, and you are taking a nap?"
"I was not sleeping, Alex," Marcus defended himself lazily. "I was deeply engaged in ntal visualization."
Vance just stared at him. "Right. Paulo, et your new manager."
Dybala, trying to hide a highly amused grin, stepped forward and offered his hand. "It is a pleasure to et you, boss."
Marcus stood up, instantly dropping the sleepy deanor. His posture straightened, and he shook Dybala's hand firmly.
"Welco to the club, Paulo," Marcus said, his tone shifting into its crisp, professional register. "I am very glad you are here. We needed a player with your exact profile to operate in the pockets behind Cristiano. You have the technical ability to unlock deep defenses, and you know how to combine with him. You will play as a false nine. You will find the space, and you will feed him."
Dybala nodded, appreciating the imdiate, clear footballing instruction.
"I know how to play with him," Dybala agreed. "I am looking forward to getting on the pitch."
"Finish your dia duties," Marcus instructed cheerfully, picking up a pen from his desk. "Tomorrow, you train. We have a lot of matches to win."
Dybala and Vance left the office to complete the formalities. Marcus sat back down, letting out a quiet breath. The squad was finally complete.
He opened his laptop, pulling up the video feed of their upcoming opposition. A quiet knock at the door broke his concentration.
"Co in," Marcus called out.
The door opened, and Mason Greenwood walked into the office. The young forward looked slightly nervous, hovering near the doorway.
"You wanted to see , boss?" Greenwood asked.
Marcus paused the video. He looked at the calendar on his desk. It was mid-January.
Before Marcus had been reborn, in his previous life, he rembered exactly what had transpired in late January 2022 regarding the young forward standing in front of him. The horrifying audio recordings, the photographs, the imdiate suspension, and the permanent scarring of a promising career and a young woman's life.
Marcus had brought Greenwood into the office today with a very specific purpose. He could not change the past, but he was the manager of this football club now, and he had the power to alter the future before the point of no return.
"Sit down, Mason," Marcus said, his voice warm and inviting.
Greenwood took a seat in the leather guest chair, resting his hands on his knees.
"You've been playing very well recently," Marcus began, maintaining a relaxed, easy-going tone to lower the player's guard. "Your finishing off both feet is exceptional. You are adapting to the shape perfectly."
"Thank you, boss," Greenwood smiled. "I'm feeling really sharp."
"Good," Marcus nodded, leaning back in his chair and spinning his red magnet slowly. "But I didn't bring you here to talk about your left foot. I brought you here to talk about your life."
Greenwood blinked, slightly confused.
"You are twenty years old," Marcus continued, his tone shifting into that of a ntor. "You are playing for Manchester United. You have money, you have fa, and you have millions of people telling you how brilliant you are every single day. How are you handling the noise?"
Greenwood shrugged lightly. "It's fine, boss. I just try to focus on the football. Hang out with my mates, spend ti with my girlfriend, you know? Just normal stuff."
Marcus stopped spinning the magnet.
"Fa is a very dangerous liar, Mason," Marcus said quietly, leaning forward. "It is a trap. I look at players like Paul Pogba, or Jesse Lingard. Unbelievable, world-class talent. But they let the noise get to them. They let the fa and the money dictate their actions off the pitch, and it ruined their ceiling on it."
Greenwood listened intently. The manager wasn't yelling; he was offering genuine, fatherly advice.
"When you have status," Marcus continued, his eyes locking onto the young forward with absolute sincerity, "the people around you—your friends, the hangers-on—will tell you that you are untouchable. They will make you feel like the normal rules of society do not apply to you. They will make you feel like you can treat people however you want, because you are a star. I talk to the club's ntal health specialists daily, Mason. They see this happen to young players all the ti."
Marcus leaned forward slightly, resting his arms on the desk.
"I am having all the young players coming up from the academy talk with them twice a week," Marcus said, keeping his tone light but highly encouraging. "I want you to try it. Talk to them regularly. It is not a strict obligation, but it will be very good for your ntal health. To help you manage the noise."
Greenwood swallowed, nodding quickly. He didn't feel like he needed a psychiatrist, but if the new manager was suggesting it, he wasn't going to say no. He wanted to stay in Marcus's good favor.
"Yeah, boss. I can do that," Greenwood agreed. "I'll talk to them."
"Good," Marcus smiled warmly, before his gaze sharpened just a fraction. "Because the noise is a lie. How you treat people behind closed doors is the only true asure of the man you are. How are things with your partner?"
"They're... they're good, boss," Greenwood stamred slightly, caught off guard by the deeply personal question.
"I demand absolute discipline on the grass," Marcus said, his voice soft but carrying a unyielding weight. "But I demand even more respect off it. A real man treats his partner with absolute respect. Always. A man who raises a hand or forces his will on a woman is not a star. He is a coward."
Greenwood swallowed hard. He didn't understand the prophetic foresight behind the conversation. He didn't know the specific disaster Marcus was actively trying to prevent. He simply viewed it as a fierce, deeply serious ntorship lecture from a manager laying down the absolute moral boundaries of life.
"If I ever hear that a player at this football club has crossed that line, has abused their partner or treated a woman with disrespect..." Marcus leaned back, his eyes never leaving Greenwood's. "...their career at Manchester United will end instantly. Fa will not save them. Money will not save them. Do you understand , Mason?"
Greenwood stared at the twenty-seven-year-old manager, sensing the gravity in the room.
"I understand, boss," Greenwood said firmly, nodding his head. "I swear. I treat people right."
Marcus held his gaze for three more seconds, searching the boy's eyes, planting the psychological barrier as deep as he possibly could.
Then, the heavy intensity vanished.
Marcus offered a lazy, goofy smile and picked the red magnet back up.
"Good," Marcus said cheerfully. "I just wanted to make sure we were on the sa page. You have the potential to be a legend here, Mason. Don't let the noise ruin it. Keep working hard on your movent inside the box. And you will be talking to a psychologist regularly . Dismissed."
Greenwood stood up quickly, letting out a quiet breath. "Thanks, boss. See you tomorrow."
He walked out of the office, closing the door behind him. Marcus watched him leave. He didn't know if the ntorship would be enough to alter the tiline, but he had given the boy a stark, undeniable warning. The rest was up to him.
Over the next three weeks, the Manchester United tactical machine shifted into an unrelenting gear.
The integration of Kieran Trippier, Denis Zakaria, and Bruno Guimarães completely transford the squad's capability on the pitch. They no longer had to hide their weaknesses; they could actively impose their strengths.
In mid-January, United traveled to Villa Park to face Steven Gerrard's Aston Villa in the Premier League. Ard with a newly reinforced midfield, Marcus deployed the 4-4-2 diamond. Guimarães operated at the base, orchestrating the play with incredible vision, completely bypassing the Villa press with precise, one-touch passing.
United dominated the match. Cristiano Ronaldo, thriving off the elite crosses from Trippier and Telles, scored twice inside the penalty box. A late consolation goal from Philippe Coutinho couldn't stop United from securing a comfortable 2-1 victory.
Three days later, they traveled to London to face Brentford.
Under the freezing rain, Thomas Frank's side tried to turn the match into a physical, aerial battle. Marcus responded by unleashing Denis Zakaria. The Swiss midfielder operated as a pure destroyer, winning every second ball in the center of the pitch and physically dominating the Brentford midfield. United sat in a compact shape, absorbed the long throws, and struck ruthlessly on the counter-attack, winning 2-0.
At the end of January, West Ham United arrived at Old Trafford, bringing forr United player Jesse Lingard with them. David Moyes set up a stubborn, deep defensive block, frustrating the ho side for seventy minutes.
Marcus didn't panic. He brought Paulo Dybala off the bench for his debut. The Argentine imdiately drifted into the pockets of space between the West Ham defenders, linking up brilliantly with Donny van de Beek. In the 82nd minute, Dybala slipped a beautiful reverse pass into the box, and Cristiano Ronaldo hamred it ho to secure a gritty 1-0 win.
Ten straight Premier League victories. The winning streak continued. The dressing room was entirely unified.
By early February, the Premier League paused for an international break.
The Carrington Training Complex emptied out as the vast majority of the first-team squad flew across the globe to represent their respective national teams. Only a handful of senior players who had retired from international duty, alongside a crop of academy prospects, remained in Manchester.
For Marcus, it was a welco reprieve from the relentless pressure of matchdays. He spent his mornings running highly technical passing drills with the youth team, enjoying the pure, uncomplicated act of coaching without the glaring spotlight of the dia watching his every move.
On a quiet Tuesday afternoon, Marcus was standing on Pitch Two, demonstrating a specific body-shape adjustnt to a young Alejandro Garnacho.
"Do not face the touchline when you receive the ball," Marcus instructed lazily, demonstrating the stance. "Open your hips to the center of the pitch. See the whole board before the ball even arrives."
He tossed the ball to Garnacho, who executed the turn perfectly, driving toward the training mannequins.
"Better," Marcus nodded.
"Marcus," a voice called out from the edge of the grass.
Marcus turned to see Alexander Vance walking across the pitch. The CEO was wearing a sharp tailored suit, looking entirely out of place on the damp turf.
"Alex," Marcus greeted him, walking over. "What brings you out into the cold? Did we secretly sign soone else?"
"No," Vance smiled slightly. "But we do have a dia obligation to fulfill."
Marcus frowned, crossing his arms. "The press conferences are paused during the international break. I am enjoying the silence."
"It's not a press conference," Vance explained, gesturing toward the main building. "It is a sit-down interview. A long-form piece. The comrcial departnt needs to humanize your image. You have spent the last two months terrifying the local journalists and giving one-word answers. It is highly effective for winning football matches, but we need to show the fans the man behind the tactics."
Marcus sighed heavily. He hated performative dia. "Who is conducting it?"
"Just walk inside," Vance said, a knowing smirk on his face. "He is waiting in the dia suite."
Marcus patted Garnacho on the shoulder, told the academy coach to wrap up the session, and followed Vance back into the complex.
They walked down the corridor and stopped outside the secondary dia room. Vance opened the door and gestured for Marcus to enter.
Marcus stepped inside. The room had been completely transford. Heavy black curtains blocked out the windows. Professional lighting rigs were set up, illuminating two comfortable leather armchairs facing each other in the center of the room. Four different cara angles were positioned around the periter.
Sitting in one of the armchairs, reviewing a stack of cue cards, was Gary Neville.
Neville looked up as Marcus entered. "Afternoon, Marcus."
Marcus stopped. He looked at Neville, then looked back at Vance standing in the doorway.
"The Overlap," Marcus realized, recognizing the famous YouTube interview format.
"Exactly," Vance nodded, looking extrely pleased with himself. "I knew if I told you about it yesterday, you would have found an excuse to drive your Volvo into the mountains and hide. Have a seat. Do the interview. Improve your image."
Vance stepped out and pulled the door shut, locking Marcus in the room with the caras.
Marcus let out a long, slow breath. He slipped his hands into the pockets of his tracksuit, pulled out his red tactical magnet, and walked slowly toward the empty leather armchair.
"I have to admit, Marcus," Neville said, a wide, slightly nervous grin on his face. "When Axiom agreed to let us do this, I didn't think you would actually show up. You haven't exactly been the dia's best friend since you arrived."
Marcus slumped comfortably into the armchair, crossing his legs and resting his chin on his hand. He looked at the forr United captain with a lazy, half-amused expression.
"I was ambushed, Gary," Marcus deadpanned smoothly. "But since I am trapped here... let's talk about football."
Neville chuckled, tapping his cue cards on his knee, ready to dive into the mind of the most enigmatic manager in the world.
Manchester United League Position: 3rd Place
Golden Boot Race (Top 3):
Mohad Salah (Liverpool) - 17 Goals
Cristiano Ronaldo (Manchester United) - 15 Goals
Diogo Jota (Liverpool) - 11 Goals
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