Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 484: More Than Football I



Chapter 484: More Than Football I

Monday morning, Beckenham. 08:30. The normal time. The human time.

I hit the canteen first. Rúben was sitting alone... coffee in one hand, phone in the other. The morning routine. I bought a cup and sat beside him. Not opposite. Beside. The difference was everything. Opposite was a meeting; beside was a conversation.

"How’s the family, Rúben?"

A flicker of surprise crossed his face. In nearly six months since taking the job at Crystal Palace, I had asked him about passing ranges, stamina levels, tactical awareness, and recovery metrics. I had interrogated him on everything that happened between the white lines, but I had never asked about the world outside them.

"They’re good, gaffer," he said, recovering. "My daughter is walking now. Everywhere. She marched into the bathroom cabinet yesterday, and my wife sent me a video of the bruise." A small, genuine smile broke through. "It’s a big bruise."

"What’s her name?"

"Lurdes."

"That’s beautiful."

We sat there for a moment. Two men, two coffees, the Monday morning hum of the canteen, and the distant clatter of the kitchen staff preparing lunch. Normal. Human.

I looked at the steam rising from my cup and made a silent promise to myself. Six months of managing them as "assets" was enough. It was time I started managing men. That started now.

"About Leicester," I said. "We’re done with that. I was wrong. Not about the mistake about how I said it. You’re the best midfielder in this squad, Rúben. One of the best in the league. I should have told you that on the touchline instead of what I actually said."

He was quiet for a moment. Then: "My girlfriend saw it. On the television. The cameras caught it." He looked at his coffee. "She asked me if I was okay. I told her I was. She asked me if I wanted to leave."

The words landed like stones dropped into still water.

"What did you tell her?" I asked, my voice careful.

"I told her that the gaffer had a bad night. That he didn’t mean it. And that Crystal Palace is the best football I have ever played." He looked at me. "That part is true. All of it."

A full nod. Not partial. Not guarded. The nod of a man who had been wounded, who had processed the wound, and who had chosen actively, consciously to stay and to trust. The crack was closing. The scar would remain, because scars always did. But the structure was sound.

"Thank you, Rúben," I said.

"Don’t do it again, gaffer."

"I won’t."

He picked up his phone, showed me the video of Lurdes hitting the bathroom cabinet a small, determined toddler with her father’s dark eyes, the collision producing a wail of operatic proportions and I laughed so hard that the kitchen staff looked over. Neves laughed too. It was the first time I had heard him laugh off the pitch. It was a good sound.

I took my coffee upstairs to Steve Parish’s office.

Parish and Dougie Freedman were waiting. The chairman was standing by the window, looking out at the empty pitch, and when he turned, the expression on his face confirmed what his seven-thirty Sunday phone call had suggested. This was big. This was very big.

"Sit down, Danny," he said. "This is going to take a while."

Freedman turned his laptop to face me. On the screen was a commercial dashboard graphs, figures, projections, the kind of data visualisation that belonged in a FTSE 100 boardroom, not a football club that had been in the Championship three years ago.

"I’ll start with merchandise," Freedman said, "because that’s where the story begins." He pointed to a graph that climbed like the north face of a cliff. "Revenue is up four hundred and twelve percent compared to the same period last season. Not a typo. Four hundred and twelve. The club shop has processed more orders since August than it did in the entire previous financial year."

I stared at the number.

"Konaté’s shirt," Freedman continued, "is the third-best-selling player shirt in the Premier League. Behind Pogba at United and Kane at Spurs. An eighteen-year-old centre-back at Crystal Palace is outselling every player at Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, and Manchester City. The shirt itself has become a cultural object; there’s a Facebook trend of fans wearing it to unusual locations. Someone wore it to a wedding in Lagos. Someone else wore it to the summit of Snowdon."

Parish, who had been pacing by the window, stopped. "The international numbers are what changed my thinking, Danny. This is where it gets serious." He nodded at Freedman.

"International orders were essentially zero last season," Freedman said.

"This season, they represent thirty-one percent of total merchandise sales. We’re shipping to forty-seven countries. We have new supporters’ clubs registered in twelve cities that we had no presence in twelve months ago: Lagos, Nairobi, Tokyo, Seoul, São Paulo, Dubai, Melbourne, Cape Town, Mumbai, Manila, Jakarta, and Mexico City."

"Nairobi?" I said.

"A supporters’ club of over two hundred people. They screen every match at a sports bar in Westlands. The owner is a Palace fan who grew up in Croydon, moved back to Kenya, and couldn’t stop following the club. He told our community team that since the start of this season, his membership has tripled. People who have never supported an English club before are joining. They’re choosing Palace."

Parish sat down across from me.

"The Wembley match was the inflection point. The clips of Zaha’s chip, your celebration, and Eze staring at the Spurs fans were shared across platforms in markets we had zero presence in. The Eze story in particular, the Arsenal fan rejected by Spurs, scoring at Wembley, the mural in Thornton Heath translated across cultures in a way that pure football content doesn’t always achieve. It’s a story about rejection and vindication. That’s universal."

Freedman flipped to the next slide. "Sponsorship. Three major brands have approached us in the last six weeks. I can’t name them yet, NDAs, but let me give you the profile."


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