Chapter 487: League Cup Quarter-Final II: Motivation
Chapter 487: League Cup Quarter-Final II: Motivation
At half-time, I adapted. Not a wholesale change, a tactical tweak, delivered through questions rather than instructions. The new Danny. The Danny who had learned from the Neves incident, from Frankie’s visit, from Sakho giving the City speech.
"Nya," I said. "What are you seeing in their midfield?"
Kirby, who had been the best player on the pitch, answered immediately. "Obiang is sitting deep. He’s not pressing. If I drop in front of him, I’m wasting my position. I need to get beyond him playing higher, let Jake screen alone."
"Do it."
"Eberechi, where’s the space?"
Eze thought. "Between their left centre-back and left-back. When I drift there, the centre-back follows. But the full-back doesn’t cover. Michael’s been finding that space but the pass hasn’t come quickly enough."
"Then make it quicker. One touch. First time. Michael, be ready."
Olise nodded. He had been quiet all half not invisible, but processing, watching, the way he always did before his best moments. "I’ll be ready, gaffer."
"Tyler," I said to Webb. "The corner. You lost your shape, not your man. That’s a positioning error, not a concentration error. The difference matters. Next corner, start two yards further right. You’ll be fine."
Webb looked at me. I could see the Lazio memory flickering the same situation, the same fault and I watched him process it and put it away. Not forget it. File it. Use it. That was the growth.
The second half was magnificent.
Kirby pushed higher, exactly as he had suggested, and the effect was immediate. Palace’s midfield press went from effective to suffocating. West Ham’s build-up play, which had found pockets in the first half through Obiang’s positioning, was suddenly cut off. Kirby was pressing the West Ham centre-backs, forcing them long, and Morrison shielding alone, but thriving on the responsibility was winning everything in the air.
Pope made a save in the fifty-second minute that announced him to the Selhurst crowd. A West Ham substitute fresh legs, raw pace drove at the Palace defence and hit a low shot from eighteen yards.
Pope went down fast, his right hand strong, and turned the ball around the post. The save was technically outstanding the footwork, the angle, the timing but what made it special was the reaction.
Pope stood up, collected the corner, and distributed it with a quick throw to Mitchell that started a counter-attack. No theatrics. No self-congratulation. Professional competence, delivered with the quiet authority of a goalkeeper who was beginning to believe he belonged.
"NICK!" I shouted from the touchline. "Outstanding! That’s England-level, that!"
Pope glanced at me. A tiny smile. He knew it too.
In the fifty-eighth minute, Eze and Olise produced the goal that defined the evening.
Kirby won the ball on the halfway line and played it forward to Eze, who received with his back to goal. Two West Ham midfielders closed.
Eze held them he was stronger than he looked, his balance extraordinary and laid the ball off to Kirby, who had continued his run. Kirby played it first-time wide right, to Olise, who had drifted inside, exactly where the whiteboard had told him to be.
Olise received. Took one touch to set himself. Looked up and saw Eze, who had spun away from his markers and was now running into the space between the centre-back and full-back the space that Eze had identified at half-time, the space that the first-half passes had been too slow to exploit. Olise played it first-time. One touch. The ball arrived at Eze’s feet as though delivered by post.
The twenty-year-old took one more touch not for the shot but for the angle, opening his body to the far corner and curled a finish that dipped under the crossbar with the venom of a player who had spent the evening conducting a masterclass and was now adding the final brushstroke.
Crystal Palace 2–1 West Ham. Eze. 58 minutes.
I ran to the edge of my technical area and clapped both hands above my head, the uninhibited applause of a man who had seen two young players execute a tactical instruction in real time, adjusting mid-match, reading each other, producing a goal from a pattern they had discussed in a dressing room forty-five minutes ago. This was the lesson. Not just the goal. The thinking that produced it.
Eze ran to the bench. I grabbed him by the shoulders. "That’s what I asked for. You and Michael you found the space we talked about. You adapted. That’s what separates good players from great ones."
"He played it perfectly," Eze said, pointing at Olise. "First time. Didn’t hesitate."
"I know. I’ll tell him."
Blake added the third in the seventy-first minute. Semenyo who had been a persistent, tireless menace on the left, driving at defenders with the joyful recklessness that was his trademark won a corner. Bray’s routine. Blake peeled off the back post, Hannam’s flick-on found him, and the young striker headed home from four yards. His second of the match.
Crystal Palace 3–1 West Ham. Blake. 71 minutes.
I brought Blake off in the seventy-fifth minute. As he reached the touchline, I took his hand and pulled him into a hug the same two-armed embrace as his first goal, but this time with words. "Two goals. A cup quarter-final. You just announced yourself, Connor. Remember this feeling. Carry it with you."
Blake’s eyes were glistening. "Thank you, gaffer. For believing in me."
"I’ve always believed in you. Now everyone else does too."
Abraham came on for Blake. I brought Morrison off at eighty he had given everything, his legs gone, his shirt soaked. As he jogged to the touchline, I met him halfway. "Jake. That was the best performance of your career. You shielded alone for thirty minutes and didn’t put a foot wrong. I’m proud of you."
Morrison, who communicated through tackles rather than words, just nodded. But the nod came with wet eyes.
Townsend replaced Semenyo at eighty-three. I held Semenyo’s hand as the young winger came off, leaned in, and said: "The corner that led to Blake’s second that was yours. That was your goal as much as his. You were relentless tonight."
Semenyo grinned the enormous, irresistible, lighting-up-the-room grin that made him the most likeable player in the squad. "Cheers, gaffer. Can I start on Saturday?"
I laughed. "We’ll see."
In the eighty-seventh minute, Webb’s moment arrived. West Ham corner. Deep delivery. The same situation as Lazio. The same back-post area. Tyler Webb rose above the West Ham striker, met the ball at the highest point of its trajectory, and headed it clear fifty yards, thunderous, definitive. The ghost, exorcised. He landed, turned to the Holmesdale, and beat his chest.
On the bench, Paddy had his hand over his mouth.
The whistle blew. Crystal Palace 3–1 West Ham. Semi-finals.
I walked onto the pitch and found each of them. Hannam: "You led like a captain. Dann would be proud." Webb: "That header. You know what that was." Webb just nodded, his jaw tight. He knew. Kirby: "You made the tactical adjustment yourself. You didn’t wait for me. That’s the next level, Nya." Olise, standing apart, quiet as always: "The pass for Eze’s goal. First time. No hesitation. You’re learning, Michael. You’re learning faster than anyone I’ve ever coached."
The sixteen-year-old looked at me with those watchful eyes. "Eze told me to play it first time. He called for it."
"And you trusted him."
"Of course. He’s Eberechi."
Eze was named Man of the Match. He deserved it a goal, an assist, the complete number ten performance, the intelligence to identify the tactical weakness at half-time and the quality to exploit it in the second. But when the interviewer asked him about his performance, he said: "Olise’s pass for my goal was the best pass anyone has played to me all season. Including Rodríguez. Don’t tell James I said that."
The dressing room afterwards was earned joy. Not wild. Earned. Kirby sat on the bench, his arm around Morrison. Blake held the match ball two goals, his to keep. Pope was towelling his hair, quiet and steady, the performance logged in his muscle memory. And Paddy McCarthy was in the corridor, his eyes red, saying the same thing he always said: "Every time these kids play, they make me cry."
"That’s because you built them."
"We built them."
I drove home. Emma was on the sofa laptop open, working. Not waiting. Working on her own thing. She looked up when I came in, smiled, finished her sentence, then closed the laptop. The difference was small. The difference was everything.
"Semi-finals," she said.
"Semi-finals." I sat down. She poured tea from the pot made for herself, not for me, enough for two by coincidence rather than devotion.
"I called The Athletic today," she said.
"And?"
"February. Weekly episodes. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings."
"Good. That’s brilliant, Em."
She studied me. "You mean that."
"I mean it completely."
She leaned against my shoulder. Choosing to be close. Not needing to be. The posture of a woman building her own thing alongside his, not underneath it.
"Come to bed," she said. "Huddersfield on Saturday. No footage until six-forty-five."
"Deal."
I slept. Properly. The fumes were gone. Something real had taken their place.
[Season Status December 19th.]
[Overall: P36 W30 D3 L3. GF: 85. GA: 31.]
[Premier League: P18 W13 D3 L2. Points: 42. Position: 3rd.]
[EFL Cup: Semi-final. Youngest squad in League Cup semi-final history.]
[League Cup QF Man of the Match: Eberechi Eze. 1 goal, 1 assist. Tactical adaptation at half-time identified the space between West Ham’s left centre-back and full-back, communicated it to the coaching staff, and exploited it with Olise’s first-time pass. This is not just execution. This is football intelligence.]
[Connor Blake: 2 goals. First multi-goal game in senior competition. Subbed in 75th minute to a standing ovation.]
[Nick Pope: 3 saves, including one of England-quality in the 52nd minute. Distribution improving. English goalkeeping scouts were in attendance.]
[Commercial: Merchandise +412%. 47 countries. 9,000 waiting list. Stadium expansion preliminary. Three major brand partnerships in negotiation.]
[Personal: Slept 8 hours. Called Mum. Talked to Neves about his daughter. Emma taking the podcast. The fumes are gone.]
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Massage Chair.
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