Chapter 488: Christmas I: Huddersfield
Chapter 488: Christmas I: Huddersfield
Three days before Christmas, we went to Huddersfield, and it was so cold that the air hurt.
Not the polite London cold that I had grown accustomed to: the damp, grey chill of South London that made you zip your jacket and complain about the central heating.
This was a Yorkshire cold. A cold with teeth.
The temperature at kick-off was minus two, the wind driving down from the Pennines with the casual brutality of weather that didn’t care whether you were playing a football match or herding sheep, and the John Smith’s Stadium: a modern, functional bowl dropped into a valley between rain-soaked hills, was wrapped in a mist that clung to the floodlights like gauze.
The breath of twenty-two thousand people rose in white columns above the stands, and the pitch, despite the undersoil heating, had a faint crystalline sheen that made every first touch an act of faith.
I stood in my technical area in a Palace overcoat, gloves, scarf, and the conviction that my ears were about to fall off.
Beside me, Sarah was hunched over her tablet, her fingers red with cold, her stylus gripped in a gloved hand that made the screen registration intermittent and her annotations increasingly profane.
Kevin Bray, to my left, had his notepad open but was writing with the careful deliberation of a man whose pen was freezing. Rebecca was monitoring the players’ body temperatures through the GPS vests, her screen a grid of orange and red numbers that she kept angling away from the wind.
The staff. My staff. Nine months officially together today on the senior stage, and they functioned like a second nervous system: Sarah was reading the tactical patterns in real time,
Bray tracking the set-piece opportunities, Rebecca monitoring the physical loads, Marcus in the gantry feeding me information through the earpiece that I was too frozen to fully process.
I trusted them. Not the abstract trust of delegation, but the earned, tested, specific trust of people who had proved themselves in crisis after crisis and had never once let me down.
The squad was in high spirits despite the cold. The academy kids’ cup quarter-final was still resonating Blake walking around Beckenham with a grin that hadn’t faded, Kirby being mock-interviewed by Gnabry with a water bottle as a microphone.
The senior players fed off the youth players’ energy, and the result was a squad that felt unified in a way that transcended the rotation. There was no A team and B team anymore. There was just Palace.
I picked a side that balanced freshness with quality. Hennessey; Wan-Bissaka, Konaté, Sakho, Chilwell; Neves, Milivojević; Navas, Rodríguez, Zaha; Benteke.
On the bench, tucked between Eze and Townsend, sat Michael Olise. Sixteen years old. A pair of trainers that looked slightly too big for him. His Palace tracksuit zipped to the chin against the Yorkshire cold, his dark eyes taking in the frozen stadium with the quiet absorption that was his defining characteristic.
I need to tell you about Michael Olise, because the backstory matters.
Fifteen months ago, he had been nobody. A slight, quiet boy from Hammersmith with a left foot that his Sunday league coaches described as "special" and a physical frame that every professional academy scout described as "too small."
He had been at Reading’s academy until he was fourteen, released, drifted to non-league football, and arrived at Crystal Palace on a five-week trial with the U16s in September 2016.
The trial was unremarkable. The coaches’ reports were lukewarm: technically gifted but physically immature, good on the ball but disappeared when the game got physical, showed flashes but not enough consistency to justify a contract.
He was about to be released. The U16 coaches had written their assessments. The paperwork was being prepared. Michael Olise was going to leave Crystal Palace and return to the wilderness of non-league football, and nobody in the building was going to lose sleep over it.
Except me.
I had been managing the U18s at the time, and Paddy McCarthy, who ran the U16s alongside his U18 work, had mentioned the trial player in passing. "There’s a kid called Olise. Left foot’s ridiculous. But he’s small, Danny. Really small. The U16 coaches don’t think he can compete physically."
I had gone to watch him train. One session. Ninety minutes. And in those ninety minutes, I saw something that the U16 coaches, with their reasonable assessments and their responsible caution, had missed.
They had evaluated Michael Olise against what he was. I evaluated him against what he could become.
The left foot was not just "special." It was generational, a foot that could weight a pass to the nearest gram, that could strike a ball with the kind of spin and dip that belonged to players a decade older, that could find angles that existed only in the imagination of the person kicking it.
The physical frame was slight, yes. But the movement was intelligent, not the explosive, muscular movement of an athlete, but the drifting, ghostly, always-in-the-right-place movement of a footballer who played the game in his mind before his body caught up.
I had walked into the U16 coaches’ office the next morning and said: "Don’t release him. Give him to me."
They had looked at me as though I had asked for a puppy. "Danny, he can’t compete physically at U16 level. He’ll be eaten alive at U18."
"He’ll be fine," I said. "I’ll protect him. Give me time to work with him."
They gave me six months. Within three, Olise was the best player in the U18 squad. Within six, he was the best player in the academy.
The rainbow flick against Bristol City, the post against Lazio, the first-time pass for Eze’s goal against West Ham, these were not accidents. They were the product of a boy who had been given a second chance by a manager who looked at a left foot and saw the future.
I had told him in training on Thursday: "You’re in the squad for Huddersfield. If the match opens up, you play."
He had nodded. Not excited, not nervous. The nod of a boy who had been waiting for this and had decided, long before anyone told him, that he was ready.
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the support.
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