Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 489: Christmas II: Goal



Chapter 489: Christmas II: Goal

The first half was a battle in the cold. Wagner’s Huddersfield pressed with the same intensity that had earned them promotion high, aggressive, the two gegenpress systems colliding in midfield, the ball ricocheting between bodies.

The frozen pitch made first touches treacherous. Rodríguez, whose feet usually had the delicacy of a surgeon’s hands, mistimed two passes in the opening ten minutes as the ball skidded off the crystalline surface.

Sarah leaned towards me at the fifteen-minute mark. "Their left centre-back is stepping too high when Neves has the ball. The space behind him is there that Navas could exploit it... if we switch the play quicker."

I relayed it through the earpiece to Marcus, who passed it to the analysis team. Within three minutes, Bray had identified the pattern: when Huddersfield’s left centre-back pressed Neves, their left-back tucked inside to cover, leaving the right channel exposed. The pass had to be fast diagonal, first-time, bypassing the midfield line entirely.

"Tell Rúben," I said to Sarah. She used the water-break at the twenty-first minute to jog to the touchline and pass the instruction. Neves listened, nodded, and two minutes later, he played the exact pass they had discussed a forty-yard diagonal that landed on Zaha’s chest as though delivered by satellite.

Zaha drove at the Huddersfield right-back, cut inside, and fed Rodríguez, whose shot from the edge was blocked. But the pattern was there. The staff had identified it, communicated it, and the players had executed it. The machine functioning at every level.

In the thirty-first minute, the quality told. Milivojević won the ball with a tackle that was equal parts technique and menace. He found Neves, who found Rodríguez, who let the ball run across his body and played a disguised through ball. Benteke was through before anyone in Huddersfield had registered the pass. Clinical finish low, across the goalkeeper.

Huddersfield 0–1 Crystal Palace. Benteke. 31 minutes.

Three thousand Palace fans in the far corner huddled in coats and scarves, their breath rising in clouds, their voices raw in the frozen air produced a noise that rolled across the pitch and disappeared into the Pennine mist. Benteke raised both arms. Seven goals in twelve matches. The Belgian was having the season of his life.

Mooy equalised just before half-time with a dipping free kick that Hennessey got a hand to but couldn’t keep out. 1-1. Rebecca met me at the tunnel entrance with her tablet. "Navas is flagging. Sprint count down thirty percent in the last ten minutes. His hamstring load is in the amber zone."

"How long can he go?"

"Sixty minutes. Sixty-five at a push."

I had planned for this. The substitution was already in my head. The question was timing too early and the replacement wouldn’t have the tactical information from the first half; too late and Navas would be a passenger.

In the fifty-eighth minute, I made the change. Navas for Olise. The sixteen-year-old for the thirty-one-year-old. The future for the present.

The PA announced it. The Huddersfield crowd paid no attention a substitute winger at a mid-table ground in December, nothing to see.

The Palace fans noticed, but mildly, a smattering of applause for Navas, a murmur of curiosity about the number on the substitute’s back. Nobody stood. Nobody chanted. Olise jogged onto a Premier League pitch for the seventh time, into minus-two December cold, and twenty-two thousand people barely registered his existence.

"Michael," I said, as he waited at the touchline. He looked at me with those quiet eyes. "Play your game. Don’t force it. Their left-back is tiring the space is on the right side. Receive wide, cut inside on your left foot, look for James or Wilf. And if the shot is on..." I paused. "Take it."

He nodded. Then he jogged into the cold.

His first involvement was invisible. A five-yard pass to Milivojević, recycling possession, disappearing back into the pattern.

His second was a turn receiving from Wan-Bissaka with his back to goal, rolling his marker with a hip movement so fluid that the Huddersfield midfielder took a full second to realise he was now facing the wrong direction. The Palace fans noticed. A small murmur. Who is this kid?

His third was a dribble short, past one defender, then a lay-off to Rodríguez that drew applause for its intelligence. He was integrating. Not imposing himself on the match integrating into it, finding the rhythm, the way a musician joins a song already playing by listening first and contributing second.

Rebecca was watching his GPS data. "His movement is unusual," she said, showing me the heat map forming on her tablet. "He’s drifting inside from the right not hugging the touchline. He’s occupying the half-space between their left-back and left centre-back. It’s pulling their shape apart."

She was right. Olise wasn’t playing as a conventional winger. He was floating from the right touchline into the inside channel, then back wide, then inside again, each movement pulling a different defender with him, each drift creating a yard of space somewhere else.

It was the same intelligence that Rodríguez used in the ten position, the same ghostly occupation of space that Eze was learning. But Olise was doing it at sixteen, in his seventh Premier League appearance, on a frozen pitch in Yorkshire.

In the sixty-seventh minute, Chilwell driving forward with the energy that made him special played a low cross that deflected off a Huddersfield defender. The ball fell to Zaha, six yards out. Wilf swept it home.

Huddersfield 1–2 Crystal Palace. Zaha. 67 minutes.

Zaha cupped his ears at the Palace fans the gesture that had become the squad’s signature. Sarah, beside me, was already on her earpiece. "Their left side has collapsed. Olise has space every time he receives. Push him higher."

I passed the instruction. Bray, who had been tracking the set-piece patterns, added: "If we get a corner in the next five minutes, KB-22. They’ve lost their structure."

The staff working in concert. Sarah reading the tactical shifts, Rebecca monitoring the bodies, Bray tracking the dead balls, and Marcus feeding the aerial view. Four people, four perspectives, a single machine.

In the seventy-sixth minute, Michael Olise scored his first Premier League goal.

Neves played a simple forward pass to Rodríguez. James took one touch, turned, and played the ball wide right to Olise, who had drifted into the channel between the left-back and left centre-back the inside position that Rebecca had identified on her heat map, the movement that was pulling Huddersfield’s shape apart.

Olise received on his left foot. The left foot that Paddy had called "the most naturally gifted in the academy." He took one touch to set himself not outside where the cross would come, but inside, towards the penalty area.

The Huddersfield centre-back closed. Olise shifted the ball right to left the same hip-drop as Eze, but smoother, quieter and the defender committed. Olise didn’t go past him. He went through him a nutmeg so subtle the defender didn’t realise until the ball was behind him.

Left foot. Low. Across the goalkeeper. Far corner. The ball hit the back of the net with the soft, definitive sound of history being made.

Huddersfield 1–3 Crystal Palace. Olise. 76 minutes.


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