Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 523: The Taste I



Chapter 523: The Taste I

Saturday, January 13th. Selhurst Park. Three o’clock. Chelsea.

The last time we played Chelsea, in October, we lost. I have not forgotten the feeling. The taste of ash. The first defeat of the season, the match that ended the unbeaten run and introduced the squad to the reality that the Premier League would not be kind simply because we had been brave.

Conte’s side had been clinical, their counter-attacking brutal, Hazard’s movement impossible to contain, and the result, two-one at Stamford Bridge, had left a mark that four months of winning had not fully erased.

I had not mentioned revenge to the squad. I did not need to. The players who had been at Stamford Bridge remembered.

The players who had watched from the bench remembered. And the twenty-five thousand people filing into Selhurst Park on a Saturday afternoon in January remembered, because Crystal Palace supporters remembered everything, especially the defeats, especially the ones that hurt.

The team selection was the rotation model made real. Five changes from the Arsenal semi-final, three days earlier. Rebecca had been in my office at seven that morning, her tablet displaying the load data in the colour-coded system that governed every decision.

"Pope has played three matches in eleven days. He needs a rest. Hennessey starts."

"Agreed."

"Dann played ninety-plus minutes on Wednesday, scored the winning goal, and ran himself into the ground. His recovery data is amber. He shouldn’t start."

"He won’t. Konaté and Sakho come back in."

"Chilwell’s load is the highest of any outfield player this month. Digne starts at left-back. And Benteke." She paused. "Physically, he could play. But emotionally, the miss at the back post is still in his head. Tom says he’s been quiet in treatment. Luke noticed it too. Give him the afternoon off. Let him reset."

"Pato starts up front."

Rebecca nodded. The Brazilian had come off the bench in the sixty-eighth minute against Arsenal and played twenty-two minutes. He was fresh, hungry, and his movement between the lines, the trigger in the trigger-and-blade partnership, was exactly what Chelsea’s three-at-the-back system struggled to contain.

Five changes. Same system. Same identity. Different personnel.

[Starting XI: Chelsea (H). PL Matchday 23. Hennessey; Wan-Bissaka, Konaté, Sakho, Digne; Neves, Kovačić; Navas, Rodríguez, Zaha; Pato. Bench: Mandanda, Dann, Tarkowski, Chilwell, Kirby, Townsend, Blake.]

The atmosphere at Selhurst Park was different from a midweek semi-final. Louder, if that was possible. More hostile. Saturday-afternoon hostility, the kind that had been marinating in pubs since noon, the kind that arrived at the ground smelling of beer and purpose and the specific, generational antipathy that South London reserved for West London.

Palace and Chelsea were not rivals in the traditional sense. There was no derby. There was no shared history of hatred. But there was geography, there was class, there was the quiet resentment of a club that had existed for a century in the comfortable shadow of a club that had been bought by a billionaire and turned into a machine.

The Holmesdale did not like Chelsea. The Holmesdale had opinions about Chelsea that were expressed in songs that could not be printed in a family newspaper.

In the tunnel, I stood beside Antonio Conte. The Italian was immaculate, his suit sharp, his hair precise, his expression carrying the intense, almost ferocious focus that defined his tenure at Stamford Bridge.

He did not acknowledge me. I did not acknowledge him. Tunnel etiquette between managers was a complex, unwritten protocol that boiled down to a single principle: say nothing until the match is over, and even then, say as little as possible.

Tomás was filming the tunnel. Elena had positioned him at the far end, near the pitch entrance, shooting into the darkness where the players lined up. The footage would show two teams emerging from shadow into light, the metaphor so obvious that Elena would later say she almost didn’t use it. Almost.

The match started at a tempo that suggested both teams had read the same script: fast, physical, no quarter given.

Chelsea’s system under Conte was a 3-4-3 that could shift into a 5-2-3 without possession, the wing-backs, Alonso and Moses, dropping into a back five that was compact and difficult to penetrate.

The three at the back, Azpilicueta, Christensen, and Rüdiger, were organised and aggressive. Kanté, as always, was everywhere. The Frenchman covered ground that should have required two players, his positioning intuitive, his tackles clean, his presence in the midfield a constant, suffocating reality that every opponent had to account for.

But Palace had Kovačić. And Kovačić had already learned, in seventy-five minutes against Arsenal, that the Premier League’s midfield battles were won not by running more but by thinking faster.

In the twelfth minute, Kovačić received from Sakho and played a pass that Kanté could not intercept because Kanté did not see it coming. A disguised ball, played with the sole of his boot, rolling through the gap between Kanté and Bakayoko and arriving at Rodríguez’s feet in the space between Chelsea’s midfield and defence. The pocket. The space where James Rodríguez lived.

Rodríguez turned. He didn’t look for Zaha. He looked for the trigger. Pato was drifting off Christensen’s shoulder, the movement so subtle that the Danish centre-back didn’t register it until the pass was already in the air. A floated ball, disguised as a crossfield switch, that dropped over Christensen’s head and arrived at Pato’s feet on the edge of the box.

The Brazilian’s first touch killed it. His second touch shifted it to his right foot. His third touch was the shot: a low, curling, precise finish into the far corner that Courtois saw leave Pato’s boot and reached for and missed by the width of a glove. The ball hit the inside of the post and spun into the net.

Crystal Palace 1-0 Chelsea. Pato. 12 minutes.

Pato celebrated the way Pato always celebrated. Arms wide, face tilted to the sky, the joy of a man who had been the next Pelé at seventeen and who was now, at twenty-eight, rediscovering the simple pleasure of putting a ball in a net. Rodríguez reached him first, the two of them embracing, the pass and the finish, the vision and the execution, the partnership that had been growing all season.

Chelsea responded. Conte’s side were too good, too experienced, too well-drilled to absorb a goal without reaction.

Hazard, who had been quiet for fifteen minutes, woke up. In the twenty-third minute, he received from Kanté on the left side of the Palace box, dropped his shoulder, shifted the ball from left foot to right with the casual, devastating ease that made him the best player in the Premier League, and curled a shot past Hennessey into the far corner. The goalkeeper got a hand to it. The hand was not enough.

Crystal Palace 1-1 Chelsea. Hazard. 23 minutes.

The Chelsea fans in the Arthur Wait stand celebrated. The equaliser was deserved. Hazard’s quality was irresistible on his day, and this was his day.

But the equaliser did not change the pattern. Palace were in control. Kovačić and Neves were dominating the midfield, their passing triangles suffocating Chelsea’s press, the ball moving through the middle third with a fluency that Conte’s 3-4-3 could not contain without committing more bodies to the centre and leaving the flanks exposed. Sarah, on the touchline, was tracking the shape in real time.

"Their wing-backs are narrowing," she said in my ear at the thirty-minute mark. "Alonso is fifteen yards inside his normal position. Digne has the entire left channel."

I relayed it through Marcus. Marcus to the pitch through Neves’s awareness, the pass that arrived at Digne’s feet forty seconds later was not a coincidence but a consequence.

Digne drove into the space. The Frenchman, who had been at Barcelona and who treated the left flank the way Rodríguez treated the pocket, as personal territory to be explored and exploited, delivered a cross that was technically perfect: outswinging, rising, clearing the first defender and arriving at the back post with the trajectory of a ball that had been designed by a physicist.

Zaha. Back post. He had been drifting from the left wing to the centre all half, drawing Azpilicueta with him, creating the space for Digne’s overlap.

The cross arrived. Zaha met it with his right foot, a volley struck from chest height with the clean, sweet, technically flawless connection that separated great players from good ones. The ball flew past Courtois. The net billowed.

Crystal Palace 2-1 Chelsea. Zaha. 37 minutes.

The Holmesdale erupted for the second time in twenty-five minutes. Zaha ran to the corner, slid on his knees, and cupped both ears. The gesture. The villain’s gesture. The crowd roared it back.

The Chelsea fans fell quiet. Azpilicueta was shouting at Moses, who was shouting at Christensen, who was looking at the ground. The defensive miscommunication that had created the space for Digne’s overlap was the kind of error that Conte would dissect at half-time with the surgical precision of a man who did not tolerate structural failure.


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