Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 312: The Chairman’s Gambit I
The day after I sent the scouting department on their secret mission, the entire first-team squad had a scheduled day off. For the first time in what felt like a lifetime, I woke up without the immediate, crushing weight of a match to prepare for or a crisis to solve.
The war for survival was over. The war for the future was a quiet, simmering campaign being fought in the shadows. For one day, at least, there was peace.
I spent the morning in a small, unassuming park in South London, a place I had come to love for its anonymity. Hood up, headphones in, I walked the perimeter, the gentle rhythm of the city a welcome change from the relentless intensity of the training ground.
I watched the world go by: dog walkers, young mothers with prams, old men playing chess. For a few precious hours, I wasn’t Danny Walsh, the boy-wonder manager of Crystal Palace. I was just a man in a park. 𝗳𝚛𝚎𝚎𝘄𝕖𝕓𝕟𝕠𝚟𝚎𝕝.𝗰𝕠𝐦
Of course, it didn’t last. As I was heading for the exit, I passed a group of about a dozen kids playing a chaotic, joyous game of football, their schoolbags for goalposts. They were good, too.
Quick, fearless, full of the raw, uncoached talent that you only find on the streets. I stopped to watch for a moment, a smile playing on my lips. This was where it all began. This was the heart of the game.
One of the kids, a small, wiry winger with a shock of bright red hair, miscontrolled the ball and it rolled towards me. I stopped it dead with the sole of my trainer. He looked up, his eyes widening in recognition.
"No way," he breathed. The game screeched to a halt. A dozen pairs of eyes were suddenly fixed on me, a mixture of awe, disbelief, and pure, unadulterated excitement.
"You’re... you’re him," one of them stammered. "You’re the gaffer."
I pulled down my hood and smiled. "Just Danny," I said. The kids swarmed me, a chaotic, happy mob. They didn’t want autographs or selfies. They wanted to talk football.
They wanted to know if Zaha was really that fast, if Benteke was really that strong, and if I was really going to sign Messi in the summer.
I laughed, answering their questions, feeling the infectious energy of their passion for the game. The red-haired winger, whose name was Leo, shyly asked if I would join in. "Just for a bit," he pleaded. "We need a decent midfielder."
How could I say no? For the next ten minutes, I was back where I belonged, in the heart of a game, passing and moving, shouting instructions, feeling the simple, uncomplicated joy of a ball at my feet.
I set up a goal for Leo with a simple through ball, and he celebrated like he had just won the World Cup. It was a beautiful, perfect moment. It was a reminder of why I did this, of what it was all for. It wasn’t about the money or the fame or the headlines. It was about this. This joy. This hope. This feeling of belonging.
As I finally made my excuses and walked away, the kids’ cheers following me down the street, I felt a profound sense of peace. I thought of my own childhood in Moss Side, of the concrete pitches and the jumpers for goalposts.
I thought of my mother, working her fingers to the bone to give me a chance. I thought of how far I had come, of the impossible, improbable journey that had led me to this moment. I was a long way from home, but for the first time, I felt like I was exactly where I was supposed to be.
The next morning, the peace was shattered. I was in my office, reviewing the initial data on Hull City, our next opponents, when my phone rang. It was the chairman’s personal assistant. "Mr. Parish would like to see you in his office, Danny. At your earliest convenience."
My blood ran cold. This was it. He knew. The scouting department had reported my secret mission. I had overstepped my authority, and now I was going to pay the price. I took a deep breath, straightened my tracksuit top, and walked to the chairman’s office, my heart pounding a slow, heavy rhythm in my chest.
I knocked on the door. "Come in," a cheerful voice called out. I stepped inside, my face a mask of calm professionalism, ready for the confrontation. But the chairman wasn’t angry. He was sitting behind his large, mahogany desk, a wide, almost mischievous grin on his face. "Danny, my boy," he said, gesturing to the chair opposite him. "Sit down. We need to talk."
I sat, my hands clasped in my lap, waiting for the axe to fall. "So," the chairman began, leaning forward, his eyes twinkling. "I hear you’ve been busy."
I didn’t flinch. "I’m not sure what you mean, sir."
He laughed, a warm, genuine sound. "Oh, I think you do. I had a very interesting call from Tim Allen in the scouting department yesterday. He tells me you’ve given him a rather... comprehensive dossier. A blueprint, I believe he called it."
I met his gaze, my expression unreadable. "I was just trying to be proactive, sir. To get ahead of the curve for next season."
"Proactive," the chairman repeated, a slow smile spreading across his face. "I like that." He leaned back in his chair, his demeanor shifting from amused to serious.
"Danny, I’m going to be honest with you. When I gave you this job, I was taking a gamble. A huge gamble. The board thought I was insane. The media thought we were a joke. But I saw something in you. I saw a hunger, a passion, a tactical intelligence that I hadn’t seen in a long, long time."
He paused, his eyes fixed on mine. "And you, my boy, have proved me right. In every single way." He started ticking off points on his fingers.
"You saw something in Eberechi Eze when Millwall had given up on him. You saw the potential in Michael Olise when he was a cast-off from Manchester City’s academy. You saved Antoine Semenyo from being released by our own U16s. You turned Connor Blake from a promising but inconsistent talent into a Premier League goalscorer. You nurtured Nya Kirby into a player who can dictate a Premier League midfield at the age of eighteen. You saw the raw, untamed talent in Aaron Wan-Bissaka in the U21s and gave him the chance to shine. You haven’t been wrong yet, son. Not once."
I was speechless. I had expected a reprimand, a warning, a reminder of my place. I had not expected this. This... validation.
"So," the chairman continued, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "Don’t give me this ’proactive’ nonsense. Show me the list. Show me the players you want. Show me the future of this football club."
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the magic castle.
Also thank you for 100 power stones.







