Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 371: The Redemption of the Duck I
July 19th, 2017
The dressing room at the Singapore National Stadium smelled of Deep Heat and fresh kit. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead.
Players moved through their pre-match rituals with the quiet, unhurried focus of professionals who had done this a thousand times Neves sitting perfectly still in the corner, eyes closed, headphones on, already somewhere else entirely; Zaha standing in front of the mirror adjusting his wristbands with the meticulous care of a man who believed presentation was part of the performance; McArthur taping his own ankles with the grim, workmanlike efficiency of a man who trusted nobody else to do it properly.
I found Alexandre Pato sitting apart from the rest, lacing his boots with a deliberate, unhurried care that told me everything I needed to know. He was not nervous. He was ready. He had been ready for this for a long time.
I crouched down beside him. "You know what today is," I said. It was not a question.
He looked up. His eyes were dark and calm and burning with something I had no word for. "I know," he said. His English was careful and precise, each word placed like a chess piece. "I have been waiting for this for a long time, gaffer."
"Then go and take it," I said. "Everything they said about you. Everything they thought. You answer it today. On that pitch."
He held my gaze for a second, then gave me a single, sharp nod. The System pinged quietly in my peripheral vision.
> System Notification: [Player Motivation]
> Player: Alexandre Pato
> Motivation vs Former Club: 100% (Maximum)
> Mental State: Focused, Determined, Primed
I stood up and turned to face the room. My team talk was brief. I had learned that lesson from the Atlético game too many words before a match cluttered the mind. "We control the tempo from the first whistle," I said. "We trust the press. We earn the right to play. And we do not give them a single easy minute. Now go and enjoy it."
The starting eleven I had named was a statement: Mandanda; Ward, Tomkins, Konaté, Chilwell; McArthur, Neves; Townsend, Eze, Zaha; Pato. A team built to press, to transition, to hurt teams in the spaces they left behind. And up front, the man this game was built around.
Across the pitch, AC Milan were a team in the middle of their own reinvention. Vincenzo Montella, their new manager, stood on the touchline in a beautifully cut suit, his arms folded, his expression one of composed, analytical calm. He was a man who had managed at the highest level, who had seen everything, who was not easily impressed. He watched our warm-up with the detached attention of a professor observing an experiment.
But the player who drew every eye in the stadium, the player who made the crowd murmur even during the warm-up, was their goalkeeper. Gianluigi Donnarumma. He was eighteen years old.
He was six feet five inches tall. He moved through his warm-up with the easy, unhurried grace of someone who had been born to occupy a goal. He had the face of a schoolboy and the wingspan of a condor.
He was, by common consensus, the most prodigious goalkeeping talent since Gianluigi Buffon and some people were already saying he would surpass him. He was the reason, I suspected, that the scoreline tonight would be far closer than the balance of play deserved.
The whistle blew. The game began.
The first half was a revelation. The tactical lessons from the Atlético debrief had not just been absorbed they had been internalised.
The press was a coordinated, snarling, beautiful machine. When the ball went to the Milan right-back, Eze was on him within two seconds, cutting off the angle back to the centre-backs.
Zaha tracked his full-back relentlessly, never letting him settle, never letting him turn. Pato, who I had asked to press from the front, was a dynamo, closing down every ball played to the Milan centre-halves with an intensity that had the entire stadium buzzing.
> System Notification: [Tactical Cohesion]
> Pressing Efficiency: 75% (Excellent)
> Team Shape: Compact, Organised
> Player Morale: +5 (Confident)
AC Milan were pinned back. Their midfielders, unable to receive the ball under pressure, kept recycling it back to Donnarumma.
And Donnarumma, to his enormous credit, was the calmest man in the stadium. He received every back-pass with the unhurried composure of a man who had been in this situation before, who understood that his job in these moments was to be the first line of attack as much as the last line of defence.
He played it long, he played it short, he played it wide. He was the conductor of a symphony that had no musicians willing to play.
The first real chance came in the tenth minute. Townsend whipped a corner from the right, a vicious, inswinging delivery that found the head of James Tomkins at the near post. Tomkins met it perfectly, a downward, powerful header that was destined for the bottom-left corner. Donnarumma was already moving.
He threw himself to his right, got down impossibly low for a man his size, and clawed the ball away with his right hand. The rebound fell to McArthur, who struck it first-time on the volley. Donnarumma, who had barely recovered his footing, somehow got a hand to that too, deflecting it over the bar.
The crowd gasped. Kevin Bray, standing beside me, let out a long, slow breath. "That kid is not human," he said.
"He’s eighteen," I said, mostly to myself. "He’s eighteen years old."
The eighteenth minute brought the second save. Zaha, who had been tormenting the Milan right-back with a relentless series of step-overs and direction changes, finally got past him on the outside and cut inside onto his right foot.
He shaped to shoot, drew the last defender, and then opened his body and curled a shot towards the top-right corner. It was a beautiful strike, the kind of goal that Zaha scored in his sleep. Donnarumma was moving before the ball left Zaha’s boot.
He launched himself to his right, fully extended, and tipped the ball over the bar with the very tips of his fingers. It was a save that had no right to exist.
Zaha stood with his hands on his head, staring at the sky. The crowd applauded, and they were applauding both of them the man who had created the chance and the boy who had denied it.
In the twenty-second minute, Eze played a brilliant, incisive one-two with Pato on the edge of the box and found himself one-on-one with the keeper. He took one touch to set himself, looked up, and tried to place the ball low to Donnarumma’s left. Donnarumma stood tall, spread himself wide, and blocked the shot with his chest. The ball rebounded to Pato, who struck it on the half-volley. Donnarumma, still on the ground, somehow got a leg to it.
I turned to Sarah. "He is the only reason this is still nil-nil."
"He’s going to be the best goalkeeper in the world," she said, with the matter-of-fact certainty of someone who had spent her career watching footballers and knew the real thing when she saw it.
Twenty-five minutes in, the pressure finally told. Neves, who was running the game from the base of midfield with the calm authority of a man ten years his senior, intercepted a loose pass from a Milan midfielder who had tried to play out under pressure and paid the price.
He took one touch to control it and a second to slide a pass out to Zaha on the left. Zaha, who had been tormenting the Milan right-back all evening, took one look up, dropped his shoulder, and exploded past him to the byline. He had the composure to lift his head and cut the ball back into the six-yard box, low and hard, precisely where a striker needed it to be.
And there was Pato. He had made a classic striker’s run, a sharp, diagonal dart to the near post that had taken him a yard clear of his marker. He didn’t even have to break his stride. He met the ball on the full, a first-time finish with the inside of his right foot that flew past Donnarumma before the young keeper could even react.
1-0.
Pato stood still. He did not run. He did not raise his arm. He did not turn to the crowd. He simply stood exactly where the ball had left his boot, his chest rising and falling, staring at the net.
He had scored against the club that had given up on him, in front of 50,000 people, in a stadium on the other side of the world, and he would not celebrate it. Not against them. Common courtesy. Basic decency.
The kind of thing that separated a man from a boy. Zaha was the first to reach him, leaping on his back, screaming something in his ear. McArthur was next, grabbing him in a headlock. Eze arrived a second later, wrapping his arms around the whole chaotic pile.
The entire team swarmed him, a joyous, heaving mass of red and blue. Pato let them carry him, his face hidden inside the celebration, a single tear tracing a quiet, private path down his cheek that nobody else could see.







