Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 382: The Copenhagen Conquest I
0-1.
Stunned silence fell over the stadium, a sudden vacuum where the noise had been. The only exception was the corner of the ground, where 5,000 bodies in red and blue detonated. Pato’s celebration was a study in cold professionalism.
He didn’t sprint or scream. He simply stopped, turned, and pointed one finger at Bojan, then another at Neves, a silent, deadly acknowledgment. It wasn’t a celebration; it was an invoice. The machine confirming receipt of services rendered.
On the opposition bench, the Brøndby coach, Alexander Zorniger, a man known for his own high-press philosophy, slammed his water bottle onto the ground in disgust. I allowed myself a single, sharp, downward punch of the fist. The thesis was proven.
We didn’t sit back. We turned the screw. I made a decision. Now was the time to kill the game. I focused my intent, a quiet command in the back of my mind, and activated the trait I had earned in the fires of last season’s relegation battle.
> System Notification: [Trait Activated]
> Trait: Heavy Metal Football
> Effect: For the next fifteen minutes, your team’s pressing intensity and attacking speed are boosted to world-class levels.
> Warning: Significant stamina cost.
The change was immediate. It was like a switch had been flipped. The controlled press became a suffocating, relentless swarm. "Higher, Wilf!" I screamed at Zaha. "Andros, again!" My voice was raw, but they responded.
The whole team took a collective step forward, compressing the pitch until there was no air for Brøndby to breathe. Brøndby couldn’t get out of their own half. Every time they won the ball, they were swarmed by two, three, sometimes four Palace players.
The five-second rule was being executed with a terrifying, brutal efficiency. Nya Kirby, the eighteen-year-old making his debut, was a revelation. He led a swarm that won the ball back on the edge of their box, and I couldn’t help but punch the air.
"Yes, Nya! That’s it!" He played with the tactical intelligence of a man ten years his senior, winning tackles and recycling possession, never wasting a pass.
Alongside him, Neves was the calm conductor, but now his orchestra was playing at double speed. At the back, Ibrahima Konaté was a colossus, a mountain of a man who won every single aerial duel against the Brøndby target man, who looked increasingly demoralised.
The home crowd, so loud just minutes before, was now a nervous, murmuring sea of yellow. Their dream was turning into a nightmare. And in the thirty-eighth minute, it got worse.
Wilfried Zaha, who had been tormenting the Brøndby right-back all half, received the ball out wide. He feinted to go outside, then chopped back in, leaving the defender scrambling.
He drove to the byline and cut a sharp pass back towards the penalty spot. It was slightly behind Bojan. The defender, a big, bruising centre-back, should have cleared it easily. He lunged for the ball.
But Bojan was there. This was not the "New Messi." This was not the fragile, technical player who could be bullied.
This was the warrior I had demanded he become. He slid in with a ferocious, perfectly-timed tackle, his whole body committed to the challenge. He won the ball, clean. Back on his feet in an instant, he took one touch to set himself, opened his body, and curled an unstoppable shot into the top corner.
0-2.
This goal broke something in the stadium. The player they had written off as a lightweight had just outfought their toughest defender and scored a goal of sublime quality.
Bojan let out a roar that was years in the making, a guttural scream of pure, unadulterated vindication that tore through the stunned silence of the stadium. It was the sound of every doubt, every headline, every whispered criticism being burned away.
He didn’t run to the fans. He ran to me. His arms wide, he launched himself into my arms, and I held him tight, feeling the frantic, joyful hammering of his heart against my chest.
Before I let him go, I grabbed the back of his head and pulled him close, my voice a low, urgent whisper in his ear.
"I’m proud of you. Now get back in your shape. Don’t lose your head." This was more than a goal. It was an exorcism, but the game wasn’t over. The System flashed in my vision, its text a quiet validation of the entire project.
> System Notification: [Player Development]
> Player: Bojan Krkić
> Trait Unlocked: The Warrior’s Heart (Increased determination and physical stats in key moments)
The commentators were almost speechless. "I... I don’t know what to say," one of them stammered. "We are witnessing a complete tactical deconstruction. And Bojan Krkić... he looks like a different player. A different man."
The half-time whistle was a mercy for Brøndby. Our dressing room was quiet, focused, no trace of celebration. Marcus had already projected the data on the whiteboard. `[Pressing Efficiency: 81%], [Territorial Dominance: 74%], [Opposition Passes in Final Third: 12]`. It was as close to a perfect half of football as I had ever seen.
I didn’t praise them. I just showed them the numbers. I highlighted two instances where a lazy pass had almost allowed Brøndby to break our press. "The standard is the standard," I said, my voice low and even. "Don’t let it drop."
I moved around the room.
To Nya: "Exactly what I needed. Keep it simple."
To Konaté: "Long balls in the second half. Be ready."
I met Bojan’s eyes and held them. "Now do it again." He nodded.
I looked at Pato last. "More chances will be coming. Take them."
As we filed out, I could hear shouting from the home dressing room down the corridor the muffled, desperate sound of a dream dying.
The second half was a masterpiece.
Ten minutes after the restart, in the fifty-fifth minute, we scored the goal that would be on highlight reels for the rest of the season. It started with Mandanda, who rolled calmly to Konaté. Konaté played it to Neves, deep in his own half.
One touch to settle it, a second to look up. He saw a run that maybe three other players in the world would have seen. He unleashed a sixty-yard, laser-guided diagonal pass, a sweeping arc of impossible geometry, that dropped perfectly over the head of the despairing Brøndby left-back and into the path of Andros Townsend, who had timed his run from the right wing to perfection.
Townsend didn’t break his stride. He met the ball on the full, smashing a first-time volley of such savage purity that the net bulged and rippled before the keeper had even finished his dive.
0-3.
For a moment, he just stood there, a look of disbelief on his own face. "What a hit, son! What a hit!" I roared from the touchline.
Pure, unadulterated joy took over. He sprinted towards the corner flag, a classic, mud-scattering knee-slide that ended right in front of the travelling Palace fans, his face a mask of ecstasy as he was mobbed by his teammates. He pointed back at Neves, a gesture of pure gratitude for a pass that deserved to be framed.
It was a goal of such breathtaking quality that even the remaining Brøndby fans applauded. Neves, the architect, just turned and jogged back to the centre circle as if he had just played a simple five-yard pass.
In the commentary gantry, there was a long, reverent silence before one of the commentators found his voice.
"That," he said slowly, "is Rúben Neves. Twenty years old. And he just played a pass that Pirlo would have been proud of. From his own half. I have been watching football for thirty years, and I am not sure I have seen a better one." His co-commentator, a former Premier League midfielder, just laughed. Not a dismissive laugh. An awed one. "What is going on here? What has Danny Walsh built?"
In the home sections, the exodus began. Seats were emptied, yellow scarves discarded. But in the corner of the stadium, a young Brøndby fan, no older than sixteen, sat completely still in his seat as the people around him left.
He had been part of the tifo. He had held his section of the Viking longship aloft before kick-off, his heart full of the belief that tonight was the night his club announced itself to Europe.
Now he sat with his hands in his lap, staring at the pitch, trying to understand what he had just witnessed. He was not angry. He was not devastated. He was something more complicated than that. He was watching a team play football the way it was supposed to be played, and he could not look away.







