Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 414: The Inferno II
In the dressing room, I kept it short.
"Same intensity, same discipline. They’ll change shape probably three at the back, more attacking. Good. That means more space for us on the counter. Bojan, keep doing what you’re doing. Pato, stay patient. The second goal will come."
I looked at Sarah. She stepped forward.
"Their right-back is on a yellow. Gnabry, run at him. Make him choose between a foul and a goal." I looked at Kevin Bray. "Kev. If we get a corner or a free kick in their half, we go with KB-19."
Bray nodded, the faintest smile crossing his face. KB-19. The routine he had built specifically for Fenerbahçe’s zonal marking system. The one he had promised me on that touchline at Selhurst Park after the Stoke match. Wait until you see what I’ve got for Fenerbahçe. Four days of preparation. Three hours of video analysis. One perfect design.
[Half-Time Tactical Note: Fenerbahçe expected to switch to 3-4-3 in the second half. Counter-attacking opportunities will increase.]
[Set-piece routine KB-19 designed to exploit their zonal marking - the weak point is the near-post zone, where their shortest defender is stationed. Delivery target: back-post corridor.]
The second half was a masterclass in professional game management. The fire had gone out of the crowd, replaced by a sullen, resentful silence punctuated by occasional, desperate surges of noise when Fenerbahçe strung three passes together.
We controlled the tempo, Neves and Milivojević dictating from deep, their passing crisp and intelligent. Bojan continued his extraordinary performance, pressing, harassing, recycling possession, and creating the platform for everything we did.
In the fifty-eighth minute, he won the ball for the seventh time in the match, played a quick one-two with Pato on the edge of the box, and nearly scored himself a curling effort that Fenerbahçe’s goalkeeper tipped over the bar at full stretch.
The chemistry between them was something I hadn’t coached. You can’t coach chemistry. You can only create the conditions for it to grow, and then get out of the way.
In the sixty-fifth minute, Pato, having run himself into the ground eleven kilometres covered, the most of any forward on the pitch, was replaced. The crowd expected Zaha. I brought on Connor Blake.
The eighteen-year-old academy striker, a boy I had coached in the U18s, a boy who had scored on his senior debut in the five-match miracle last season, was jogging onto the pitch in the Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium, his eyes wide with wonder but his stride confident. I caught his eye as he crossed the touchline.
"Play your game, Connor," I said. "You belong here." He nodded and sprinted to the centre circle. The travelling Palace fans, who knew his story, who had watched him come through the academy, erupted into a chant: *"One of our own! He’s one of our own! Connor Blake, he’s one of our own!"*
[Substitution: 65’ Pato → Connor Blake. Blake’s profile: Academy graduate. Age: 18. Senior appearances: 6. Goals: 2. This is his European debut. The development pathway is working.]
And then, in the seventy-second minute, Kevin Bray delivered on his promise. A driving run from Gnabry, his pace too much for their exhausted right-back, won us a corner.
I looked at Bray. He was already on his feet, calling the routine from the bench, his hand signals sharp and precise. KB-19.
The design was elegant in its simplicity. Fenerbahçe defended corners zonally each defender responsible for an area of the box rather than a specific attacker.
Bray had identified that their near-post zone was covered by their shortest defender, a full-back standing five foot nine.
His plan was to create a decoy run to the near post Chilwell, sprinting from deep, drawing the full-back’s attention and pulling him out of position while the real target, Sakho, peeled off to the back post, arriving late, arriving unseen, arriving like a freight train.
Bojan delivered the corner high, looping, hanging in the Istanbul night air. Chilwell’s decoy run worked perfectly, dragging two defenders towards the near post. And Sakho, a giant among men, rose above the back-post zone completely unmarked, his body a testament to raw power and perfect timing, and thundered a header into the back of the net.
2–0. Crystal Palace. Sakho. 72 minutes.
He didn’t celebrate with his teammates. He walked to the Fenerbahçe ultras, stood in front of fifty thousand hostile faces, folded his arms, and stared them down.
A defiant, magnificent statue. The most beautiful, arrogant, perfect celebration I had ever seen. On the bench, Kevin Bray sat back down, closed his notepad, and allowed himself a single, quiet nod. Promise kept.
[GOAL. Sakho. Set-piece routine KB-19 (Kevin Bray designed specifically for Fenerbahçe’s zonal marking). Decoy run: Chilwell. Delivery: Bojan. Finish: Sakho (header). xG: 0.34. Four days of preparation for one perfect moment. This is why set-piece coaching matters.]
With the game won, I made my final changes. Zaha came on for Gnabry with ten minutes to go a flash of lightning to run at tired legs and remind them of the weapon we had kept in reserve. I watched the ankle carefully from the touchline. He moved freely, no hesitation, no wince. Good. He’d be ready for City.
Rodríguez replaced Bojan, who walked off to an ovation from the travelling fans, his shirt soaked through, his legs spent, his performance one of the finest I had seen from any player in a Palace shirt.
Bojan grabbed Pato’s hand as he passed him near the bench, a handshake that lingered, a private acknowledgement between two men who had built something tonight. The dirty work and the finishing. The trigger and the blade.
[Substitutions: 65’ Pato → Blake. 80’ Gnabry → Zaha. 80’ Bojan → Rodríguez. Zaha minutes: 10. Ankle response: no adverse reaction. Available for Manchester City (H), Monday 21st August.]
Connor Blake, in his ten minutes on the pitch, did exactly what I had asked. He ran the channels, he pressed intelligently, he held the ball up when we needed to breathe. He didn’t score. He didn’t need to.
He had stood on a pitch in Istanbul, in a European knockout tie, at nineteen years old, and he had not looked out of place. That was worth more than a goal.
The final whistle blew. The Palace players walked to the away end and applauded the travelling fans, three hundred people who had flown to Istanbul on a Thursday night, who had sung for ninety minutes in the heart of the inferno.
Sakho lifted a Palace scarf above his head. Dann applauded until his hands were red. Mandanda sat on the pitch, eyes closed, a small smile on his lips.
In the press conference room, a cramped, airless box beneath the stands, I sat across from a wall of Turkish journalists. "Mr. Walsh," the first one began. "How do you explain this result?" I leaned forward. "Good football," I said.
The room rippled with incredulous laughter. "Fenerbahçe is a club with a great European history," he pressed. "Do you believe your team can finish the job?" I kept my voice level.
"We have a two-goal advantage. We will approach the second leg with the same respect and preparation we gave to this one. We have not qualified yet." I stood up and walked out.
In the dressing room, I stood in the centre of the room. "Well done," I said. Two words. They knew what they meant. Sakho caught my eye and gave a slow, satisfied nod.
Dann was already talking to Neves, dissecting a passage of play from the second half. Mandanda was sitting quietly, his towel over his shoulders, the look of a man who had been to hell and found it quite comfortable.
On the bus back to the hotel, the players were subdued, tired. I sat at the front, looking out at the Istanbul skyline, the Bosphorus a dark ribbon of water in the distance. My phone buzzed. Emma: "Watched the whole thing on my laptop. Sakho’s celebration. I actually screamed. Come home soon."
I typed back: "Two days. Don’t let anyone touch the leftover Chinese."
Steve Parish: "DANNY. I am watching this in my kitchen in my pyjamas and I am crying. CRYING. Call me when you land."
Dougie Freedman: "The phones are already ringing. Every agent in Europe wants to know about our players. Don’t tell them anything." I put the phone in my pocket.
[FULL TIME: Fenerbahçe 0–2 Crystal Palace. Europa League Playoff, First Leg.]
[Goals: Pato 34’, Sakho 72’.]
[Manager Record: P9 W9 D0 L0. GF: 32. GA: 3. Win Rate: 100%.]
[Milestone: First European Playoffs away win in Crystal Palace’s 112-year history.]
[Key Performance: Bojan Krkić distance covered: 12.4km. Possessions won: 9. Chances created: 3. Rating: 9.1. Man of the Match.]
[Next Match: Crystal Palace vs Manchester City. Premier League, Matchday 2. Monday 21st August. Selhurst Park. 4 days. Zaha: AVAILABLE. Konaté: AVAILABLE.]
Nine wins. No draws. No defeats. I closed my eyes and let the hum of the bus carry me forward. City on Monday. Selhurst Park under the lights. Guardiola on the opposite touchline. The season was two weeks old and already extraordinary.
***
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