Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 442: Ash III: Applause

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Chapter 442: Ash III: Applause

They had watched their club go to Istanbul and silence a stadium. They had watched their bus get attacked in Marseille and their team respond with dignity. And now they were standing, after a defeat, in the September dusk, telling us telling me that they were still here. That the project was bigger than one result. That they trusted the process even when the process hurt.

"DANNY WALSH" Clap! Clap!

"DANNY WALSH" Clap! Clap!

"DANNY WALSH" Clap! Clap!

The players, who had been walking off the pitch with their heads bowed, stopped. Sakho looked up at the Holmesdale, and something shifted in his face the stone mask cracked, and underneath it was gratitude.

Dann turned and began to applaud back, clapping the fans who were clapping him. Zaha, who had been chewing his lip in fury, stood still for a moment, absorbing the noise, and then raised his hand a simple, quiet gesture that said I hear you. Neves, the composed Portuguese who rarely showed emotion, put his hand over the badge on his chest and held it there.

I stood on the touchline, my arms at my sides, and let the sound wash over me. I had expected anger. I had expected frustration. I had expected the doubt. Instead, I got love. Unconditional, unsolicited, unshakeable love from twenty-five thousand people who had decided that this club, this team, this project, was worth believing in even on the worst day.

The Chelsea players watched from the far side of the pitch, their celebration muted. Several of them: Hazard, Kanté, and Courtois looked at the Palace fans with something that might have been respect. This was not normal. Losing teams did not receive standing ovations in the Premier League. But Crystal Palace under Danny Walsh was not a normal losing team. And these were not normal fans.

Conte shook my hand a firm, genuine grip, his dark eyes meeting mine. "You have a very good team," he said, his Italian accent thick. "The boy who was injured the young centre-back he is special. I hope he recovers quickly." He paused, then glanced at the Holmesdale, where the ovation was still going. "And your fans," he added quietly. "They are extraordinary."

"They are," I said. "They’re the best in the country."

I walked into the dressing room. The silence was absolute. Exhausted men, scattered across benches, staring at the floor, the walls, their own hands. They didn’t know how to process this. None of us did.

I stood in the centre of the room. I didn’t shout. I didn’t throw anything.

"Listen to me," I said, my voice quiet but firm. Every head snapped up. "Remember this feeling. Remember this silence. It tastes like ash, doesn’t it?"

Nobody spoke.

"We lost a game of football today. For the first time since I walked through the doors of this club, we were beaten. Chelsea were better than us. They were fresher, they were sharper, and they punished our mistakes." I paused. "But this is not the end of the world. This is the Premier League. You cannot go through a season in this league without taking a punch to the jaw."

I looked at Sakho, who was staring at the floor, his face carved from stone. I looked at Zaha, who was chewing his lip, the anger radiating off him in waves. I looked at the empty space on the bench where Konaté should have been sitting.

"We have ten points from five league games. Three wins, a draw, and a loss. We are still in a strong position. But the honeymoon is over. The invincibility is gone. Now we find out what kind of team we really are. Now we find out if we have the character to stand back up."

I turned to Rebecca. "How is Ibou?"

Her face was professional, but I could see the strain behind it. "Grade two hamstring tear. Six to eight weeks minimum. We’re sending him for a scan tonight to confirm."

A groan rippled through the room. Losing the match was painful. Losing Konaté was devastating.

"Right," I said, clapping my hands once a sharp, decisive crack. "We deal with it. We adapt. Tomorrow is recovery. Monday, we go back to work. Dann and Tarkowski will step up. Tomkins is here. The depth exists for exactly this reason." I looked around the room. "The machine doesn’t stop because of one result and one injury. It evolves."

I walked out and down the tunnel towards the media mixed zone. The journalists were waiting, recorders out, pens poised, their faces the particular mixture of sympathy and hunger that the press wears when they’ve finally got the narrative they’ve been waiting for. Walsh loses. The bubble bursts. The fairytale ends.

I took a deep breath, squared my shoulders, and sat behind the microphone. The first question was predictable. "Danny, your first defeat. How does it feel?"

I looked at the journalist a young man from the Guardian, earnest, not hostile. "It feels exactly how it should feel," I said. "It feels bad. Chelsea were the better team today. We were fatigued from Thursday night in Marseille, and that’s not an excuse it’s a fact. The turnaround was brutal and it showed in our performance."

"And Konaté? How serious is the injury?"

"Hamstring. We’ll know more after the scan, but it’s likely he’ll be out for six to eight weeks. It’s a significant loss. Ibrahima has been outstanding this season and we’ll miss him enormously."

A hand went up from the back. A tabloid reporter, sharper, hungrier. "Danny, some would say that playing Konaté today, given the turnaround from Marseille, was a risk that didn’t pay off. Do you accept responsibility for the injury?"

The room went still. It was a knife of a question, and everyone knew it.

I held the man’s gaze for a long moment. "Yes," I said. "I selected the team. The decisions are mine. All of them the good ones and the bad ones. I’ll review everything and I’ll learn from it. That’s what managers do."

No deflection. No excuses. Just the truth. I stood up and walked out, the camera shutters clicking behind me.

In the corridor, Sarah was waiting. She didn’t say anything. She just fell into step beside me, her clipboard under her arm, her presence a quiet, steadying force. We walked in silence for a few steps, and then she said, very quietly: "The System flagged the hamstring at half-time."

"I know."

"You chose not to sub him."

"I know that too."

She nodded. No judgement. No I-told-you-so. Just the acknowledgement of a fact, and the unspoken understanding that it would never happen again.

[FULL TIME: Crystal Palace 2–3 Chelsea.]

[Goals: Zaha 38’, Benteke 88’. Chelsea: Morata 22’, Cahill 65’, Hazard 75’.]

[Manager Record: P15 W13 D1 L1. GF: 44. GA: 10.]

[Premier League: P5 W3 D1 L1. Points: 10. GD: +7.]

[Injury: Konaté Grade 2 hamstring tear. Out 6-8 weeks. The manager ignored the System’s recommendation to substitute at half-time. This must be logged as a learning moment. Trust the data. Even when the boy looks at you with those eyes.]

[First defeat in 15 competitive matches. The unbeaten run is over. What happens next will define the season.]

I drove home in the DB11, the September evening light fading over South London, the streets quiet. Emma was waiting. She didn’t ask about the match. She didn’t need to. She had watched every second.

She just opened the door, took my hand, and led me to the sofa. She poured two glasses of wine, curled up beside me, and held my hand while I stared at the wall and processed the taste of ash.

"First loss," she said quietly, after a long time.

"First loss," I repeated.

"How does it feel?"

I thought about it. About Konaté’s scream. About Hazard’s curl into the far corner. About the UNBROKEN tifo hanging limp above a silent Holmesdale. About the System’s cold, clinical verdict: This injury was preventable.

"It feels necessary," I said. "Like something I had to go through to understand what this job really costs."

She squeezed my hand. "Then it wasn’t wasted."

She was right. She was always right about the things that mattered. I closed my eyes, the weight of the day pressing down on me, and let the silence settle. Tomorrow, I will go back to work. Tomorrow, I would face the cameras and the questions and the doubt. Tomorrow, the machine would start again.

But tonight, in the quiet of our apartment, with the woman I loved beside me and the taste of my first defeat still bitter on my tongue, I let myself feel it. All of it. The pride and the pain and the guilt and the resolve.

The run was over. The real season had begun.

***

Thank you for 300 Power Stones.