Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 444: The Response II: Vitória SC
In the seventy-eighth minute, he collected a pass from Milivojević, played a quick one-two with Rodríguez on the edge of the box, and slid a perfectly weighted through ball into Zaha’s path. Wilf did the rest one touch to kill it, a second to fire it low and hard into the corner. The Palace fans in the upper tier erupted, their relief as loud as their joy.
West Ham 1–2 Crystal Palace. Zaha. 78 minutes.
Kevin Bray’s corner routines helped us see out the final twelve minutes twice we won corners and used them to eat two, three minutes of clock, Bojan (on for Rodríguez in the eighty-second minute)... keeping the ball alive in the corner with the intelligence of a man who had played a hundred matches at the highest level. Dann came on for Benteke in stoppage time, the captain dropping into the back three to lock the door. The final whistle was a release.
[FULL TIME: West Ham 1–2 Crystal Palace. Goals: Benteke 41’, Zaha 78’. Manager Record: P16 W14 D1 L1. The bounce-back begins.]
The bounce-back was only the beginning. Four days later, Selhurst Park was under the floodlights again this time for the first Europa League group stage home match in the club’s history.
Vitória de Guimarães had travelled from northern Portugal, and the atmosphere was electric not the hostile, suffocating intensity of Marseille, but something warmer, more celebratory, the noise of twenty-five thousand people still getting used to the fact that European football was a thing that happened at their ground.
The Holmesdale had prepared a tifo: a giant Palace eagle clutching the Europa League logo in its talons, the words "OUR TIME" in bold red letters beneath.
I rotated the entire starting eleven, exactly as I had done against Fenerbahçe. The machine had proven itself in that match, and it would prove itself again. Mandanda in goal. Ward, Dann, Tomkins, and Digne across the back. McArthur and Nya Kirby in the double pivot. Bowen on the right, Eze in the ten, Gnabry on the left. Abraham leading the line.
[Starting XI Vitória (H): Mandanda; Ward, Dann (C), Tomkins, Digne; McArthur, Nya Kirby; Bowen, Eze, Gnabry; Abraham. Formation: 4-2-3-1. Bench: Pope, Tarkowski, Sakho, Townsend, Bojan, Connor Blake, Pato. 11 changes from West Ham.]
The so-called "B team" treated Vitória de Guimarães the way a cat treats a mouse. With patient, controlled, occasionally cruel precision.
Gnabry scored twice the first a blistering run from the left that left the Vitória right-back on the floor, the finish a clinical, side-footed effort into the far corner. The second was a poacher’s goal, arriving at the back post to tap in a Bowen cross from the right.
Bowen himself was magnificent direct, fearless, his two-million-pound price tag from Hull looking more absurd with every match. He won the free kick that led to the third goal, driving at the Vitória defence until they had no choice but to bring him down.
The third was Eze’s. A free kick from twenty-two yards, curled over the wall with his right foot, dipping under the crossbar and nestling in the side netting. He stood with his arms outstretched, a private smile on his face, as the Holmesdale sang his name.
Beside me, Sarah shook her head. "He’s twenty years old, Danny. Twenty. And he’s doing that in European football." Marcus Reid, who had scouted Eze and lobbied hard for his inclusion in the first-team squad, sat back in his seat with the quiet satisfaction of a man whose thesis had been proved correct.
In midfield, Nya Kirby eighteen years old, already a senior England U21 international was imperious. He controlled the tempo with a maturity that defied his age, shielded by the tireless McArthur, who covered every blade of grass and won every second ball with a snarl.
The two of them with youth and experience, silk and steel were the engine that drove the performance. At the back, Dann organised the defence with the authority of a man who had done it a thousand times, Tomkins beside him winning headers and clearing danger, Ward at right-back defending solidly and offering width when we needed it.
Abraham, up front, didn’t score but his hold-up play was excellent bringing others into the game, occupying both centre-backs, running the channels. Connor Blake replaced him in the seventy-second minute and nearly scored himself, his raw pace stretching the exhausted Portuguese defence, a left-footed shot tipped over by the goalkeeper.
Townsend came on for Bowen and added experience to the final twenty minutes. Pato replaced Gnabry and drifted through the last fifteen with the lazy, dangerous intelligence of a man who could score at any moment but chose not to.
[FULL TIME: Crystal Palace 3–0 Vitória de Guimarães. Goals: Gnabry 24’, 56’, Eze 67’. Europa League Group H, Matchday 2.]
After the match, I checked the group table on my phone.
Europa League Group H After Matchday 2:
1. Crystal Palace 6 pts (W2, GD +4)
2. Lazio 4 pts (W1 D1)
3. Vitória SC 1 pt (D1 L1)
4. Olympique de Marseille 0 pt (L2)
Top of the group. Maximum points. Two clean sheets. The rotation model vindicated again eleven changes, zero drop in quality.
[Europa League Squad Usage: After 2 group matches, 22 of 28 squad members have played European football this season. The depth is not just a concept. It is a competitive advantage.]
Forty-eight hours later, we were on a bus heading north. St James’ Park. Fifty-two thousand Geordies in black and white, Rafa Benítez on the opposite touchline, and the kind of raw, authentic football atmosphere that the London Stadium could only dream of. This was proper football. Proper away day.
The journey up the M1 had been five hours the squad playing cards, watching films, Sakho asleep before we’d cleared Watford, Rodríguez reading something on his iPad with the detachment of a man being driven to a spa rather than a Premier League fixture.
I mixed the squads again. Nick Pope, who had kept a clean sheet on debut at Swansea and been patiently waiting for his next chance, was given the gloves. Wan-Bissaka and Digne returned to the full-back positions. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
Tarkowski continued alongside Sakho in the centre their partnership growing with every match, the communication sharper, the understanding deepening. Neves and Milivojević anchored the midfield. But I rotated the attacking line: Townsend on the right, Bojan in the ten, Zaha on the left, and Pato up front. Rodríguez, Navas, and Benteke rested on the bench.
[Starting XI Newcastle (A): Pope; Wan-Bissaka, Tarkowski, Sakho, Digne; Neves, Milivojević; Townsend, Bojan, Zaha; Pato. Formation: 4-2-3-1. Bench: Hennessey, Dann, Ward, McArthur, Navas, Rodríguez, Benteke.]
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Thank you to Sir nameyelus, icoi and Manpreet_Kaur_7484 for the support.







