Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 446: The Reckoning I

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Chapter 446: The Reckoning I

The second international break of the season arrived like a ceasefire in the middle of a war. One day, you’re standing on the touchline at St James’ Park watching Neves volley the ball into the bottom corner, the next you’re sitting in your apartment in Dulwich with nothing to do and nobody to shout at.

It was Monday evening, October 2nd. I was on the sofa again, cold beer, Monday Night Football. Emma was in the kitchen, on the phone to her editor at The Athletic she had taken the column, and her first piece was due Friday.

She was pitching something about fan culture in European away days, using the six hundred Palace supporters who had followed us to Marseille as the centrepiece. I could hear her voice through the doorway, sharp and professional, the journalist’s cadence that was so different from the warm, teasing tone she used with me. Two Emmas. I loved them both.

On the screen, David Jones was settling into his chair between Carragher and Neville, and the graphic behind them made me sit up straight.

It wasn’t a single match analysis or a team preview. It was a full-screen image of the Premier League table, Crystal Palace highlighted in third place on sixteen points, with the words: "THE PALACE PROJECT HOW FAR CAN THEY GO?"

"Right then," Jones said, leaning forward with the barely suppressed excitement of a presenter who knows he’s got a good show.

"Let’s talk about the elephant in the room. Or rather, the eagle. Crystal Palace. Third in the Premier League. They are at the top of their Europa League group. And after a defeat to Chelsea two weeks ago that some people said would be the beginning of the end, they’ve rattled off three straight wins. Gary, I seem to remember you were one of those people."

Neville shifted in his seat, and to his credit, he didn’t hide from it. "I was, David. I was on this very show after the Chelsea game, and I said the defeat could be a turning point in the wrong direction. I said the injury to Konaté could destabilise them. I said the turnaround from Marseille was too brutal and the fatigue would carry into the next few weeks." He paused, a wry smile forming. "I was wrong. On all counts."

Jones turned to Carragher, who was already leaning forward, the Scouse accent thick with vindication. "Jamie, you’ve been the Palace cheerleader all season. Did the Chelsea result worry you?"

"Honestly? No," Carragher said, and I could tell he meant it.

"Because I’ve been watching this team closely, and the thing that impressed me most wasn’t the unbeaten run. It was the squad. The depth. The system. And what Danny Walsh did in the week after Chelsea proved everything I’ve been saying." He jabbed a finger at the screen.

"Look at this. He loses to Chelsea on Saturday. His best centre-back goes down with a hamstring injury. Half the media and Gary, I’m looking at you... are writing the obituary. And what happens? He goes to West Ham and wins. He changes the entire eleven for Vitória and wins three-nil. Then he mixes it up again and goes to Newcastle and wins two-nil. Three different lineups. Three different goal scorers in each match. Seven goals, one conceded. That is not a team that’s been broken by a defeat. That is a team that’s been liberated by one."

Jones raised an eyebrow. "Liberated?"

"Yes," Carragher said firmly.

"The unbeaten run was brilliant, but it was also a pressure. Every week, the question wasn’t ’can Palace win?’ it was ’can Palace keep the unbeaten run going?’ That’s a different kind of weight. Now it’s gone. They lost, and the world didn’t end. The fans gave them a standing ovation after the Chelsea defeat... a standing ovation after a home loss! When does that happen? That tells you everything about the culture Walsh has built. The defeat freed them. They don’t have to be invincible anymore. They just have to be good. And they are very, very good."

Neville nodded, the grudging respect of a man who had been proved wrong and was intelligent enough to acknowledge it.

"I’ll tell you what’s changed my mind," he said. "It’s not the results. It’s the rotation. After Chelsea, you’d expect a team to circle the wagons. Play your best eleven. Protect the lead. But Walsh did the opposite. He rotated against Vitória eleven times, the whole starting eleven swapped, and they won three-nil. He gave Nick Pope his second start of the season at Newcastle, and the lad kept a clean sheet. He’s playing Tarkowski for the injured Konaté and the partnership with Sakho looks like it’s been together for years. That’s not luck. That’s not a fluke. That’s a manager who trusts his entire squad, and a squad that trusts the system."

"So, Gary," Jones said, a smile playing at the corner of his mouth. "February. You keep saying February. It’s October. Are we still waiting?"

Neville laughed a genuine, self-deprecating laugh. "I did say February, didn’t I? Alright, look. I’ll move it forward. Let’s see where they are at Christmas. The December schedule is brutal; they’ve got thirteen matches in five weeks. If they’re still in the top four at the end of December, then I’ll accept that this is not a fairytale. This is a genuine project."

"Christmas it is," Carragher said, grinning. "I’ll hold you to that."

Then the touchscreen lit up with a detailed tactical breakdown, heat maps, pressing data, passing networks, and the two of them spent the next fifteen minutes dissecting Walshball with the kind of forensic attention usually reserved for title contenders.

They analysed the gegenpress triggers, the five-second rule, the way the formation shifted from a 4-2-3-1 in possession to a 4-4-2 mid-block out of possession. They highlighted Neves as the "best deep-lying playmaker in the Premier League outside of Manchester City" and called Kevin Bray’s set-piece routines "the most productive in England seven goals from designed plays, which is more than any other club."

They praised Tarkowski’s adaptation to the system, noted Digne’s Barcelona-quality crossing, and singled out Sakho’s leadership as "the heartbeat of the project."

And then Carragher said something that made me put my beer down.

"I want to talk about the Konaté injury for a second," he said, his tone shifting to something more serious.

"Because Walsh did something in the press conference after Chelsea that I’ve almost never seen from a Premier League manager. A journalist asked him if he accepted responsibility for playing Konaté when the turnaround from Marseille was so tight. And Walsh didn’t deflect. He didn’t blame the schedule or the medical staff. He looked the journalist in the eye and said, ’Yes. I selected the team. The decisions are mine. All of them, the good ones and the bad ones.’ That is extraordinary. That is a twenty-eight-year-old manager, in his first full season, taking full public accountability for a mistake. Most managers twice his age wouldn’t do that. That kind of honesty builds trust. It builds culture. And I think the standing ovation the fans gave after the Chelsea game was partly because of that... they saw a manager who doesn’t hide, who doesn’t make excuses, who treats them like adults."

The room was quiet for a moment. Then Neville said, simply: "He’s the real thing, isn’t he?"

Carragher didn’t hesitate. "He’s the real thing."

I turned the television off. The screen went black. My own reflection stared back at me a twenty-eight-year-old man in a T-shirt and joggers, holding a beer, sitting in an apartment that cost more per month than he used to earn in a year. The real thing. I didn’t know about that. But I knew I wasn’t finished yet.

Emma appeared in the doorway, her phone in her hand, her red hair pulled back in a loose knot. "They called you the real thing," she said.

"You were listening." 𝕗𝐫𝐞𝕖𝕨𝐞𝗯𝚗𝕠𝘃𝐞𝚕.𝐜𝗼𝚖

"I’m a journalist. I’m always listening." She sat beside me on the sofa, tucking her feet beneath her. "How does it feel? Hearing that?"

I thought about it. "It feels like pressure," I said. "A different kind. When they doubt you, you can use it as fuel. When they believe in you..." I trailed off.

"When they believe in you, you have to live up to it," she finished.

"Exactly."

She leaned against my shoulder. "You will."

[Media Summary Monday Night Football, October 2nd. Neville publicly retracts his post-Chelsea scepticism. Moves his "wait and see" deadline from February to Christmas.]

[Carragher calls the Chelsea bounce-back proof that the project is "liberated, not broken." Both pundits perform a 15-minute tactical deep-dive on Walshball.]

[Carragher highlights Danny’s post-Chelsea press conference as "extraordinary accountability." Neville’s conclusion: "He’s the real thing." Combined MNF segment views: 3.8 million across platforms.]

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Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Super Gift.