Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 451: The Eternal City II: Behind

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Chapter 451: The Eternal City II: Behind

Lazio were brilliant. Simone Inzaghi, a young manager, my generation, sharp and hungry had built a team that played with the technical fluency and tactical intelligence that Italian football demanded at its best.

They moved the ball from back to front in three passes. Felipe Anderson drifted off the left, his feet a blur, his step-overs maddening. Luis Alberto conducted everything from the centre, finding spaces that shouldn’t have existed, playing passes that arrived at their destination before the defenders had finished their first step.

And Immobile... Ciro Immobile, the golden boy of Italian football... moved between the lines with the predatory instinct of a man who had been scoring goals in this stadium since he was a teenager.

In the eleventh minute, he struck. A flowing move down the right, Felipe Anderson skipping past Ward with a step-over and a burst of pace that left the Palace right-back clutching air. Anderson’s cut-back was low and hard, aimed at the near post.

Immobile arrived a half-second before Dann, his body between the defender and the ball, and his finish was clinical side-footed, no backlift, the ball whipping past Mandanda before the goalkeeper could set his feet.

Lazio 1–0 Crystal Palace. Immobile. 11 minutes.

The Olimpico erupted. Eighty thousand voices, unified into a single, seismic roar that rolled across the running track and hit me in the chest. The Curva Nord bounced, the pale blue flags waving in waves, the drums accelerating into a frenzy. Above me, the upper tier was a wall of noise so dense that individual voices dissolved into pure vibration.

I looked at my players. Ward had his hands on his hips, frustrated with himself. Dann was already barking at Tomkins, resetting the line. McArthur was pointing, organising, his face red with effort and determination.

And Kirby, eighteen years old, playing in the Stadio Olimpico, just conceded a goal in front of Eighty thousand hostile fans was demanding the ball from Mandanda’s goal kick. The kid was not afraid.

"STAY IN IT!" I screamed from the touchline, my voice eaten by the noise. "The game is ninety minutes, not eleven!"

For fifteen minutes, Lazio pinned us back. Luis Alberto was orchestrating a symphony of possession, the ball zipping between pale blue shirts with a precision that was almost hypnotic.

We couldn’t get out. McArthur was winning individual battles in midfield crunching into tackles, disrupting the flow but the ball kept coming back, wave after wave, the tide of Italian football washing against our defence.

And then, against the run of play, we scored.

In the twenty-sixth minute, McArthur won the ball in midfield with a tackle that would have drawn a card in gentler company a lunging, full-blooded challenge that sent Luis Alberto sprawling and the ball bouncing free.

The referee waved play on. McArthur played it forward to Bojan, who was drifting into the space between Lazio’s midfield and defence with the ghostly intelligence that was his gift. Bojan’s first-time layoff found Gnabry on the left, and the German drove at the Lazio defence, cutting inside onto his right foot.

His shot was heading wide I could see it, the angle was wrong, the power insufficient but it struck the outstretched shin of a Lazio defender and deflected viciously, the ball changing trajectory and looping over the goalkeeper.

The Lazio fans howled. Deflection. Lucky. Fortune.

I didn’t care. The ball was in the net. The scoreboard read 1-1.

Lazio 1–1 Crystal Palace. Gnabry. 26 minutes.

From the corner of the upper tier, four hundred Crystal Palace supporters who had travelled by plane, by train, by car, by any means necessary erupted. I could hear them. Four hundred voices in a stadium built for Eighty thousand, and somehow, impossibly, they were singing "Glad All Over" loudly enough to reach me across the running track and the pitch and the twenty metres of Roman air that separated us.

The match swung. Lazio pressed, we countered. Bowen was electric on the right direct, fearless, driving at the Italian left-back with a speed and aggression that the defender simply couldn’t handle. In the thirty-eighth minute, he won a corner. Bray’s routine.

Kevin Bray had spent three days dissecting Lazio’s set-piece defending. He had found the same kind of weakness he had exploited against Marseille Lazio defended zonally, but their near-post marker was lazy, slow to react to aggressive runs. The play was simple: Dann attacks the near post as the decoy, dragging the marker with him. The ball goes beyond him, into the space. Abraham attacks it.

Digne delivered the corner an inswinging, flat delivery aimed at the near post. Dann made his run, aggressive and committed, dragging the Lazio marker out of position. The ball cleared the first wave of bodies.

And there was Abraham, nineteen years old, throwing his body through the air in a diving header that the goalkeeper got a hand to but couldn’t stop. The ball had too much power. Too much desire.

It crossed the line, and Abraham slid across the Roman grass, his face pressed into the turf, and for one perfect, frozen moment, a teenager from Camberwell was lying in the Stadio Olimpico having just scored the goal that put Crystal Palace ahead. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝓮𝒘𝙚𝙗𝒏𝙤𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝒐𝙢

He scrambled to his feet, sprinted to the corner where the four hundred Palace fans were losing their minds, and stood with his arms wide, his face a picture of pure, uncomplicated, uncontainable joy. The celebration of a boy who had just lived his wildest dream.

Lazio 1–2 Crystal Palace. Abraham. 38 minutes.

The Olimpico fell silent. The drums stopped. The eagle tifo hung limp. Eighty thousand people in pale blue, muted by a diving header from a teenager on loan from Chelsea.

Marcus’s voice crackled in my earpiece from the gantry. "Danny. This is insane."

Half-time. We were winning. In the Stadio Olimpico. With the rotation squad. I let the dressing room settle water, towels, the heavy breathing of men who had been in a war before I spoke.

"We have forty-five minutes. Inzaghi will change something. He’ll go three at the back, push Luis Alberto higher, flood the wide areas. They’ll throw everything at us." I looked at Dann, sweat dripping from his chin, his ribs still tender from the shot he’d taken against Chelsea. "Scott. James. You’ll face the storm. Hold the line." I looked at McArthur and Kirby. "The channels will be where they attack. Double up. Cover each other. Every ball, every runner."

I paused. "And if we get a chance on the break take it."

Inzaghi changed. Three at the back, wing-backs pushed high, Luis Alberto given licence to roam. The second half was forty-five minutes of sustained, suffocating, relentless Italian pressure. Lazio had seventy percent possession.

They pinned us in our own third, the ball swinging from side to side, the crosses raining in, the shots coming from every angle. Mandanda was immense two saves in the first ten minutes, one from Immobile at point-blank range, the other a fingertip stop from a Luis Alberto free kick that was curling into the top corner.

In the fifty-eighth minute, Luis Alberto scored himself. Another free kick this time from twenty-two yards, curled over the wall with his left foot, dipping under the crossbar. Mandanda got a hand to it. Not enough.

Lazio 2–2 Crystal Palace. Luis Alberto. 58 minutes.

The Olimpico roared back to life. The Curva Nord found their voice, the drums pounding again, the noise redoubled, the stadium shaking with the energy of Eighty thousand people who believed the comeback was on.

And in the sixty-seventh minute, it was complete. A corner from the right Luis Alberto’s delivery, curling and vicious. Tomkins went up to clear but didn’t get enough on it, the ball glancing off his forehead and floating to the far post, where Immobile was arriving.

The Italian needed only the slightest contact a glancing header, the ball redirecting past Mandanda and inside the post. His second of the night. His celebration was restrained a finger to his lips, silencing nobody in particular, the quiet confidence of a man who scored in this stadium the way most people breathed.

Lazio 3–2 Crystal Palace. Immobile. 67 minutes.

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the super gift.

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