Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 470: South London Rising III
At Beckenham, the mood was electric. The players who hadn’t been at Wembley the Roma squad, the youth players, and the injured had watched on television and were buzzing.
Paddy McCarthy showed me a video on his phone: Olise, watching the match at home with his family, leaping off the sofa when Eze scored, his sixteen-year-old composure completely abandoned, screaming at the television like a fan. "Even the quiet ones lose it sometimes," Paddy said, laughing.
In the canteen, I found Eze sitting alone at a table, his phone face-down, a cup of tea untouched in front of him. He looked different from the player who had stared down the Spurs fans forty-eight hours ago. Quieter. More reflective. The adrenaline had drained and left behind something thoughtful.
I sat down opposite him. "How are you feeling?"
He was quiet for a long moment. "Weird," he said finally.
"I always imagined scoring against them. Since I was fourteen. Since they told me I wasn’t good enough. I used to lie in bed and picture it the goal, the celebration, the noise." He paused. "I never pictured this. The articles. The mural. Arsenal fans calling me one of their own."
A small, uncertain smile. "I’m a Palace player, gaffer. I love this club. I love what we’re building. But I grew up an Arsenal fan. My dad’s a Gooner. My uncles are Gooners. I watched Henry at Highbury when I was six years old and I decided that was it that was the team, that was the man, that was the football I wanted to play." He looked at me. "Is that a problem?"
"Is it a problem that you’re an Arsenal fan?"
"Some people might think it means I don’t love Palace."
I leaned back in my chair and looked at this twenty-year-old boy this absurdly talented, emotionally complex, fiercely proud young man who had just produced one of the great individual moments of the season and was now sitting in a canteen worrying about whether his childhood loyalties made him a fraud.
"Eberechi. Let me tell you something. I grew up supporting Manchester United. I spent my childhood watching Beckham and Scholes and the Treble from a living room in Moss Side. I plastered my bedroom wall with United posters."
His eyebrows rose. I had never told him this. I had never told anyone at Palace. "And now I manage Crystal Palace, and I love this club with everything I have, and if Manchester United came calling tomorrow, I would tell them I’m busy. Because the club you support as a child and the club you give your professional life to are not the same thing. One is history. The other is a choice. You chose Palace. You chose to stay here, to develop here, to become the player you’re becoming here. That’s not disloyalty to Arsenal. That’s loyalty to yourself."
He looked at me for a long time, his dark eyes searching my face. Then the uncertain smile became a real one small, private, but genuine.
"Thank you, gaffer," he said. "I needed to hear that."
"Good. Now finish your tea and get on the training pitch. We’ve got a season to finish."
He stood up, picked up his cup, and paused. "Gaffer. One more thing."
"What?"
"I still hate Tottenham." 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮
I laughed. "So does most of London, Eberechi. You’re in good company."
Emma came to Beckenham that afternoon to interview Paddy McCarthy for her Athletic column, a feature on the academy pathway, the development of Olise, the Bristol City match, the pipeline of talent that was feeding the first team.
She conducted the interview in the small meeting room while I ran the afternoon session, and when I came back inside, sweating and grass-stained, she was waiting in the corridor with her notepad and her recorder and the particular expression she wore when she had just heard something that would make a brilliant piece of journalism.
"Paddy cried," she said. "Actual tears. When he talked about watching the Bristol City match from the touchline. About seeing his players the boys he’d coached since they were fifteen scoring goals in a competitive match." She shook her head. "That man loves those kids, Danny. He loves them like they’re his own."
"I know."
"I’m going to write the piece. It’s going to be special. But I need your permission to use some of the details the loan plans, the Olise development pathway, the decision to retain Mitchell and Olise instead of sending them out."
"You have it. Write whatever you want. Just don’t reveal the System."
She smiled. "The System doesn’t exist, remember? I’ve never heard of it."
"That’s my girl."
She leaned in and kissed me a quick, professional kiss that was somehow also intimate, the kind of kiss that said I am at your workplace and I will behave, but tonight I will not behave at all.
Then she turned and walked towards the car park, her red hair catching the November light, her notebook under her arm, her hips moving with the easy, confident stride of a woman who was building something of her own and knew exactly how good it was.
I watched her go. The woman who had shown up at a freezing touchline in Moss Side before anyone else knew my name. The woman whose arms were the only place the pressure couldn’t reach.
The woman who was becoming one of the most exciting young football writers in the country without ever once trading on the fact that she was dating one of its most talked-about managers.
I turned back towards the training pitch. The November sun was low, the Beckenham grass golden, the shadows long. In the distance, I could hear the drum of the training session Sakho’s voice barking in French, Neves’s calm instructions, the thud of boot on ball.
Third in the Premier League. Top of the Europa League group. The most hated man in North London. A mural in Thornton Heath. Five thousand voices louder than sixty thousand. And a twenty-year-old Arsenal fan in a Palace shirt who had stared down the club that rejected him and made the whole of London take notice.
The season was a siege. But right now, standing in the November light with the sound of football in my ears and the taste of Wembley still fresh on my tongue, the siege felt like something else entirely.
It felt like a coronation.
[Post-Match Media Impact November 19th-20th.]
[Zaha chip: 22 million views. Walsh ear-cup celebration: 11 million views. Eze stare: 9 million views. Combined: most shared Crystal Palace content in history. Club social media followers increased by 340,000 in 48 hours.]
[The Athletic feature "The Boy They Threw Away": 280,000 reads in first 24 hours. Eze’s Arsenal fandom revealed. Arsenal Fan TV reaction video: 3.2 million views. Thornton Heath mural: location tagged 14,000 times on Instagram within 36 hours.]
[South London Press front page: "PALACE CONQUER WEMBLEY." First time Crystal Palace have led the front page of the local press for a positive football story since the 2016 FA Cup Final.]
[Cultural assessment: The Wembley victory has shifted Crystal Palace’s status in London football. Pre-match, Palace were perceived as a plucky South London underdog. Post-match, they are perceived as a genuine force a club that can beat anyone, anywhere, and celebrate while doing it. This is a watershed moment. The "smaller club" narrative is dead.]
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Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Massage Chair.







