Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 473: No Empty Corner III
The silence lasted two seconds. Literally two seconds. Then the Holmesdale responded with a noise so ferocious, so defiant, so furiously determined that it felt like the old ground was going to physically lift off its foundations. "CRYSTAL PALACE! CRYSTAL PALACE! CRYSTAL PALACE!"
Not a song. Not a chant. A declaration of war. Twenty-five thousand people refusing to accept the equaliser, refusing to allow the momentum to shift, refusing to let Marseille believe even for a second that they were back in this match.
The effect on the players was visible. Dann, who had been walking back to the centre circle with the heavy tread of a man processing a goal conceded, suddenly straightened. His head came up.
His shoulders squared. He pointed at Tomkins and barked an instruction. Tomkins nodded. McArthur, whose legs should have been gone by this point, found another gear the gear that existed beyond exhaustion, beyond physical capability, in the place where willpower overrode biology.
I looked at the bench. Pato was warming up. Blake was stretching. But the man I wanted was Eze sitting forward, his eyes locked on the pitch, the hunger radiating off him.
"Eberechi. You’re on."
He was up before the sentence finished. I brought him on for Bojan in the seventy-second minute fresh creativity, the twenty-year-old’s directness replacing the Spaniard’s subtlety. Bojan came off to an ovation the crowd recognising the tireless, intelligent performance of a man who had given everything.
Four minutes later, Eze won the match.
It started with McArthur. The thirty-year-old Scotsman, running on fumes and fury, won the ball in midfield with a tackle that drew a roar from the Holmesdale. He played it forward to Gnabry, who drove inside, beat one man, and laid it off to Eze.
The nineteen-year-old received it twenty-two yards from goal, on the left side of the box. Two Marseille defenders closed.
Eze shifted the ball from right to left, the same movement he had made against Everton, the same hip-drop that had created space where none existed, and curled a shot that was rising, dipping, bending, the ball describing an arc through the Selhurst Park floodlights that seemed to defy the laws of physics.
The Marseille goalkeeper dived, stretched, got a fingertip to it but the ball had too much movement, too much venom, too much of the boy’s desire behind it. It kissed the inside of the far post and dropped into the net.
Crystal Palace 2–1 Marseille. Eze. 76 minutes.
Selhurst Park didn’t erupt. It transcended. The noise went beyond volume into something that existed in the bones, in the chest, in the vibrating air itself. Twenty-five thousand people, standing on their feet, screaming with a primal, uncontainable joy that came from somewhere older than football the joy of a tribe that had been wronged and was now, finally, definitively, delivering its verdict.
Eze ran to the Holmesdale and was swallowed by his teammates. Somewhere in the pile, I could see Gnabry’s arm, McArthur’s bald head, Abraham’s grinning face. On the bench, Sarah was on her feet, her clipboard abandoned. Kevin Bray was nodding the quiet, satisfied nod of a man who recognised a goal that couldn’t be coached, only enabled.
The final fourteen minutes were a masterclass in game management. Dann organised. Tomkins defended. McArthur and Kirby controlled the midfield with the stubborn, immovable discipline of men who would rather die than concede. Pato came on for Abraham fresh legs, hold-up play, time wasted in the channels. Townsend replaced Gnabry, defensive solidity, a man who would track back to his own goal line and beyond.
Marseille threw everything forward. Payet curled a free kick that Mandanda tipped over.
A corner in the eighty-ninth minute was headed away by Dann, who threw himself at the ball as though it were a grenade. Kirby, in the ninety-first minute, won the ball in the centre circle and dribbled it to the corner flag, shielding it from two Marseille players, eating fifteen seconds of clock with the composure of a veteran who had done this a hundred times.
He was eighteen. He had done this precisely never. But the mentality the Palace mentality, the Walsh mentality, the system that didn’t depend on individuals but on identity carried him through.
The whistle blew. Crystal Palace 2–1 Marseille. The Vélodrome punishment, delivered.
The Holmesdale sang for ten minutes after the final whistle. The Marseille players walked off the pitch in silence, their heads bowed, the empty away section a hollow rebuke. Rudi Garcia shook my hand in the tunnel. His grip was firm but his eyes were tired.
"Your fans," he said, shaking his head. "Twenty-five thousand people and it sounded like a hundred thousand."
"That’s Selhurst Park," I said. "When it’s full and it’s ours, there’s nowhere louder in English football."
"I believe you." He paused. "The sanctions. The ban. I want you to know what happened to your bus was wrong. I said it at the time and I say it now. No player, no staff member, no person should experience that."
"Thank you, Rudi."
He nodded and walked away a dignified man managing a club whose fans had disgraced it, carrying the weight of their consequences on his shoulders.
In the dressing room, the noise from outside was still filtering through the concrete. The players were scattered across benches, exhausted, elated, the particular mix of emotion that follows a match won on character rather than quality.
I stood in the centre of the room. "What you just did," I said, "was not about talent. It was not about tactics. It was about mentality. About wanting it more. About refusing to accept an equaliser.
About finding a goal when your legs were gone and your lungs were burning." I looked at each of them Dann, the leader. Tomkins, the warrior. McArthur, the engine. Kirby, the prodigy. Bowen, the livewire. Gnabry, the finisher. Abraham, the teenager. Mandanda, the wall. Ward, the soldier. Digne, the professional.
"Every single one of you would start for half the teams in this league," I said. "Tonight you proved it. The rotation model works because of nights like this because the players in this room play with the same intensity, the same identity, and the same belief as the players who started at Wembley on Saturday. There is no B team at Crystal Palace. There is only the team."
Dann stood up, his armband still on, his face lined with exhaustion. "The gaffer’s right," he said, his deep voice cutting through the room. "But I want to add something."
He looked around at the young faces Kirby, Abraham, Bowen. "Those fans tonight. Twenty-five thousand of them. They came for us. Not for Zaha. Not for Rodríguez. Not for the superstars. For us. Remember that. Remember what it felt like to have an entire stadium singing your name. Because that’s what this club is. That’s what you play for."
The room was quiet for a moment. Then McArthur, who never spoke in team meetings, who expressed himself exclusively through tackles and passes and the quiet, relentless business of winning football matches, said: "Best night of my career."
Nobody argued.
[FULL TIME: Crystal Palace 2–1 Marseille. Europa League Group H, Matchday 5.]
[Goals: Abraham 17’, Eze 76’. Marseille: Germain 68’.]
[Attendance: 25,486 (sold out). Away fans: 0 (UEFA ban). Noise level: estimated 108dB the loudest recorded at Selhurst Park.]
[Manager Record: P27 W22 D3 L2. GF: 71. GA: 25.]
[Europa League Group H After Matchday 5:]
[1. Crystal Palace 13 pts (W4 D1). QUALIFIED as group winners with one match remaining.]
[2. Lazio 8 pts]
[3. Marseille 5 pts]
[4. Vitória SC 1 pt]
[Crystal Palace will enter the Europa League Round of 32 as the number one seed from Group H. The draw takes place in December.]
[Rotation Model Europa League: 5 group matches played. 5 different starting XIs. Record: W4 D1. GF: 10. GA: 4. The "B team" has outperformed the "A team" in European competition. The distinction between the two is now meaningless. There is only the squad.]
[Post-Match Cultural Note: The empty away section 0 Marseille fans, consequence of the bus attack became the defining image of the evening.]
[The stewards’ sign reading "CLOSED. CONSEQUENCES." was photographed over 40,000 times and shared across social media. The message was clear: actions have consequences. Violence has a price. And Crystal Palace, who responded to the attack with dignity and silence, have been vindicated.]
On the drive home, the DB11 purring through the South London streets, the November night cold and clear, I thought about what Dann had said in the dressing room. They came for us. Not for the superstars. For us. He was right.
Twenty-five thousand people had sold out a Thursday night Europa League match in forty-seven minutes, not because Zaha was playing or Rodríguez was orchestrating or the first team was running out in their full glory.
They had come because it was Crystal Palace versus Marseille, and the bus attack was still raw, and the punishment was being delivered, and they wanted to be part of it. They wanted to stand in the Holmesdale and sing into the empty away section and let the silence from those vacant seats speak as loudly as any chant.
My phone buzzed. Emma: "Just got home from the pub. Voice completely gone. Cannot speak. Can only text. YOU’RE THROUGH AS GROUP WINNERS. Also Eze’s goal was disgusting. In the best way. Hurry home. I’ll make tea and communicate exclusively through hand gestures until my vocal cords recover."
I smiled, put the phone down, and drove south through the London night. Group winners. Qualified with a match to spare. The rotation model proven beyond any remaining doubt. And somewhere in the empty away section of Selhurst Park, the ghost of a firework was finally extinguished.
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the Super Gift.







