Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 475: The Return to Old Trafford I

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Chapter 475: The Return to Old Trafford I

The last time I walked into Old Trafford, I walked out a villain.

Six months ago.

Final day of last season. Crystal Palace needed a result to keep surviving, Manchester United fielding their full-strength, cup-winning, superstar-laden first eleven of De Gea, Bailly, Pogba, Ibrahimović, the lot, despite having a Europa League final three days later. Mourinho had seen my trap and called my bluff. He had expected to teach me a lesson. Instead, I taught him one.

We won 3-0. Benteke headed in the first from a Zaha cross. Eze scored a thirty-yard screamer that De Gea watched into the net. McArthur slotted the third, one-on-one, after Herrera got sent off for a second yellow.

The Theatre of Dreams became the Theatre of Silence. And I, twenty-seven years old, a caretaker manager in an academy tracksuit who had been coaching teenagers six weeks earlier, had turned to the Stretford End, raised my arms, and stood there while they threw cups and screwed-up programmes at me.

Not in triumph. In defiance. In the pure, molten, reckless joy of a man who had been called a PE teacher and a fraud and had just burned their house to the ground.

José Mourinho had tried to rip my arm out of its socket during the handshake. A physical assault, captured by every camera in the stadium.

The brawl that followed Pogba shoving Eze, Dann confronting Pogba, and both benches spilling onto the pitch had been replayed a thousand times. The FA had investigated. Mourinho was fined. I said nothing. I never said a word about it.

And Sir Alex Ferguson, watching from the directors’ box, had given me a nod. A single, slow, almost imperceptible nod from the greatest manager who ever lived. Two seconds of eye contact across the vast expanse of Old Trafford that felt like a coronation.

That was the last time.

Now it was Saturday, December 2nd, and I was going back.

The bus turned onto Sir Matt Busby Way, and the memories hit me before the noise did. The red brick. The statues. The sheer, overwhelming physical presence of a stadium built to make you feel small.

Through the tinted windows, I could see thousands of United fans lining the approach, their faces already twisted with something that went beyond normal matchday hostility.

They remembered. Of course, they remembered. The 3-0. The celebration. The arms raised in front of their stand. The cups raining down.

The handshake. Every detail had been catalogued and stored in the collective memory of seventy-five thousand people who took personal offence at the idea that a boy from Moss Side had humiliated their club and their manager and had the audacity to come back.

The boos started before we’d parked. A low, guttural, sustained wall of sound that pressed against the bus windows like weather. Not the hostile atmosphere of Wembley or the Vélodrome, where the hatred was directed at the team. This was personal. This was aimed at one person. Me.

I sat at the front of the bus and felt it... the familiar electric current running through my body, the voltage that surged whenever the world decided I wasn’t supposed to be winning. Emma called it the villain trait.

The observation that whenever Danny Walsh was hated, whenever the crowd turned hostile, something clicked that elevated everything. The hatred became energy. The energy became focused. The focus became football so sharp it could cut glass.

The system didn’t just function under hostility. It thrived.

[Pre-Match: Manchester United (A). Old Trafford. Attendance: 75,635. Walsh record at Old Trafford: P1 W1 (2016/17 final day, 3-0 victory).]

[Context: Danny Walsh celebrated in front of the Stretford End. Mourinho physically assaulted him during the handshake.]

[FA investigation followed. Ferguson acknowledged him from the directors’ box. The hostility today is expected to be EXTREME the most personal atmosphere Walsh has experienced this season. Villain effect in hostile away environments: P3 W2 D1 L0. Unbeaten.]

The walk from the bus to the away dressing room was an education in what it meant to be truly despised. The corporate fans in the corridors; suits, lanyards, the people who paid thousands for the privilege of proximity, turned their backs as we passed. One man, grey-haired, expensive watch, looked me dead in the eye and said: "Lucky boy. Back for another lesson?"

Lucky boy. Mourinho’s words. The original insult. I had heard it a hundred times since that press conference, in airports, in restaurants, on social media. It had followed me like a shadow. And every time I heard it, the same thing happened the current surged, the focus sharpened, the machine inside me began to hum.

I didn’t respond to the man. I just looked at him, held his gaze for two seconds longer than was comfortable, and walked on. Sarah, beside me, muttered: "It’s started."

"Good," I said. "Let them feed it."

In the dressing room, the players could feel it too. They had been here before six months ago, most of them. They knew what Old Trafford felt like when it was angry. AWB was quieter than usual, his headphones on, his eyes closed.

Konaté, who hadn’t been here last season, was absorbing the noise filtering through the concrete walls: seventy-five thousand people warming up, the bass note of hatred vibrating through the building.

Sakho was cracking his knuckles, one by one. Rodríguez was scrolling through his phone. Zaha was sitting very still, a faint smile on his face the smile of a man who had scored the goal that started the massacre last time and was contemplating a sequel.

I stood in the centre of the room.

"You’ve been here before," I said.

"Most of you. You know what’s out there. Seventy-five thousand people who hate us. Who hate me, specifically. And that’s fine." I paused. "Last time we came here, we were fighting for survival. We were sixteenth. We were desperate. And we won three-nil."

A ripple of something pride, memory, the ghost of that night moved through the room. "Tonight is different. We’re not desperate. We’re third in the Premier League. We’re Europa League group winners. We’re here because we’ve earned the right to be here, not because we need a miracle."

I looked at each of them. "Mourinho will have prepared for this all week. He will have watched the footage of last season on a loop. He will have told his players that they were humiliated in their own home and that it can never happen again. He will have them fired up, motivated, angry." I let that sit. "Good. Angry teams make mistakes. And we are going to exploit every single one."

Mourinho was in the tunnel before kick-off. The long overcoat. The scarf. The expression of a man who carried grievances the way other people carried wallets close to his chest and never forgotten.

He didn’t offer a handshake. The last handshake between us had ended with him grabbing my arm and being dragged away by his own players. The memory hung between us like smoke.

He looked at me. I looked at him. Two seconds. No words. The understanding was absolute this was unfinished business, six months old and still raw.

When my name was announced on the PA "Crystal Palace, managed by Danny Walsh" the Stretford End produced a sound that I can only describe as organised fury. Not boos that word was too small, too polite.

This was a roar of collective, personal, sustained hostility that rolled down from the stand in waves, seventy-five thousand people channelling six months of humiliation into a single, deafening declaration: we have not forgotten and we will not forgive.

A cup was thrown. It landed near my technical area, bouncing off the turf. A steward retrieved it. I didn’t look at it. I didn’t look at the fans. I looked at the pitch, hands in my pockets, and smiled.

The same smile I had smiled six months ago, standing in their faces with my arms raised. The smile that said: I was here then. I’m here now. And I’m not going anywhere.

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the support.