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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 225: The Christmas Period I: Brighton and West Ham
The festive period in English football is a unique, brutal, beautiful kind of madness. While the rest of the country winds down, indulging in the gentle, comforting rhythms of a family, food, and a well-earned rest, the footballing world accelerates, the fixture list a relentless, unforgiving, chaotic blur of matches that can make or break a season. 𝒻𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝘯𝘰𝑣ℯ𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝘮
For my young, hungry, beautiful team, it was a chance to cement our place at the top of the table, to prove that our surge up the league was not just a fleeting, feel-good story, but the start of something real, something lasting, something special.
The two home games before the short Christmas break, against Brighton and West Ham, were not just matches; they were tests of our character, our resilience, our sheer, bloody-minded refusal to be beaten. And we passed them with flying colours.
The Brighton match was a thriller, a chaotic, end-to-end, heart-stopping rollercoaster of a football that left me a nervous, pacing, beautiful wreck on the touchline. We were brilliant in patches, our attacking play a joyous, free-flowing, unstoppable force, but we were also sloppy, careless, almost arrogant at times, our defensive discipline a distant, forgotten memory.
We went 1-0 up in the tenth minute, a beautiful, flowing move that started with Reece Hannam at the back and ended with Connor Blake slotting the ball past the goalkeeper with a calm, clinical finish, his eleventh league goal of the season. But Brighton, to their credit, did not crumble.
They came at us with a ferocity that was a testament to their own quality, their own ambition, and they equalized in the twenty-fifth minute, a well-taken goal that was a reminder that we were not invincible.
We went again. We always went again. Eze scored a stunning, long-range effort in the thirty-eighth minute to make it 2-1, a goal that was a work of art, a searing, dipping, swerving missile that flew into the top corner of the net. But again, we switched off. Again, we were punished.
Brighton equalized again in the sixty-seventh minute, a sloppy, avoidable goal that was a testament to our own complacency. The final twenty minutes were a tense, cagey affair, a battle of tactical wits and a sheer, bloody-minded refusal to be beaten.
And then, in the ninety-third minute, with the match heading for a draw, came the moment of pure, unadulterated, beautiful magic. A long, hopeful ball from our defence was flicked on by a substitute, and the ball fell to Connor Blake, who was lurking just outside the Brighton penalty box.
He took one touch to control the ball, a second to shift it onto his right foot, and then he unleashed a shot that was a work of art, a searing, dipping, swerving missile that flew into the top corner of the net.
3-2.
The stadium erupted, a deafening, joyous, cathartic roar that was a testament to the hope, the belief, the sheer, unadulterated joy that this team was bringing to the long-suffering Palace faithful. [SYSTEM NOTIFICATION: Connor Blake has unlocked the ’Clutch Finisher’ trait.]
The West Ham match, just three days later, was a different kind of a victory, a controlled, clinical, professional 3-0 win that was a testament to our newfound maturity, our tactical discipline, our ability to learn from our mistakes.
The memory of our 1-1 draw against them earlier in the season, a match we should have won comfortably, was still fresh in our minds, and we were determined to right that wrong. We were relentless from the first whistle, our pressing a furious, swarming entity that gave them no time to breathe, no space to think.
We scored in the nineteenth minute, a beautiful, flowing move that started with Tyler Webb at the back and ended with Antoine Semenyo slotting the ball past the goalkeeper with a calm, clinical finish.
1-0.
The second goal came in the fifty-eighth minute, a powerful, instinctive finish from Connor Blake, his thirteenth league goal of the season, a testament to his relentless, insatiable hunger for goals.
The third, and final, goal was a thing of beauty, a sweeping team move that started with our goalkeeper and ended with Eberechi Eze dancing through the exhausted West Ham defence before calmly slotting the ball into the bottom corner in the eighty-first minute.
It was the perfect end to a perfect performance, a 3-0 victory that was a statement of intent. We won the match not with a beautiful, flowing football, but with grit, a determination, a sheer, bloody-minded refusal to be beaten, and a touch of class.
It was a victory that was just as satisfying, in its own way, as the Brighton result, a confirmation that we were no longer a one-trick pony. We could play, but we could also fight. And that, I knew, was the mark of a team that was destined for great things.
We were second in the league, with 28 points from our first 11 matches, just past the halfway point of the season, our dream of a top-four finish, of a place in the UEFA Youth League, no longer a distant, impossible fantasy, but a real, tangible, achievable goal.
It was a few days before Christmas, the training ground a quiet, almost deserted place, the players having been given a few well-earned days off to spend with their families, when I received the call. I was in my office, the rain lashing against the window, a steaming mug of coffee in my hands, when my phone buzzed.
It was Gary Issott, the academy director, a man whose encyclopedic knowledge of youth football was matched only by his gruff, no-nonsense, old-school demeanor. "Danny," he said, his voice a low, gravelly rumble.
"Got a minute?" I told him I did. "There’s a kid," he said, getting straight to the point, as was his way. "A winger. Michael Olise. Just been released by Man City. Turned sixteen last week. His parents have been on the phone to me all morning. Desperate for a second chance. They live in London. They want to bring him down for a trial."
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Special thanks to nameyelus and chisum_lane for the gifts and continued support.







