©Novel Buddy
Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 356: The First Session I: Player-Manager
(Afternoon)
The words had barely left my mouth when a familiar figure scurried onto the pitch. It was Norman, the kitman, a man who had seen more managers than I’d had hot dinners, and he was carrying a pair of black boots and a training bib.
He didn’t even look at me as he dropped them at my feet, a silent, well-practiced routine that we had established in the final weeks of the previous season.
I sat down on the grass and started unlacing my trainers, and the effect on the new signings was immediate and profound. All seven of them were staring, a collective wave of confusion passing through them as they looked from the boots to me and then back to each other. Pato, who had been leaning against a goalpost with an air of detached cool, nudged Bojan, a silent question passing between them. Is he... serious?
Scott Dann, my captain, let out a long, weary sigh that spoke of a man who had given up being surprised by my methods. "Yeah," he said, his voice carrying across the quiet pitch to no one in particular. "He is."
"He does this?" It was Ben Chilwell who asked, his young face a perfect picture of bewilderment as he watched me pull on the boots.
Wilf Zaha, who was stretching his hamstrings with the lazy grace of a man who knows he is the best player here, let out a loud, booming laugh.
"Oh, you’re in for a treat, son," he said, a huge grin spreading across his face. "The gaffer thinks he’s still got it. Wait till he starts shouting at himself for a misplaced pass. It’s the best part of the whole show."
I ignored them all, the familiar ritual of lacing up the boots a small, grounding moment in the whirlwind of the day. I pulled the bib over my head, the cheap polyester a stark contrast to the designer training gear the players were wearing.
"We have twenty-one players," I said, my voice matter-of-fact as I stood up and rolled my shoulders. "We need twenty-two for a proper game. I’m playing left-back."
I read out the teams, and the players separated into two groups. Team A, in bibs, and Team B, without. On the sidelines, my coaching staff were ready, a small army of analysts and observers.
Marcus had his laptop open, the live data feed from the GPS vests already streaming in, tracking every sprint, every turn, every heartbeat. Sarah had her notepad, her focus not on the tactics but on the human element, the player interactions and body language that would tell her more about the team’s chemistry than any passing diagram.
Kevin was watching the shape, his set-piece brain already calculating angles and opportunities, while Rebecca monitored the physical output, her eyes on the red-zone indicators, ensuring no one pushed too hard on the first day back.
Team A (Bibs): 4-2-3-1
GK: Hennessey
RB: Wan-Bissaka
CB: Tomkins
CB: Konaté
LB: Walsh (Me)
CM: Neves
CM: McArthur
RW: Zaha
CAM: Eze
LW: Pato
ST: Connor Blake
Team B (No Bibs): 4-2-3-1
GK: Mandanda
RB: Ward
CB: Dann
CB: Tarkowski
LB: Chilwell
CM: Milivojević
CM: Nya Kirby
RW: Navas
CAM: Bojan
LW: Townsend
ST: Benteke
I took my position at left-back, the unfamiliar position a deliberate choice. It gave me a wide-angle view of the pitch, a place from which I could see everything unfold.
Across from me, on the right wing for the other team, was Jesús Navas, a man with a World Cup winner’s medal in his sock drawer, and he gave me a polite, professional nod. I nodded back, a silent acknowledgment of the strange, surreal situation we found ourselves in. This was going to be a long forty-five minutes.
The whistle blew, and the game began, and it was immediately, breathtakingly obvious that this was not a normal training session. I was a constant, running commentary, a voice in their heads, a ghost in the machine.
The System was humming in the back of my mind, a quiet, ever-present stream of data that showed me everything.
It was the run Zaha was about to make, the space Eze was moving into, the position Bojan was taking up on the other team. It was like having the cheat codes, like seeing the game from an aerial view, while being on the pitch, a secret weapon that no one else could see or understand.
"Aaron!" I yelled across the pitch to Wan-Bissaka, my right-back. He was five yards too deep, giving Navas acres of space to receive the ball on Team B’s right wing, a cardinal sin in the system I was trying to build. "Get up! Press him! I want you so close you can tell me what he had for breakfast!"
Wan-Bissaka, startled, jumped forward five yards. He was twenty years old and still learning. He was not used to being coached in real time by his own manager, who was playing left-back on the other side of the pitch.
I received a pass from my centre-back, Tomkins, and took a touch, my head up, scanning the pitch. The game slowed down, the chaos resolving itself into patterns and possibilities.
I played a simple pass into Neves in midfield, the ball zipping across the pristine turf. "Shoulder, Rúben!" I shouted, even though I knew he was already doing it, his head on a constant swivel. "Picture! Where’s Bojan?"
Neves, without looking, popped the ball back to me in a one-touch return pass, a move of such effortless grace that it almost went unnoticed. He was already a step ahead of everyone else on the pitch, playing a different, more intelligent game.
My own private battle with Navas was a fascinating, humbling experience. He was quicker than me, stronger than me, a million times better than me in every conceivable way. But I had the System.
I knew where he was going before he did. He would feint to go inside, a subtle drop of the shoulder that would have sent any normal defender the wrong way, but I was already there, my body positioned to block the path.
He would try to knock it past me and run, a classic winger’s move, but I had already taken a step back, anticipating the move and cutting off the space. It was infuriating him. I could see it in the tense set of his shoulders, the frustrated clenching of his jaw.
"Getting old, Jesús?" I muttered, as he was forced to play a simple, safe pass backwards, his attack thwarted once again.
He just gave me a thin, humourless smile. "You talk a lot for a manager," he said, his English perfect and clipped.
"I’m a player today," I said, a grin on my face. "And my player is telling your player that he’s got no chance."
He laughed, a short, sharp bark of a laugh. "We will see," he said, and there was a promise in his voice.
***
Special thanks to Sir nameyelus for the constant support.







