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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 379: The Road to Brøndby I: Excitement
The news broke at seven the next morning. By eight, it was the lead story on every sports website in the country. By nine, it was trending worldwide on Twitter. #PalaceAirlift.
The media reaction was a tidal wave of disbelief, admiration, and barely concealed jealousy. Pundits who had spent the summer talking about transfer fees and wage bills were suddenly forced to talk about a football club doing something genuinely, unequivocally good. Rival fans were split between grudging respect and outright fury.
"Why doesn’t my club do this?" was the most common refrain. The broadsheets wrote think-pieces about the soul of football. The tabloids ran pictures of Danny under the headline "The People’s Manager." It was a full-blown media storm, and it was all anyone was talking about.
I walked into the canteen at Beckenham that morning to a round of applause from the entire squad. Zaha was standing on a chair, conducting them like an orchestra. I ignored him and went to get a coffee. Freedman was already there, holding two mugs, and he handed one to me without a word. He looked tired.
"The club shop has sold out of away shirts," he said.
"The website crashed twice this morning. The ticket office has been inundated with calls from people who aren’t even season ticket holders, just wanting to say thank you. The Supporters’ Trust have issued a statement calling it the single greatest gesture in the club’s history. The chairman is on Sky Sports News in an hour. And the total cost, by the way, is just under one and a half million pounds."
I took a sip of my coffee. "We made fifteen million from the Singapore tour," I said. "It’s a rounding error."
"It’s not about the money," he said. "It’s about the statement. And you, my friend, have just made one hell of a statement."
He walked away, leaving me with my coffee and the low hum of the canteen. The players were still buzzing, the energy in the room electric. I caught James Rodríguez’s eye across the room. He raised his coffee mug to me in a silent toast, a small, knowing smile on his face. He had played for Real Madrid. He understood what a statement looked like.
The next three days were a blur of intense, focused work. The media storm raged on outside the walls of the training ground, but inside, we were in a bubble. The Brøndby game was all that mattered.
The players, to their credit, handled the noise well. Zaha gave a single interview: one sentence, standing in the car park, to a journalist who had somehow got past security. "Palace fans deserve the world," he said, and walked away. It was on every back page by the following morning.
Neves said nothing to anyone, which was entirely on brand. James Rodríguez posted a photograph on Instagram of the Palace crest with a single heart emoji and got four hundred thousand likes in an hour.
The academy kids, Blake and Kirby, were the ones who felt it most visibly. Blake had grown up going to Selhurst Park with his dad on the bus.
The idea that five thousand fans were being flown to Copenhagen to watch him play his first European competitive game for the senior team was almost too much to process.
I caught him staring at his phone in the canteen one afternoon, reading the comments under the club’s announcement, and I left him to it. Some things you just let a player feel.
The training sessions in those three days were the sharpest we had produced all summer. The Brøndby dossier was on the big screen in the analysis room every morning.
Marcus Reid had broken their last six matches into clips: their high press, their set-piece routines, the specific runs their number ten made between the lines. The squad watched, asked questions, and went out onto the pitch and worked. The pressing efficiency climbed from 65% to 71% across those three sessions. Not perfect. But close.
Two days later, we were at Heathrow. The private terminal at six in the morning was a world away from the chaos of the main departures hall. It was quiet, discreet, and smelled of expensive coffee and polished floors.
The squad assembled not with the boisterous, holiday energy of the Singapore trip, but with a quiet, focused intensity. This was not a tour. This was a competitive away game in Europe. The mood was different.
Lucas Digne was on the bus for the first time as a Crystal Palace player, sitting next to Chilwell, the two of them already deep in a conversation that looked more like a professional seminar than a chat between teammates.
Gnabry’s paperwork was still being processed in Germany; he was not on the plane, but everyone knew he was coming. The news had broken the night before, a quiet confirmation from the club that the release clause had been met. It was another statement of intent, another piece of the puzzle falling into place.
The flight to Copenhagen was short, just under two hours. I used the time to do my homework. Marcus Reid had prepared a full dossier on Brøndby IF, and I read it on my tablet, the System overlaying tactical annotations in real time.
> System Analysis: [Brøndby IF]
> Formation: 4-4-2 (Classic)
> Style: Aggressive, high-energy pressing. High defensive line. Strong emphasis on set pieces.
> Key Players: #9 (Target man, physical, good in the air), #10 (Creative hub, technically gifted, drifts between the lines), #6 (Defensive midfielder, aggressive tackler, high work rate).
> Strengths: Organisation, physicality, home advantage (passionate, hostile crowd).
> Weaknesses: High line can be exploited by pace in behind. Susceptible to quick transitions. Goalkeeper prone to errors under pressure.
They were not a team of superstars. They were a well-drilled, organised, physical unit who were already three weeks into their domestic season.
They would be fitter than us. They would be sharper than us. And they would not be intimidated by a Premier League team coming to their backyard. This was, I thought, closing the tablet, a potential banana skin of the highest order.
***
Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the support.







