©Novel Buddy
Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 456: The Homecoming II: Bristol City
Bristol City came out hard. Lee Johnson, their manager young, energetic, with a point to prove had clearly told his players that a Premier League team’s reserve eleven was there to be beaten.
They pressed high, they competed physically, and they tested the young Palace defence from the first minute. In the sixth minute, a long ball over the top caught Hannam flat-footed, and their striker was through, one-on-one with Pope.
For a sickening, stomach-dropping moment, I thought the night was going to end before it began. But Pope magnificent, reliable, increasingly essential Pope read the danger, came off his line, spread himself wide, and smothered the ball at the striker’s feet with a save that was part goalkeeping and part act of faith. He stood up, pointed at Hannam, and barked an instruction. Hannam nodded, reset, and didn’t make another mistake all night.
The first twenty minutes were scrappy, nervous, the kind of football that happens when young players are finding their courage against professionals who want to physically intimidate them. Morrison was the first to settle.
The combative midfielder won three tackles in five minutes each one harder than the last, each one sending a message to the Bristol City midfield: we are not here to be bullied. Beside him, Kirby was finding his feet, receiving the ball in tight spaces, turning, distributing the composure that had made him an England U21 international asserting itself against the chaos.
And then Olise happened.
In the twenty-fourth minute, he received the ball on the right touchline, thirty yards from goal, with a Bristol City left-back closing him down. What followed was a sequence of football that silenced Ashton Gate and made every scout in the stadium reach for their phone.
Olise didn’t try to beat his man with pace. He showed the ball on his right foot the weaker one invited the defender to commit, and in the half-second that the left-back shifted his weight, Olise rolled the ball onto his left foot with a touch so delicate it barely disturbed the grass.
The defender lunged. Olise was already gone gliding past him on the inside, his body low, his balance impossible, the ball attached to his left boot as though connected by an invisible thread. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦
He drove ten yards into the vacated space, looked up, and played a through ball that split the two Bristol City centre-backs with surgical precision. The weight was perfect not too heavy, not too soft, arriving at Blake’s feet in stride.
Blake took one touch and finished into the bottom corner. Clinical. Cold. The instinct of a boy who had been scoring goals since he could walk.
Bristol City 0–1 Crystal Palace. Blake. 24 minutes.
The away end erupted. Blake sprinted towards them, sliding on his knees, and was immediately buried under a pile of academy players Semenyo, Morrison, Kirby, all of them piling on in a tangle of limbs and unbridled joy.
Olise jogged over and stood at the edge of the celebration, a small, private smile on his face. He didn’t pile on. That wasn’t his style.
He just watched his teammates celebrate the goal his pass had created, and in his quiet, watchful eyes, I saw something that made the hair on the back of my neck stand up the absolute, unshakeable certainty of a boy who knew he was going to be extraordinary and was in no hurry to prove it to anyone but himself.
On the touchline, Paddy turned to me. His eyes were glistening. "That pass, Danny. That pass."
"I know," I said. "I know."
[ASSIST. Michael Olise. Through ball, right channel. Age: 16 years, 10 months. Technical execution: ELITE. The defender was shown the ball on Olise’s right foot and committed to the wrong side. The switch to the left and the through ball were a single, fluid movement. Flag this moment. It is the beginning of something extraordinary.]
The goal settled the nerves. The system the same 4-2-3-1 framework that the first team ran began to function with increasing fluency.
Kirby and Morrison controlled the midfield. Eze, playing in the number ten, started to find the pockets between the lines, his ghostly movement pulling Bristol City’s midfield apart. Semenyo, on the left, was a constant threat his explosive pace stretching the defence every time he received the ball.
In the thirty-eighth minute, Eze scored. And it was a goal that announced him as a player of genuine, top-flight quality.
Kirby picked the ball up in the centre circle the same position he had occupied in the U18 Nationals, the same role, the same calm authority and played a first-time, disguised pass into Eze’s feet. The twenty-year-old received it with his back to goal, twenty-two yards out, two defenders closing. He didn’t panic.
He shifted the ball from right to left with a drag-back that sent the first defender stumbling past him, then opened his body and curled a shot rising, dipping, swerving that flew over the goalkeeper’s dive and crashed into the roof of the net. The technique was devastating. The audacity was breathtaking.
Bristol City 0–2 Crystal Palace. Eze. 38 minutes.
Selhurst Park was three hours away, but in the away end at Ashton Gate, two thousand Palace fans were bouncing as though they were in the Holmesdale. "EBERECHI EZE! EBERECHI EZE!" The chant echoed around the ground, incongruous and defiant, a South London anthem in a West Country city.
[GOAL. Eberechi Eze. Curling shot from 22 yards. xG: 0.04. This is the second consecutive match in which Eze has scored from outside the box with a shot that defies statistical probability. He is not a product of the system. He is a product of pure talent that the system has been designed to accommodate.]
Bristol City pulled one back before half-time a penalty in the forty-third minute, Webb adjudged to have handled in the box. The young centre-back was distraught, his head in his hands, convinced he hadn’t touched it.
I pulled him aside at the tunnel. "Keep your head up, Tyler. Referees make mistakes. You’ve been excellent. Stay focused for the second half." He nodded, jaw set, and walked into the dressing room with the determined stride of a boy learning in real time that professional football was not always fair.
Half-time. I kept it simple. "We’re winning. We deserve to be winning. But they’ll come at us in the second half they have to, they’re losing at home. Morrison, Nya the middle is going to get physical. Don’t back down. Eze keep finding the spaces. Michael keep doing what you’re doing."
The second half was where the youth and the energy and the sheer, terrifying potential of this team turned a good night into an unforgettable one.
Semenyo scored in the fifty-eighth minute. He received the ball on the halfway line from a Morrison clearance, and he ran. Dropped his shoulder, left the right-back on the floor, and accelerated into the space beyond with the kind of raw, physics-defying pace that made defenders want to retire.
He covered forty yards in under five seconds, the Bristol City defence backpedalling frantically, retreating in a panic that would have been comical if it weren’t so devastatingly effective. Semenyo didn’t pass. He didn’t look up.
He didn’t think. He just hit it a left-footed thunderbolt from the edge of the box that the goalkeeper saw late and could only wave at as it flew past him into the top corner. The sound of the ball hitting the net was drowned by the away end, who had lost their collective minds.
Bristol City 1–3 Crystal Palace. Semenyo. 58 minutes.
I turned to Paddy. He was standing with his fists clenched, his face a mixture of pride and disbelief. "Antoine," he said, shaking his head. "That boy doesn’t know what he can’t do."
"That’s his greatest strength," I said. "And his greatest weakness. We’ll work on the decision-making. But you can’t coach that pace. You can’t coach that fearlessness."
***
Thank you for 100 Power Stones.







