©Novel Buddy
Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 465: Wembley II
In the first twenty minutes, Konaté won every header. Not most of them. Every single one. Kane, who was one of the best aerial strikers in world football, couldn’t get near him.
The England captain would time his run, leap at the apex, and find that Konaté had already been there, had already met the ball, had already redirected it with a power that sent it thirty, forty yards clear.
Kane started dropping deeper, trying to find the ball in pockets where Konaté couldn’t follow. It didn’t work. Konaté followed. He tracked Kane’s every movement with the obsessive, suffocating attention of a man who had spent sixty-three days watching football on a television and was now making up for every second.
[Konaté First 20 Minutes: Aerial duels: 5/5 (100%). Ground duels: 3/3 (100%). Clearances: 4. Interceptions: 2. Passes completed: 14/14. He is playing at a level that the System has not recorded from any defender this season. This is not a comeback. This is a coronation.]
In the twenty-sixth minute, he scored. And the goal was designed by a man with a notepad.
A corner from the right. Kevin Bray’s set-piece routine was the same near-post decoy that had produced Sakho’s goal in Marseille. Rodríguez delivered it flat and hard, aimed at the six-yard box. Benteke made the near-post run, dragging Davinson Sánchez with him. The space opened behind. And into it rose Konaté.
He didn’t need to jump far. He was already taller than everyone around him. But the power of the header, the way he attacked the ball, met it with the centre of his forehead, redirected it with a violence that was almost personal, sent it flying past Hugo Lloris and into the roof of the net. The stanchion shuddered. The sound was like a gunshot.
Tottenham 0–1 Crystal Palace. Konaté. 26 minutes.
Five thousand people produced a noise that should not have been physically possible. The empty upper tier caught it, amplified it, sent it cascading around Wembley in a wall of sound that drowned out the fifty-seven thousand Spurs fans below. The PA system, which had been playing generic stadium music between stoppages, was irrelevant. The Palace fans were the soundtrack now.
Konaté ran to them, arms outstretched: the same celebration as Sakho in Marseille, arms wide, demanding the world’s attention and slid on his knees, the Wembley turf leaving green streaks on his white shorts.
Sakho caught him before he’d stopped sliding, lifting him off the ground in the same bear hug from the squad meeting. The rest of the team piled on. On the bench, Rebecca had her hand over her mouth, her eyes glistening. She had rebuilt this boy’s hamstring. Fibre by fibre. And now he was scoring at Wembley. 𝙛𝒓𝓮𝒆𝔀𝒆𝙗𝓷𝒐𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝓶
[GOAL. Konaté. Header from corner. KB-9. First competitive goal since September 16th. 63 days. The celebration mirrors Sakho’s Marseille celebration. These two defenders share a language that transcends words.]
Tottenham were stunned but not broken. Pochettino was on his feet immediately, screaming in Spanish, demanding more intensity. Kane dropped deep, linking play, finding Eriksen in the spaces Milivojević couldn’t cover.
In the thirty-fourth minute, Alli played a quick one-two with Son on the right, and Son’s cross found Kane at the far post. The England captain’s header was unstoppable powerful, precise, the exact corner Hennessey couldn’t reach.
Tottenham 1–1 Crystal Palace. Kane. 34 minutes.
Wembley stirred. Fifty-seven thousand Spurs fans finding their voice, sensing that the shock could be overcome. But the noise was half-hearted, the empty upper tier absorbing the sound, the celebration muted by the architecture. Kane jogged back to the centre circle. He didn’t need theatrics. He just scored.
Half-time. 1-1. The dressing room was charged with adrenaline, the players talking over each other, the energy crackling.
"We rattled them," I said. "Ibou you were immense. Keep going. Rúben find James earlier. Wilf Walker is scared of you. Keep running at him. He’ll make a mistake."
I turned to Kevin Bray. "The set-pieces are working. They can’t handle the near-post decoy. Keep the delivery flat."
Bray nodded. "KB-22. Dann Variant. If we get a corner on the right in the second half, we go with it."
The second half was the best forty-five minutes of football we played all season.
Palace came out with an intensity that took Tottenham by surprise. The gegenpress was ferocious. Neves and Milivojević hunting in pairs, cutting off the passing lanes, forcing Spurs into long balls that Konaté and Sakho ate alive.
The partnership was functioning at a level that bordered on telepathy Konaté stepping up, Sakho covering, the two of them moving like a single organism with four legs and two heads. Kane got nothing.
Alli got nothing. Eriksen found himself on the ball in dangerous areas precisely twice in the entire second half, and both times Milivojević was on him before the Dane could turn.
In the fifty-second minute, we scored again.
Neves won the ball on the halfway line with a crunching interception on Wanyama that sent the Kenyan stumbling. He played it forward to Rodríguez, who let it run across his body with that infuriating, beautiful first touch, wrong-footing Dier completely. James looked up and played a reverse pass, no-look, disguised, criminal into Zaha’s path.
Zaha had been tracking Kyle Walker’s positioning all match, noting the England right-back’s tendency to step inside when Rodríguez had the ball. Wilf ran into the exposed channel, the ball at his feet, the goal ahead.
Lloris came out. Zaha opened his body, shaped to shoot and squared it across the box to Benteke, who had followed with the instinct of a centre-forward who knew exactly where the ball was going. Side-footed. Empty net. Clinical.
Tottenham 1–2 Crystal Palace. Benteke. 52 minutes.
I punched the air hard, fierce, explosive, aimed at nobody and everybody. Sarah grabbed my arm. Bray was on his feet. The five thousand in the corner were bouncing, literally bouncing, the concrete vibrating under their feet. And now the chant started the chant that would define the afternoon.
"What do we think of Tottenham?"
"SHIT!"
"What do we think of shit?"
"TOTTENHAM!"
Five thousand voices, the call and response echoing around the half-empty stadium with a clarity that was devastating. The empty upper tier was an amplifier.
Every word, every syllable, every venomous, joyful, obscene declaration reached every corner of the ground. The Spurs fans in the lower tier tried to respond, tried to generate noise, but their songs disappeared into the acoustic dead zone above them while the Palace chants bounced and multiplied and filled the gaps.
The atmosphere was shifting. The Spurs fans were getting frustrated with their team, with the noise from the Palace end, with the empty seats that mocked their claim to be London’s biggest club. Small flashpoints started appearing.
***
Thank you for 200 Power Stones.







