NOVEL Glory Of The Football Manager System Chapter 693: England Friendly

Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 693: England Friendly
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Chapter 693: England Friendly

[Saint Petersburg. The warm-up. June 2018.]

The tunnel held the noise the way a shell holds the sea.

You don’t hear a stadium from in there. You feel it through the concrete, in your feet, a pressure with no edges, and you walk toward the white square of light and it gets louder until it stops being sound and starts being weather.

England were lined up to my left in their tracksuits. Big lads, calm, a team that had done this a hundred times and knew it.

I shook the hand at the front of their staff. We did the thing two men do who both know what the cameras want, the firm grip, the half-second of eye, the small nod that says nothing and everything.

Their manager held my eye half a beat longer than the polite amount, the way a careful man checks a thing he hasn’t decided about yet. I gave him nothing to decide.

Up and to the right, behind the glass, was the press box.

I knew which seats. I’d been read my own obituary out of those seats for a fortnight. Fraud. Vanity trip. Couldn’t say good morning to his own players. All filed by men who were now sat forty feet up with a free lunch and a view of the answer.

I did not look at them long.

Nadia was at the mouth of the tunnel with a clipboard and the calm of a woman who’d walked bigger names than me into bigger rooms. She held out two things. My team sheet, and a strip of chewing gum.

"You’ll want the gum," she said. "You already know the sheet."

I took the gum.

"Both benches signed the friendly terms," she said. "Unlimited changes, all match, the pair of you. The fourth official’s stopped pretending to count and started praying instead. Poor man’s got a list as long as my arm." A glance out at the light. "Go on. They’ve come a long way to look at you."

Nobody started and nobody was safe. An audition, ninety minutes, the whole world watching, and the team that earned it tonight played Iran in a week.

I’d told them that on a mountain. Now I’d see who believed me.

Here is what I was sending out.

MOROCCO · 4-1-4-1 (pencil) Bounou Hakimi · Benatia · Saiss · Mendyl El Ahmadi N. Amrabat · Sofyan · Boussoufa · Ziyech En-Nesyri

And here is what they were sending at me, the same shape they’d sent at everyone for a year, drilled into the bone, never once varied.

ENGLAND · 3-5-2 Pickford Walker · Stones · Maguire Trippier and Young, wing-backs, living in your half Henderson, alone, the only screen Lingard · Alli, breaking past the strikers Kane · Sterling

I’d watched every minute of them. So had Bray, who’d watched their set pieces more than he’d watched his own wedding video and told me so, twice, with feeling.

England were a machine with three settings. Build slow through the back three. Spring the wing-backs high and switch the play to the flank. And when neither worked, win a corner, because the corner was where they actually lived. Nine ways to hurt you and eight of them came from a dead ball.

But the whole machine ran through one bolt of their own.

Henderson. The single holding midfielder. The only man linking that back three to those forwards. Take him out of the game and England’s lovely build had nowhere to go but backwards.

So that was the plan. Strangle the one. Sit on Henderson, press him until he came so deep to find the ball that he was stood among his own centre-backs with nothing on but a pass back.

Make the three play it long. Win the long ball. And when their wing-backs were caught upfield, the grass behind them was a motorway, and a motorway is where Hakimi lives.

And the man in their dugout would not change it.

He’d told the world he hadn’t so much as trained another shape. Some people call that conviction. I call it a man who’s decided that losing the way he planned is safer than winning a way he didn’t. You can beat a man like that. You only have to make him need a second idea, and watch him stand there without one.

I put the gum in. Nadia was right. I needed it more than the sheet.

We came out of the tunnel and the noise that had been weather turned into a thing with colours.

Three of them. Down one end a wall of red and green, the travelling Atlas, men who’d come from Casablanca and Brussels and Amsterdam and a few from places no federation could account for, drums going since lunchtime, a flag the size of a tennis court going hand over hand across the whole tier.

Up the other end a tight block of white, England’s loyal, a chant already rolling out of them.

And everywhere between, the Russians. The neutrals, the locals who’d bought a ticket to a friendly that was nothing to do with them and turned up anyway, the way they’d turned up at the airport, the way this whole strange warm country kept turning out for us.

A grandfather two rows up from our bench had a small boy on his shoulders and a paper Morocco flag in the boy’s fist, and I have no idea on earth where he found it, and I loved him for it.

PEEP.

We kicked off.

When England had the ball, we were a fist.

El Ahmadi glued himself to the space in front of Henderson, so the simple pass into the England pivot was a pass into a Moroccan shin.

Boom boom went the drums behind Bounou’s goal, the travelling green giving us a heartbeat.

England knocked it across their back three, tok, tok, tok, looking for the man to play it through.

The man wasn’t there. The man was being eaten.

Henderson dropped to find it, deeper and deeper, until he was stood between his own centre-backs with his back to our whole team and nowhere on but a pass back.

tok, tok, tok. Backwards. Sideways. Backwards.

By the twentieth minute the white end had started to groan. That low, betrayed noise a big crowd makes when its team has the ball and does nothing with it, and every sideways pass made it deeper.

And the green answered. The Atlas end began to olé the England passing, every white touch met with a great sarcastic OLÉ rolling round three sides of a ground that had decided, in twenty minutes, whose night it wanted this to be.

Across the way the careful man sat with his arms folded and trusted the shape. No second idea coming. That was the moment I knew.

Then they found our seam, because if you’ve got one, they find it.

England don’t beat a block through the middle. They beat it down the side, with a wing-back living so high he’s basically a winger, and theirs was good, Premier League good, a lad who put more crosses into a tournament than anyone since 1966.

And he ran at our left. At Mendyl.

What Mendyl did, God love him, was the thing I’d written in a notebook by torchlight. The second we lost the ball he turned to hunt the counter, half a yard early, every time.

For that half a yard the flank behind him was a door left open.

They went through it on twenty-two minutes. A switch, fast, Trippier already past Mendyl’s outside shoulder, and the cross came in low and hard across our six and my heart went up into my throat.

Thwack.

Bounou.

Down quick and strong and onto it, the cross smothered under his body before Kane could get a boot to it. He came up with the ball, the grass, and his eyes already hunting the outlet.

Behind me Michael Steele, who’d said maybe nine words the whole camp, watched that save and said three of them.

"That’s the one."

***

Thank you for 50 Golden Tickets.

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