NOVEL Glory Of The Football Manager System Chapter 694: The Reply I

Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 694: The Reply I
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Chapter 694: The Reply I

"That’s the one."

From Steele, that’s a speech. That’s the keeper question answered in three words by the quietest man in Russia. The shirt I’d taken off Munir, doing the exact thing I took it off Munir to do.

But they’d been in. They’d be back. And the whole England bench had just seen the one place we could be hurt.

Then we showed them the other thing we were.

Because the second we won it, the fist became a knife.

Boussoufa robbed Henderson on one of those backward passes, a clean theft of a tired idea, and the same eleven who’d been a low block half a heartbeat ago were pouring forward in straight fast lines, and Marcus started his stopwatch beside me like a man at the races.

El Ahmadi stayed. El Ahmadi always stays. Everything else went.

And here’s where England’s own shape knifed England. Their wing-backs were high, the way their manager wants them high, which meant the grass behind them was bare, the motorway, and Hakimi was already gone down it, nineteen years old, sixty yards eaten before Young could turn his hips.

Boussoufa to Sofyan. Sofyan three touches and a head already past the next pass. Ziyech drifting in off the left onto his lovely wrong foot.

"Three point eight!" Marcus shouted. "Gaffer, corner to shot, three point eight, that’s, "

The shot was En-Nesyri’s and it flew a foot over, and the green made the noise you make when your heart’s been promised a thing and had it taken back.

A foot. Twenty years old, the legs of a sprinter, the nerve still catching them up.

"Next one, son," I called, clapping it. "Next one."

We did it again on the half hour, thock of Ziyech’s curler off his laces, and Pickford pushed it round the post, the only man in a white shirt enjoying himself. We did it a third time and the final ball was heavy and the moment died.

In, and in, and in, and not yet through. You batter the door and batter the door, and the door does not yet know it’s going to fall.

And once, just once before the break, England reminded me why nobody sleeps the night before they play them.

A corner. Their corner. The thing they actually do.

The white end stood up as one. They knew too, they’d watched the same nine set-piece goals I had, and for the first time all night England’s support sounded like it believed.

I watched their box fill up and I watched Bray, beside me, stop breathing. Three nights he’d lived inside their set pieces, the blocks, the screens, the little trains of bodies that peel off and leave a free man at the back stick. He’d drilled the counters to all of it on a mountain at seven in the morning while men groaned.

Peep. It came in, deep, for Maguire.

And Benatia was already there, because Bray had told him a fortnight ago exactly where the ball was going, and he met it first and cleared his lines, crack, and Bray let his breath out like a man surfacing.

"Three nights," he said. "Three nights of my life. Worth it."

Half-time, nil-nil, and it felt like a lie in our favour. We’d strangled an England side and battered them on the break and gone in level, and the only honest line in the whole forty-five was written twice down our left.

The press box would have the headline already. Plucky Morocco frustrate England. That word again. Plucky.

I had ninety seconds, a flask of warm dressing room, and one job. The job England had booked this whole friendly to do for me, without knowing it.

Fix the left. In front of the world. Live.

I didn’t take Mendyl off. You don’t end a man’s tournament in a warm-up for a flaw you can coach out of him in two sentences.

I knelt with the board and drew it, postage-stamp small.

"You’re not wrong to want the break," I told him. "You’re early. Half a yard. That’s all."

I turned to Nordin and to Ziyech. "When we lose it on the left, the pair of you don’t fly. You hold. Five yards, two seconds, you cover the door while Hamza decides. Then you go. We don’t lose the knife. We just stop bleeding for it."

Five seconds of instruction. The whole fix.

Then I told them the other thing, the thing about the man in the other dugout, because it changed how brave they could be.

"He won’t change his shape. He hasn’t got another one. So he can’t surprise us in the second half, do you understand? Everything they are, you’ve already seen. There’s no twist coming. There’s only us, getting braver, against a man who’s decided brave is dangerous."

And then I opened the doors.

Because it was time, and I’d promised them, and a manager who tells twenty-three men there’s no XI and then plays the same eleven all night is a liar they’ll never trust again.

Munir on for Bounou. Yes. The man whose shirt I’d taken, getting his forty-five in front of the world so nobody could ever say I buried him quiet. Fresh legs through the middle. And on at left-back, to give me a look at Mendyl’s job done by other hands, a lad called Badr Banoun.

Banoun plays his football at home, in Casablanca, while half this squad came up in Amsterdam and Madrid and the back streets of Brussels. The one who never left. He’d sung the anthem in the tunnel with his eyes shut and his fist on his chest and I’d thought, there’s a man who knows exactly what shirt he’s pulling on.

"How many’s that," Marcus said, scribbling.

"Don’t count. Watch."

The second half was the team they should always have been let off the leash to be.

The left held. First time England tried it, that same high wing-back, that same switch, and this time Nordin was there, five yards, two seconds, a body in the door, and the cross never came and the move folded back inside into traffic.

I didn’t celebrate it. You don’t, the small ones. But it went through me warm, a thing I’d drawn on a board ninety seconds before, happening on grass because twenty-three men chose to do what I said.

And up the spine of the pitch, a kid was having the game of his life.

Sofyan Amrabat. Twenty-one. The one the screen had filed as cover, a squad number, a body for the bench.

He was everywhere. Winning it, carrying it, giving it, then ten yards back to win it again, lungs that didn’t end, a head three passes ahead of his own boots. He took the ball off Henderson so cleanly the lad looked round for a foul that never came.

I looked at him properly, the way I look, and the shape settled over him.

SOFYAN AMRABAT · Central Midfield · Age 21 CA 128.

A hundred and twenty-eight. That’s what the screen had always said. The number that kept him out, the number that made him cover and never a starter.

The screen was wrong. The grass was telling me a different number, and the grass doesn’t lie.

A hundred and fifty’s football out of a hundred and twenty-eight’s shirt.

And across the way the careful man made his change. Like for like, a fresh wing-back for a tired one, the same shape with new batteries in it. A goal down, in front of his whole country, and he chose to fold his arms.

I burned three subs in the time he made one. Only one of us had brought a second idea to Russia.

Munir made his save on the hour, low to his right, nothing flashy, the save a settled keeper makes in his sleep, and he got up and pointed and organised like a man who’d never doubted a day in his life. I clapped that one where he could see me do it.

***

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