NOVEL Glory Of The Football Manager System Chapter 696: Day After

Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 696: Day After
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Chapter 696: Day After

The day after you beat England, nobody films the part that matters.

The part that matters is twenty-three men in their pants, shivering, lowering themselves one at a time into a wheelie bin full of ice and water while Rebecca stands over them with a stopwatch and no mercy.

"Ninety seconds, Hakim. Ninety. You did sixty and stood up, I saw you, get back in."

Slosh went the bin as Hakimi climbed back into it swearing in three languages.

"It is cold, Rebecca."

"It’s ice. It’s meant to be cold. That’s the whole idea of the ice."

Hssss went En-Nesyri’s breath through his teeth as he went under to the waist, his bad ankle strapped, and he held the rim with both hands and stared at the ceiling like a man being baptised against his will.

This is the job. Not the runway. Not the French. Not the nine seconds the whole world was still watching on a loop. This. A cold morning in a city I couldn’t spell, getting the poison of one game out of tired legs in time for the next.

We’d won nothing. I kept saying it, to them and to myself. We’d won a friendly. The thing the friendly was for was waiting seven days out with the word IRAN on it, and Iran had spent the same week we’d spent battering England watching us do it.

So we trained, and we trained with a purpose, because a week is not long and we had a hole in us the whole world had just watched England find.

The base helped. The federation and FIFA between them had set us up at a training ground on the edge of Voronezh, two pitches cut like billiard tables, a gym with everything in it, ice, screens, a room for Marcus to live in with his numbers.

After a fortnight on a mountain training on grass a degree off vertical, somebody had handed us a Premier League.

I grew up coaching on a council pitch with a slope and one working floodlight. I’ll never take a flat pitch for granted. None of these lads knew they were spoiled, and I didn’t tell them.

Recovery the first day, light. Then the real work. The left.

England had got in behind Mendyl twice, and a Premier League front line hadn’t even made him pay for it properly. Spain would. So every morning, before anything, we drilled the patch I’d drawn on a board at half-time in Saint Petersburg. Lose it on the left, Nordin and Ziyech hold five yards, count two, cover the door, then go.

Tweet. Lose it. Hold. Two. Go. Again. Tweet. Lose it. Hold. Two. Go.

Forty times a morning, until it stopped being a thing they thought about and turned into a thing their legs did without asking. By the Wednesday Mendyl could fly forward and the flank behind him stayed shut with nobody shouting, because Nordin was already there, every time, bored of being there.

The other thing England had shown me was at the front. We’d made one good chance after another and buried exactly one of them. Against a team sat deep, that is the difference between three points and a long flight home.

So we finished, cutbacks and one-touch and the same runs over and over, En-Nesyri made to put away the chance he’d ballooned in Saint Petersburg until ballooning it stopped being a thing his body remembered.

That is what a week is for. Not new ideas. Old holes, closed.

Conditioning ran underneath all of it, thud thud thud of studs on a pitch that actually deserved the name, bzzt of Marcus’s timing gates every time a man ran through them, the analyst measuring things I didn’t have the heart to ask the names of.

"Sprint loads are good, gaffer," he said, the way he says everything, like the numbers are a litter of puppies he’s personally responsible for.

"Sofyan covered more ground against England than anyone covers in a friendly. More than anyone managed in their whole opening game last World Cup, I checked, I, "

"Is he tired?"

"That’s the thing. He isn’t. He’s a freak. I love him."

Sofyan still had the match ball. He carried it everywhere that week like a man minding an egg. He’d had it inflated and signed and he kept it in his room, and Bray told me he’d seen him through a door doing keepy-ups with it on his own at half ten at night, quiet, grinning, a boy with proof in his hands.

The home-based lad, Banoun, came back from the clearance off the line a small local legend. The kids at the gate had learned his name overnight. Marcus’s supply-chain mystery had solved itself in the worst way for him, which was that there was no mystery, the city had simply decided we were theirs and gone and got the shirts.

The old woman was at the gate every morning, exactly as the driver had promised. Fold-out stool. Flask. She’d added a small green flag to her setup. She tapped the side of the bus twice every time, tk tk, the way you pat a horse, and the driver never failed to slow down for it.

"She has decided," he said again, the one time I asked, and that was the whole of it.

I’d have been happy in that bubble forever. Ice, grass, a flask-woman, a city that loved us for no reason we’d earned yet.

And it was a bubble. I’d been inside one since the day I flew out to Switzerland ahead of the squad to set the camp up. Up the mountain my phone lived in a drawer with the sound off, because a man cannot watch grass and a screen at the same time, and the grass is the job.

When I’d finally switched it back on, somewhere over Russia, the world fell out of it all at once. Messages, missed calls, the noise of an entire life I’d pressed pause on.

And buried in the pile, a date. The first of June. I’d turned twenty-nine in a hotel in the Alps with my phone in a drawer and a notebook full of left-backs, and I had not noticed the day go past.

My mum’s message sat there in the stack. 29 today, our kid. Don’t let them grind you down. Ring me when they let you. I’d been so far inside the work I’d missed my own birthday. I’d have missed it again to do the fortnight over.

But a bubble doesn’t hold. The world gets in. And while we’d been up there pretending it didn’t, England had lost its mind.

It came in through the phones, the way everything comes in now, a steady bzzz, bzzz on every surface in the building that never quite stopped all week. Hakimi brought me his on the second night, holding it like it was warm.

"Coach. Coach, you have to see what they are doing. Your own people."

I did not have to see it. I knew the shape of it the way you know weather coming. But I looked, because he wanted me to, and because some part of me, the part that grew up reading those same back pages off a newsagent’s rack, wanted to as well.

They could not decide whether to claim me or hang me.

That was the whole of it, and it was magnificent, and it ran for a week.

One paper had me as a national disgrace, an Englishman who’d taken a foreign job and then had the gall to be good at it, a man embarrassing his own on their own television.

The very next column over, same paper, had me as the best young coach the country had produced in thirty years, and why in God’s name was a man like that managing Crystal Palace and Morocco and not England.

Both. On the same page. They wanted both.

Because here is the thing they couldn’t get round.

I was English. I still had the Palace job, going straight back to it the day after the final, a club I’d taken from nearly down to champions of Europe.

I’d won the Carabao. I’d won the FA Cup. I’d won the Europa in Lyon against Wenger’s Arsenal. I had, and they kept printing this like it personally wounded them, never lost a final. Not one. Every cup I’d ever reached the end of, I’d won.

And then I’d stood on a runway in Russia, on their own live feed, and not given the English press a single word of English.

You could feel it driving them mad. A pundit on the English channel, a good one, a man who’d played, spent four minutes breaking down exactly how El Ahmadi had strangled Henderson. Drew it on the screen. Called it the best piece of tactical coaching he’d seen from a Brit in years.

And you could see it cost him something to say it, the way it costs a man something to praise the lad who’s just nicked his girlfriend.

Another show ran a whole segment on Sofyan. The boy nobody had heard of a week ago, the engine, the nine-second goal. They had graphics. They had his heat map. The kid who’d been a squad number to his own system was a talking point on a sofa in London.

And under all of it, the same question, asked sideways, never straight, because asking it straight would have meant admitting it: why won’t he talk to us.

Because for a fortnight they’d talked at me. Fraud, vanity, a boy out of his depth. They’d written the obituary before the body was cold, then watched the body get up and beat their team.

The French wasn’t a stunt. It was a door I’d shut, politely, in their faces, and I had no intention of opening it for applause when I wouldn’t open it for abuse.

Nadia found it all hugely entertaining. She’d taken to bringing me a one-line summary of the world’s press each morning with my coffee, dry as a stick.

"Morocco is in love with you," she reported on the third day. "France thinks you are one of theirs now, which is very French of them. Russia likes you because you were rude to the English on television, and Russia enjoys that in a man."

"And England." She paused, the only flourish she allowed herself. "England is writing eight thousand words a day about a man who will not say good morning to it. You have given a nation a project."

"I’ve not done anything."

"You keep saying this." She set the coffee down. "And it keeps not being true."

Bray’s view was simpler. He’d watched a clip of a former England captain calling me arrogant, and he’d folded his arms and watched it twice.

"Arrogant," he said. "You. The lad who asked me last night if his team talk was too long." He shook his head. "They’ve not got the first idea who you are. Long may it last."

***

Thank you to Sir nameyelus for the support.

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