Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 77: The Final Push II


I told JJ and our wingers to stay wide, to force their full-backs to make decisions, to create space in the channels. "They're going to sit deep and make it difficult," I told the team. "We're going to have seventy percent of the ball and it's going to feel like we're getting nowhere. Don't panic. Don't force it. The goal will come."

It did not come. Not in the first half. Not in the first twenty minutes of the second half. And then, in the sixty-fourth minute, disaster struck.

Droylsden launched a long ball forward. Our centre-back and our goalkeeper both went for it. Neither called. They collided. The ball fell to Droylsden's striker, who had the simplest of tap-ins into an empty net. 1-0 down.

The crowd groaned. I could see the fear creeping into the players' eyes. I made an immediate change, bringing on a second striker and switching to a 4-4-2. I pushed our full-backs higher. I told the midfield to take more risks, to play more direct balls into the box. "We have twenty-five minutes," I said. "Throw everything at them."

The pressure was relentless. Wave after wave of attacks. Droylsden were defending desperately, bodies on the line, blocking everything. And then, in the seventy-eighth minute, JJ picked up the ball thirty yards from goal. He looked up, saw space, and hit a thunderbolt that flew into the top corner.

The goalkeeper did not even move. 1-1. The stadium erupted. We kept pushing. In the eighty-sixth minute, Marcus Chen won the ball in midfield and slipped a perfect through-ball to JJ. JJ was one-on-one with the goalkeeper.

He rounded him calmly and slotted the ball into the empty net. 2-1. I punched the air so hard I nearly dislocated my shoulder. We held on, barely, and when the final whistle blew, I collapsed onto the bench. Emma, who was watching from the stands, texted me: "You look like you need a drink." I texted back: "I need ten drinks."

I did not get ten drinks. I got a four-hour shift at the convenience store starting at midnight. Terry had given me a hundred-pound bonus for the win, which was nice, but it did not change the fact that I still needed to pay rent.

A woman came in at one in the morning and spent twenty minutes deciding between two types of crisps. I smiled and nodded and thought about tactical adjustments for Saturday's game.

At two-thirty, I restocked the bread while mentally rehearsing my team talk. At four, I served a group of night-shift nurses who were lovely and tipped me two pounds. I used the system to check JJ's fitness levels. He was at ninety-two percent. Good. We would need him sharp.

The third game was on Saturday, February 27th, away to Radcliffe Borough, and this was the one I had been looking forward to. Radcliffe were a young, talented team who played beautiful, possession-based football.

They were a team that reminded me of what I was trying to build at Moss Side. They were also a team with a fatal flaw: they were naive defensively. The system's analysis was damning.

Their centre-backs had high "Passing" and "Technique" ratings but low "Positioning" and "Anticipation" scores. Their full-backs pushed high and rarely tracked back. They played a high defensive line with no protection in front of it. They were begging to be hit on the counter-attack.

I set us up in a deep 4-4-2 block. I told the team to let Radcliffe have the ball, to let them pass it around in their own half, to stay compact and disciplined. "When they lose it, we go," I said.

"Fast. Direct. Ruthless." I pulled JJ aside before the match. "You're going to have a lot of space to run into today," I said. "When we win the ball, I want you sprinting. Every time. No jogging. Sprinting."

The match was a tactical masterclass. Radcliffe had seventy percent possession. They completed over five hundred passes. They looked like Barcelona. And they were losing 3-0.

The first goal came in the twenty-third minute when Radcliffe's centre-back tried a cute pass out from the back. Tommo intercepted it, played a first-time ball over the top, and JJ was away. One-on-one with the goalkeeper. Finish. 1-0.

The second goal came in the fifty-first minute when Radcliffe's full-back pushed high to support an attack. We won the ball and countered. Our winger had acres of space down the right.

He sprinted forty yards, cut inside, and fired a low shot into the bottom corner. 2-0. The third goal came in the seventy-fourth minute. Another Radcliffe attack broke down. Another counter.

This time, JJ picked up the ball in his own half, ran at their defence, beat two players, and smashed the ball into the roof of the net from twenty yards. 3-0. After the match, Radcliffe's manager shook my hand and said, "You set that up perfectly. We never had a chance." I tried to look modest. I failed.

I was buzzing after that performance. The tactical plan had worked perfectly. The system had given me the insights I needed, and the players had executed brilliantly. I felt like a proper manager.

A real tactician. And then I went to work at the convenience store at eleven that night and a man asked me if we sold "bread but for dogs." I told him we had dog food. He said no, he wanted bread but specifically for dogs. I sold him a loaf of white bread. He seemed happy. The glamour never stopped.

The fourth game was on Tuesday, March 2nd, at home to Mossley, a solid, professional, mid-table team with nothing to play for. The system's analysis showed they were well-organized but unspectacular. No obvious weaknesses.

No obvious strengths. Just a competent team going through the motions at the end of the season. I set us up in our standard 4-3-3. No tricks. No surprises. Just good, solid, professional football.

We controlled the game from start to finish. We scored in the thirty-second minute a well-worked team goal involving eight passes and finished by our striker. We scored again in the sixty-eighth minute a corner that Big Dave headed home. 2-0. Clean. Professional. Job done.

If you find any errors ( broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.


Use arrow keys (or A / D) to PREV/NEXT chapter