Glory Of The Football Manager System

Chapter 536: The Depth II: FA Round 4



McArthur was in midfield, and the relief of having him back was physical. The thirty-year-old Scotsman had been injured since early January, his hamstring load pushing into the red, and the three weeks away from the pitch had been the longest absence of his career.

He had spent the time in Rebecca’s gym, in Tom Yates’s treatment room, on the bike, in the pool, rebuilding the muscle that had betrayed him and the fitness that the December schedule had eroded.

His first touch of the match was a tackle. Of course it was. McArthur’s first touch was always a tackle, because James McArthur viewed the football pitch the way a bouncer viewed a nightclub: his job was to remove anyone who didn’t belong.

He won the ball on the halfway line, played it to Kirby, and then spent the next sixty minutes doing the invisible, tireless, essential work that had made him one of the most important players at the club: covering, pressing, recycling, screening, the quiet engine that allowed the creative players to create.

Kirby beside him was the contrast. Where McArthur was steel, Kirby was silk. The eighteen-year-old, who had been magnificent against Leicester and composed against Arsenal, was playing with the freedom of a boy who had been given the midfield and told to express himself.

His passing was metronomic. His positioning was instinctive. And his relationship with McArthur, the veteran and the teenager, was the kind of partnership that coaches dream about and players rarely achieve: the old legs covering the ground, the young brain finding the passes.

On the left, Gnabry was reminding everyone that he existed. The German, who had been brilliant in the autumn but overshadowed by Zaha and Rodríguez in the winter, was playing with the sharp, direct, aggressive intent of a man who understood that his place in the team was earned and not guaranteed.

In the thirty-first minute, he drove past Forest’s right-back, cut inside, and curled a shot from the edge of the box that the goalkeeper tipped onto the post. The Holmesdale groaned. Gnabry didn’t. Gnabry ran back to his position and waited for the next chance, because Serge Gnabry was a man who believed that opportunities were not mourned but replaced.

Bojan was the number ten. The Spaniard, who had been a child prodigy at Barcelona and a broken promise at Stoke, was playing with the quiet, technical mastery of a man who had rediscovered football at the age of twenty-seven.

His touch was immaculate. His vision was precise. And his understanding of the system, the way the number ten was required to link the midfield and the attack, to receive in tight spaces and release quickly, was the product of six months of training beside James Rodríguez and learning, through proximity, what the position demanded at its highest level.

Digne at left-back was the Barcelona loanee who treated every match as an audition for his return to Camp Nou. His delivery was exceptional. His overlapping runs were timed to the millisecond. And his defensive work, which had been the concern when Danny signed him, was now disciplined and reliable, the product of Rebecca’s physical programme and Sarah’s tactical drilling.

Mandanda in goal was Mandanda. Thirty-two. World Cup experience. A hundred and thirteen caps for France. The kind of goalkeeper who treated an FA Cup fourth-round match against Nottingham Forest with the same focused professionalism he treated a World Cup quarter-final, because Steve Mandanda did not recognise the concept of a match that didn’t matter.

The first goal came in the twenty-eighth minute. Olise.

The sixteen-year-old was on the right wing, the position he had been playing since the Huddersfield match in December, the position where his left foot could cut inside and create. He received from Ward, who played a simple pass down the line, and turned inside.

Two Forest defenders closed. Olise dropped his shoulder, shifted the ball from right foot to left, and curled a shot from twenty-two yards that dipped over the goalkeeper’s hand and into the top corner. The technique was absurd. The composure was inhuman. The celebration was vintage Olise: he retied his boot.

Crystal Palace 1-0 Nottingham Forest. Olise. 28 minutes.

Paddy, on the bench, put his head in his hands. Not distress. Disbelief. The boy he had coached since the under-fourteens had just scored his third goal of the season with a technique that belonged in a different decade.

Abraham doubled the lead in the forty-third minute. Bojan played a through ball that split the Forest defence, the weight perfect, the angle impossible for anyone without the spatial awareness of a former Barcelona academy graduate.

Abraham ran onto it, took one touch, and finished with his left foot. Clinical. Composed. The goal of a striker who had been denied the Chelsea match by a loan clause and who was channelling the frustration into the only thing that mattered: putting the ball in the net.

Crystal Palace 2-0 Nottingham Forest. Abraham. 43 minutes.

Half-time. 2-0. Comfortable. The system working with different personnel. The identity bigger than any individual.

The second half was a procession. McArthur played sixty minutes before I brought him on for Kirby, Rebecca nodding at her tablet: "Sixty is perfect. His load is green. He’s back." Bowen came on for Olise in the sixty-eighth, the twenty-year-old right winger who had been essentially invisible all season getting his first minutes since November.

Bowen was quick, direct, slightly raw, the edges of his game still being sanded by the system. He didn’t score. He didn’t assist. But he ran, and pressed, and competed, and the twenty-two minutes he played were the twenty-two minutes that would keep him at the club and keep him believing that his chance would come.

Gnabry scored the third in the seventy-first. A move that started with Tomkins, who played a pass out of defence that was so precisely weighted it travelled forty yards and arrived at Gnabry’s feet without the German having to adjust his stride. Gnabry drove inside, beat one defender, and finished low into the far corner. The goal was a reminder. Gnabry was a reminder. The squad depth was not a concept. It was a weapon.

Crystal Palace 3-0 Nottingham Forest. Gnabry. 71 minutes.

The match ended. 3-0. Professional. Thorough. Every player justifying their selection. Ward’s tackles. Tomkins’s revelation. McArthur’s return. Kirby’s silk. Olise’s technique. Abraham’s finishing. Gnabry’s reminder. Bojan’s mastery. Digne’s delivery. Mandanda’s presence. The B team performing at a level that most clubs’ A teams would envy.

[FA Cup R4: Crystal Palace 3-0 Nottingham Forest. Olise 28’, Abraham 43’, Gnabry 71’. FA Cup 5th Round confirmed.]

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