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Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 347: The Gambles I
June 23rd, 2017
My phone rang at eight o’clock the next morning. I was already awake, sitting on the edge of the hotel bed in Seville, a cup of coffee going cold on the bedside table. I had not slept much.
The conversation with Navas had been playing on a loop in my head all night. The orange trees. The quiet garden. The long silence before he had said he would think about it. I had been trying to read that silence ever since.
I looked at the screen. It was a Spanish number I did not recognise. I answered.
"Mr Walsh." The voice was quiet. Measured. Navas. "I have made my decision."
I said nothing. I waited.
"I will come," he said.
I closed my eyes. Let out a slow breath. "I’m glad to hear it, Jesús."
"My agent will call your sporting director today," he said. "One year, with an option for a second if both parties are satisfied. The salary is not the important thing. The project is the important thing."
"The project is everything," I said.
There was a brief pause. "I have one condition," he said.
"Name it."
"I want to be part of the leadership group," he said. "Not the captain. I know Scott Dann holds that position and I respect it. But I want the young players to know they can come to me. That I am there to help them. That is my role. That is why I am coming."
"Done," I said. "Vice-captain. You, Dann, and McArthur. The old guard and the new. It fits perfectly."
He seemed satisfied with that. We spoke for a few more minutes, the conversation easy and warm now that the decision had been made, and then he hung up.
I sat there for a moment with the phone in my hand, looking at the wall of the hotel room, and I felt a deep, quiet satisfaction settle in my chest. The reckless one had pulled it off. The narrative was about to change.
But I was not finished yet.
I checked out of the hotel, left my bag at the front desk, and took a taxi to the train station. I had a train to catch. A different city. A different conversation. A different fallen angel.
The train journey from Seville to Villarreal took the best part of three hours. I sat by the window and watched the Spanish countryside roll past, the dry, golden landscape giving way to the greener, more fertile coastal plain as we moved north and east.
I thought about the morning after the Etihad win. May 15th. I had been sitting in my office at the training ground, the Navas report from Sarah open on my tablet, and my mind had drifted. Not to the celebrations. Not to the survival. To the future. To the players I wanted. To the vision I had been carrying since the moment I had first been given the job.
I had closed my eyes in that office and let the System do its work. Two names. Two fallen angels. Bojan Krkic and Alexandre Pato.
The boy wonder of Barcelona and the Brazilian prodigy who had taken Serie A by storm as a teenager. Both had been tipped for the very top. Both had lost their way. And both, according to everything the System was showing me, still had something left.
The Pato data had been extraordinary. Two goals in fourteen games at Mainz. A flop, by any conventional measure. A player whose reputation was in tatters, whose confidence was shot, whose name was used as a shorthand for wasted potential. But the underlying numbers told a completely different story.
An xG per 90 of 0.6. Key passes of 2.1. Successful dribbles of 3.4. A world-class player trapped in the wrong system, starved of service, playing for a manager who did not know how to use him. I had stared at those numbers for a long time. And then I had whispered to the empty room: he is perfect.
I had taken that vision to Steve Parish the same morning. I had laid it all out. The Island of Misfit Toys. Navas, the wise old head.
Bojan, the technical magician. Pato, the explosive wildcard. Parish had loved the idea. He had genuinely loved it. But his hands were tied. I did not have the licence. I did not have the authority. I had to wait. I had waited for six weeks. And now the waiting was over.
The train pulled into Villarreal in the early afternoon. The city was small and quiet, a working place without the grandeur of Seville or the noise of Madrid.
I took a taxi to the Villarreal training ground, a clean, modern facility on the edge of the city, and I was shown to a small, private meeting room by a member of the club’s staff who seemed mildly confused about why a Premier League manager had turned up unannounced on a Saturday afternoon.
Pato was already there when I walked in. He was sitting at the table, his hands folded in front of him, his expression carefully neutral. He was twenty-seven years old and he looked tired in a way that had nothing to do with sleep.
He had the guarded, watchful look of a man who had been disappointed too many times to open himself up easily. He was keeping himself fit while his agent fielded offers. The Tianjin Tianhai offer was serious. Good money for Villarreal. A comfortable salary for Pato. A league where the pressure was low and the expectations were lower. An easy life. An exit door.
I sat down across from him. I did not open with pleasantries. I did not talk about his career or his achievements or how much I had admired him. I just looked at him for a moment, and then I asked him a question. 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦
"Are you done?"
He blinked. "Sorry?"
"Are you done?" I said again. "Is this how it ends? Is this the last Chapter of the story? Alexandre Pato, the boy who was supposed to be one of the best players in the world, goes to China at twenty-seven and nobody hears from him again?"
He stared at me. His jaw tightened slightly. I had hit something. I kept going.
"Because that is what happens if you take that offer," I said.
"Not because China is wrong. Not because the money is wrong. But because you know, and I know, that once you go there, the conversation is over. The Premier League stops thinking about you. Europe stops thinking about you. You become a footnote. A what-might-have-been. And you are too good for that. You know you are too good for that."
He was quiet. His eyes were fixed on the table. I watched his hands, which had tightened slightly around each other.
"I have watched you for two months," I said.
"Not just your games. Your training sessions. Your movement patterns. The way you press. The way you find space. The way you finish when you actually get the service you need. And I see a player who still has everything. The pace. The touch. The instinct. The finishing. It is all still there. It has not gone. It has just been buried under bad luck and bad systems and bad timing. And I know how to get it out."
He looked up. His eyes met mine for the first time since I had walked in.
"You really believe that," he said. It was not quite a question.
"I would not be sitting in Villarreal on a Saturday afternoon if I did not," I said.
He held my gaze for a long moment. I did not look away. I did not add anything. I had made my argument. The rest was up to him.
The silence stretched out. Outside the window, I could hear the distant sound of a sprinkler system running on one of the training pitches. The afternoon light was warm and golden through the glass.
"What are you offering?" he said finally.
"Six million to the club," I said. "Your personal terms will be competitive. But that is not the point and you know it."
He almost smiled at that. Almost. "What is the point?"
"The point is that you come to a club that has never been in European football," I said.
"A club that is building something new. A manager who is twenty-eight years old and has no interest in managing your minutes or protecting his own reputation by playing it safe. You will play. You will be trusted. You will be given the setup and the support to do what you do best. And at the end of it, whatever happens, nobody will be able to say that Alexandre Pato gave up."
He was quiet again. But it was a different kind of quiet. The defensive, guarded quiet from the start of the conversation was gone. This was the quiet of a man who was thinking seriously. Who was weighing something up. Who had not yet decided but was closer than he had been five minutes ago.
"I need to speak to my agent," he said.
"Of course," I said. "Take the time you need."
***
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