©NovelBuddy
Glory Of The Football Manager System-Chapter 384: The Echo Chamber I
July 28th, 2017
Copenhagen, Denmark
I was awake before the sun. The sky over Copenhagen was a bruised, pre-dawn purple, the city still sleeping off the previous night’s drama. From the window of my hotel suite, I could see the harbour, its waters calm and dark.
The euphoria of the 5-0 win was a fading echo, a pleasant but distant warmth. It was real, it had happened, but in my mind, it was already a data point. A closed file. The satisfaction was being replaced by the cold, clear-headed reality of what came next. I was not basking. I was planning.
An hour later, I had the entire first-team squad and staff assembled in a private conference room in the hotel.
The players shuffled in, some still buzzing with a nervous, joyful energy, others looking physically and emotionally drained. The air was thick with the self-satisfaction of a job well done. I let them settle, a low murmur of conversation filling the room as they grabbed coffees and pastries. 𝑓𝑟ℯ𝘦𝓌𝘦𝘣𝑛𝑜𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝑐ℴ𝓂
Then I walked to the front of the room. The chatter died instantly. Every eye was on me.
"Good morning," I said, my voice calm and even. "I have one thing to say about last night: it was a professional, clinical, and complete performance. You executed the plan to perfection. Congratulations."
A ripple of applause went through the room. I held up a hand and cut it short.
"That’s it," I said. "That’s all the time we are going to spend on it. The game is over. It’s history. Our focus is now on the next ninety minutes, not the last ninety."
I saw a few of the younger players, like Nya and Konaté, exchange slightly confused looks. The senior pros, Dann, Zaha, and Mandanda, just nodded. They understood.
"We are not flying back to London today," I announced. The confusion in the room grew. "We are staying here, in Copenhagen, for the next two days. We will fly back on Saturday evening, in time for a day off on Sunday. This is not a holiday. This is not a reward. This is the next phase of our preparation."
I clicked a remote, and a presentation slide appeared on the screen behind me. It was a simple, clean graphic from Rebecca’s department that showed the physiological impact of air travel on athletic recovery. Spike in cortisol levels, dehydration, disruption of circadian rhythms.
"Rebecca can explain the science better than I can," I said, nodding to her.
"But the bottom line is this: jumping on a two-hour flight straight after a high-intensity match is counter-productive. It floods your system with stress hormones and slows down muscle repair. We have another game in less than a week. We cannot afford to lose two days of recovery to jet lag and the chaos of a London airport. So, we will conduct a professional cool-down here. We will control our environment. We will recover properly. We will train properly. And we will arrive back in London rested, focused, and ready for the next challenge. Any questions?"
There was silence. The players were looking at each other, a new understanding dawning on their faces. It was Scott Dann, my captain, who spoke first.
"No questions, gaffer," he said, his voice resonating with authority. "Makes perfect sense."
The mood in the room had shifted. The giddy euphoria was gone, replaced by a quiet, focused respect. This was the new standard. This was what it meant to be a top-tier European club. It wasn’t just about how you played. It was about how you managed victory.
---
A few hours later, I was in my suite when my personal mobile rang. It wasn’t my work phone. It was the private number I reserved for one man. The screen flashed with the name: Steve Parish.
I answered. "Steve."
"Danny!" The Chairman’s voice was booming, electric with an energy that could have powered the hotel.
"Five-nil! Five-fcking-nil! The biggest win in the club’s European history! Which is easy, I suppose, since it’s the only win in our European history! I’ve been on the phone all morning to the other Premier League chairmen. They’re stunned. Absolutely stunned. Richard Scudamore just called to congratulate us. Said we’ve done the league proud."
I smiled. Steve was a fan first, a chairman second. He lived and breathed this club.
"It was a good performance, Steve," I said, my voice calm.
"A good performance? Danny, that was a statement. That was a declaration of intent. The phone hasn’t stopped ringing. The papers are calling it a masterclass. Have you seen the press? It’s everywhere!"
"I’m about to," I said, looking at my laptop.
"Forget the press," he said, his voice dropping slightly, becoming more serious. "I just wanted to call and say thank you. I took a massive gamble on you, son. A lot of people told me I was insane. And tonight... tonight you made every single one of them look like a fool. I’m proud of you. The club is proud of you. Now go and enjoy it. Just for a bit."
"Thanks, Steve. But the work’s not done."
He laughed, a warm, genuine sound. "I know, I know. Never satisfied, you. That’s why I hired you. Speak soon."
He hung up. I put the phone down, a rare, genuine smile on my face. The Chairman was happy. That was always a good sign. Now, to the noise.
My laptop was open. The System, my silent, ever-present companion, had been at work. It had collated the morning’s media reaction from England, filtering the noise into two stark, opposing columns that glowed on my screen.
[PRAISE]
The Guardian: "The Copenhagen Conquest: How Danny Walsh’s Palace produced the most complete European away performance by an English side in a decade."
The Times: "A Tactical Masterclass. At 28, Walsh is not just a manager; he is an architect building a new type of English football."
BBC Match of the Day Analysis (Snippet): "Look at the coordinated press. Look at the movement of Bojan. This isn’t luck. This is a meticulously coached system. What we are seeing is the birth of a genuinely elite team."
***
Thank you for 90 Golden Tickets.







