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Chapter 215: The First Quarter: Norwich Away

Monday morning, two days after the Tottenham draw was a strange, suspended mont in ti, a quiet interlude between the chaos of the match and the relentless grind of the season ahead.

I woke early, not to the alarm, but to the soft, golden light filtering through the curtains, and for the first ti in what felt like a lifeti, I didn’t imdiately reach to check the system notifications, the league table, or the endless stream of ssages on my phone that had beco the background noise of my life. Instead, I just lay there, Emma’s head resting on my chest, her breathing slow and steady, and I allowed myself, just for a mont, to simply exist.

The first quarter of the season was almost over. One more match, away at Norwich, and we would have completed the first major checkpoint of the campaign, a brutal, beautiful, heartbreaking six-match gauntlet that had tested us in ways I could never have imagined.

The journey from the opening day victory over Fulham to the last-minute draw at Tottenham had been a rollercoaster, a wild, exhilarating ride through the highest highs and the lowest lows. We had won, we had lost, we had been broken, and we had co back stronger.

And now, as I lay there in the quiet, peaceful sanctuary of our small apartnt, I felt a profound sense of a quiet, unassuming pride. We were not just surviving. We were thriving. And the best part was that we were doing it together.

Training that week was a joy to behold. The confidence from the Tottenham draw and the 6-0 demolition of Sutton United in the FA Youth Cup had been a catalyst, a spark that had reignited the fire in the bellies of my players.

The squad harmony, which had been so dangerously low just a few short weeks ago, was now at a season-high of 82%. The players were laughing again, joking, the easy camaraderie that had been the hallmark of our early success finally restored.

Connor and Eze, their rivalry now tempered by a newfound respect, were a joy to watch, their movents on the training pitch a symphony of a shared understanding, their one-twos and clever flicks a sign of a partnership that was blossoming into sothing truly special.

Tyler Webb and Reece Hannam, our captain, had ford a formidable partnership at the back, a rock on which so many opposition attacks had been broken.

Lewis Grant, who had been devastated at losing his starting spot, had responded with a professionalism and a work ethic that was a shining example to the rest of the squad, and his last-minute goal off the bench had made him a hero in the eyes of his teammates.

The team was not the sa one that had been so easily dispatched by Chelsea just a few short weeks ago. They were different. They were stronger. They were a team that had been to the brink and had co back, not unscathed, but united.

And as I stood on the touchline, watching them go through their paces, I felt a profound sense of a quiet, unassuming pride. We were not a collection of individuals anymore. We were a team. A proper team.

The journey to Norwich was a long, winding affair, the team bus cutting through the grey, drizzly English countryside, the players a mixture of quiet focus and nervous energy. This was the final match of the first quarter of the season, a chance to end this tumultuous, beautiful, heartbreaking period on a high note.

The system, my silent, ever-present companion, had laid out the cold, clinical facts. Norwich CA Average: 108. Palace CA Average: 115. Win Probability: 68%.

The numbers were a stark, unforgiving reminder that we were the favorites, a position that was both thrilling and terrifying. Because with expectation ca pressure. And with pressure ca the risk of failure.

But as I looked at the players, at their faces full of a quiet, determined fire, I knew that they were ready. They had been tested in the fires of adversity, and they had not been found wanting. They were ready to finish the first quarter strong.

In the small, sterile away dressing room at Norwich’s training ground, the atmosphere was different. The nervous tension that had been so palpable before the Fulham match was gone, replaced by a quiet, focused intensity.

The players went through their pre-match rituals, not with the frantic, desperate energy of a team hoping for a miracle, but with the calm, asured confidence of a team that believed in themselves, in each other, and in the plan.

I looked at them, at the eighteen young faces staring back at , their eyes full of a quiet, determined fire, and I knew that they didn’t need another rousing speech. They didn’t need

to tell them what was at stake.

They already knew. So, I kept it simple. "Let’s finish the first quarter strong," I said, my voice quiet but clear in the tense silence. "Let’s show them what we’re made of."

The match itself was a masterclass in controlled, clinical football. We dominated from the first whistle, our pressing relentless, our passing crisp and incisive, our movent a blur of a well-oiled, beautiful machinery.

Norwich, a team that had been struggling near the bottom of the table, simply had no answer to our intensity, our quality, our sheer, undeniable belief. I was a constant, vocal presence on the touchline, my voice hoarse from shouting instructions.

"Press high! Don’t let them turn!" I yelled, my hands cupped around my mouth. "Eze, drop deeper! Link the play!" Sarah stood beside , her eyes glued to her tablet, tracking the pressing triggers, the passing lanes, the movent patterns.

"They’re dropping off," she said, her voice calm and analytical. "We can push higher." I nodded, turning back to the pitch. "Push up! Squeeze them!" We scored four goals, each one a testant to the different facets of our ga.

The first, in the fourteenth minute, was a mont of pure, unadulterated magic from Eberechi Eze. Receiving the ball just outside the Norwich box, he dropped a shoulder, a subtle, almost imperceptible feint that sent his marker sprawling, and then he was away, gliding across the pitch with an elegance that defied the chaos around him.

He drove at the heart of the Norwich defence, the ball seemingly glued to his feet, before unleashing a shot that was a work of art, a searing, dipping, swerving missile that flew into the top corner of the net.

1-0.

The goal was a reminder of the embarrassnt of riches I now had at my disposal, a testant to the depth of talent that we had assembled.

The second, in the thirty-second minute, was a poacher’s goal from Connor Blake, a player whose instinct for goal was a thing of beauty. A scramble in the box, a loose ball, and Connor was there, a predator who slled blood, stabbing the ball ho from two yards out.

2-0.

I turned to Rebecca on the bench. "How are their legs?" I asked, my eyes still fixed on the pitch. She was already looking at the GPS data on her tablet. "Connor and Eze are both in the green," she said, pointing to a series of lines on her screen.

"They can go the full ninety if needed." I nodded. "Good. Keep monitoring." The third, in the fifty-eighth minute, was a team goal, a beautiful, flowing move that involved eight passes and three players, culminating in a simple, tap-in finish from Antoine Senyo, who had been brought on as a substitute in the second half.

3-0.

The fourth, in the eighty-first minute, was a mont of pure, unadulterated joy from Lewis Grant, who had been a colossus at the back all afternoon. A corner, whipped in with pace and precision, was t by his powerful header, and the ball flew into the back of the net.

4-0.

The goal was a reminder that we were not just a team of talented attackers. We were a team of leaders, of fighters, of survivors. We were a team that had been to the brink and had co back stronger.

The final whistle was a release, a confirmation of a victory that was as comprehensive as it was deserved. The players celebrated on the pitch, their faces a mixture of exhaustion and a pure, unadulterated joy.

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