Font Size
15px

Chapter 232: The Debut II: Gem

The second half was a different story. We were a different team. We were the team that had taken the league by storm, the team that had beco the talk of English youth football.

We were relentless, our pressing a furious, swarming entity that gave Portsmouth no ti to breathe, no space to think. We were a team playing with confidence, a swagger, a sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful belief in our own ability. And it was a joy to watch.

We scored our third goal in the fifty-eighth minute, a beautiful, flowing move that was a testant to the quality, the depth, the sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful resilience of my entire squad.

The central midfielder, a kid who had been on the fringes of the first team all season, his hunger, his desire, his sheer, bloody-minded refusal to be beaten a vital, infectious, beautiful force, picked up the ball on the halfway line, his pace and his power taking him past two Portsmouth defenders, before he delivered a perfect, curling cross into the box.

The Portsmouth goalkeeper, a young, talented, but ultimately outmatched kid, ca to claim it, but he was beaten to the ball by the sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful desire of our striker, who rose highest, his powerful, instinctive header flying into the back of the net.

3-1.

The stadium erupted again, a deafening, joyous, cathartic roar that was a testant to the hope, the belief, the sheer, unadulterated joy that this team was bringing to the long-suffering Palace faithful.

In the sixty-fifth minute, with the ga won, with our place in the fourth round of the FA Youth Cup all but secured, I made the change. I brought on Michael Olise. The kid from City. The rough diamond.

The beautiful, flawed, brilliant, frustrating, beautiful work in progress. He looked nervous as he stood on the touchline, his eyes wide with a mixture of an excitent, a fear, a sheer, unadulterated, beautiful disbelief.

I put a hand on his shoulder, my touch a gentle, reassuring, grounding presence. "Go and enjoy yourself, son," I said, my voice a quiet, calm, authoritative whisper. "Go and play your ga. Go and show them what you can do." He nodded, a small, almost imperceptible gesture, and then he ran onto the pitch, the roar of the crowd a deafening, joyous, beautiful welco.

For the first few minutes, he was a ghost, a silent, almost invisible presence who seed to want to shrink into the background, to disappear into the shadows. He was a kid who was afraid to make a mistake, who was afraid to take a risk, who was afraid to be himself. But then, in the seventy-fifth minute, sothing changed.

He received the ball on the right wing, his back to goal, a Portsmouth defender breathing down his neck. In the past, he would have played it safe, a simple, sideways pass to the nearest teammate. But not this ti.

This ti, he did sothing different. He did sothing beautiful. He did sothing magical. With a single, fluid, almost impossibly quick movent, he flicked the ball over the defender’s head, spun around him, and collected the ball on the other side, his pace and his power taking him into the open space behind the Portsmouth defence.

The crowd gasped, a collective, involuntary, beautiful intake of a breath. And in that mont, I knew. I knew that he was going to be special.

In the eighty-first minute ca the mont that everyone in the stadium had been waiting for, the mont that would be replayed on the highlights for weeks to co, the mont that was a tantalizing, beautiful glimpse into the future of Crystal Palace Football Club.

Eze, who I had brought on at the sa ti as Olise, picked up the ball in the center of the pitch, his strength, his intelligence, his ability to hold up the ball and bring others into the ga a vital, reassuring presence in a relatively inexperienced team.

He looked up, and he saw Olise, who was making a quick, darting, unpredictable run into the space behind the Portsmouth defence. Eze played the pass, a perfect, weighted, beautiful ball that was a testant to his vision, his quality, his sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful genius.

Olise took one touch to control the ball, a second to shift it onto his left foot, and then he was away, his pace and his power taking him past the last Portsmouth defender. He was one-on-one with the goalkeeper, the goal at his rcy. He could have shot. He should have shot.

But he didn’t. Instead, he did sothing that was a testant to his vision, his quality, his sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful audacity. He looked up, and he saw Eze, who had continued his run, who was now unmarked in the center of the penalty box.

Olise played the pass, a simple, selfless, beautiful ball that was a testant to his intelligence, his awareness, his sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful team-first ntality. Eze slotted the ball into the empty net, his celebration a mixture of joy, relief, and sheer, unadulterated, beautiful gratitude.

4-1.

The stadium erupted, a deafening, joyous, cathartic roar that was a testant to the hope, the belief, the sheer, unadulterated joy that this team was bringing to the long-suffering Palace faithful. [SYSTEM NOTIFICATION: Olise-Eze Partnership Chemistry

10%. Michael Olise: Composure

5, Vision

5. Crowd Buzz: 95%]

We scored a fifth goal in the eighty-ninth minute, a powerful, instinctive finish from another substitute, a kid who had been on the fringes of the first team all season, his hunger, his desire, his sheer, bloody-minded refusal to be beaten a vital, infectious, beautiful force.

5-1.

The final whistle was t with a deafening, joyous, cathartic roar that was a testant to the hope, the belief, the sheer, unadulterated joy that this team was bringing to the long-suffering Palace faithful.

We had done it. We had won. We were through to the fourth round of the FA Youth Cup. And we had done it with a style, a swagger, a sheer, bloody-minded, beautiful belief in our own ability.

As I walked off the pitch, the sound of the crowd chanting my na was a humbling, beautiful, surreal experience; I felt a profound sense of satisfaction, contentnt, and sheer, unadulterated joy.

The gamble had paid off. The rotation had worked. The kids had delivered. And in Michael Olise, we had unearthed another gem, another rough diamond, another beautiful, flawed, brilliant, frustrating, beautiful work in progress. The future was bright. The future was red and blue. And the future was ours for the taking.

***

Thank you to nayelus for the inspiration capsule and the continued support.

You are reading Glory Of The Footbal Chapter 232: The Debut II: Gem on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.