Chapter 343: The Dominoes II
He signed on Friday afternoon. Five-year contract. The announcent went out at six o’clock. The reaction from the fans was different this ti was less the frenzied excitent of the Neves signing, more a slow, building recognition from the people who knew their football.
The forums were full of posts from supporters who had done their research, who had watched his highlights, who were already comparing him to Southampton’s Virgil van Dijk and Rio Ferdinand. The mainstream dia were more cautious. Crystal Palace’s signing of an unknown French teenager was the general tone. Who? was the subtext.
They would find out soon enough.
The Tarkowski negotiation was the most straightforward of the week, which is to say it was still a headache. Burnley had just been promoted to the Premier League.
They had no intention of selling one of their best defenders before they had even played a single top-flight ga. Their first response to our opening bid of two million pounds was so brief and so dismissive that Freedman had actually laughed when he relayed it to .
"They said no," he told . "In one word. Just: no."
"Go back in at three," I said. "And add the add-ons. Make the total package look bigger than the upfront fee."
Freedman was a master of the structured deal.
He went back to Burnley with a proposal of three million pounds upfront, plus half a million if Tarkowski made ten Premier League appearances, another half a million if he made the England squad, and a further quarter of a million if we qualified for Europe again.
The total potential package was four and a quarter million pounds. On paper, it looked generous. In practice, the upfront cost was manageable, and the add-ons were tied to outcos that were in everyone’s interest.
Burnley accepted on Saturday morning. Tarkowski had his dical on Sunday. He was a quiet, serious man, the kind of player who let his football do the talking. He shook my hand in the office at Beckenham with a firm, dry grip and told
he was looking forward to working hard. I believed him. He was exactly the kind of character I wanted in the dressing room.
The announcent went out on Sunday afternoon. The reaction was muted compared to the Neves and Konaté signings. Tarkowski was not a glamour signing. He was not a player who would set the internet on fire.
But the fans who understood football, the ones who had been watching us closely, understood what he represented. He was the organiser. The leader at the back.
The man who would keep Konaté’s raw energy pointed in the right direction. He was the kind of signing that won you points in November, when the gas were coming thick and fast and the pitches were heavy and the margins were tight.
I had spent the weekend at the training ground, catching up on the work I had missed during the week at St. George’s Park.
The office was quiet on a Sunday. Just , Freedman, and the hum of the air conditioning. We sat across from each other with a pot of coffee between us and worked through the remaining targets. The list was getting shorter. The squad was taking shape. But there were still gaps.
"Chilwell," I said, tapping his na on the list. "What’s the latest?"
Freedman leaned back in his chair. "Leicester want ten million. I’ve told them seven. They’ve co back at eight and a half. We’re going in circles."
"Walk away," I said.
He raised an eyebrow. "Walk away?"
"Tell them we’ve decided to pursue a different target. Thank them for their ti. And then wait."
Freedman studied
for a mont. "You’re bluffing."
"Of course I’m bluffing," I said. "But they don’t know that. And if they think we’re serious about walking away, they’ll move. They don’t want to lose the fee entirely. They know he’s going to leave eventually. They’d rather get five million now than nothing in twelve months."
Freedman picked up the phone. He made the call. He was calm, professional, and utterly convincing. He thanked the Leicester sporting director for his ti, expressed our regret that we couldn’t reach an agreent, and said we would be moving on. He hung up. We both looked at the phone. The office was very quiet.
It rang back in forty-seven minutes.
Leicester had co down to five and a half million, with a series of add-ons that could bring the total to eight million. Freedman looked at . I nodded. He accepted. Five million pounds upfront, add-ons tied to appearances and international recognition. Ben Chilwell was a Crystal Palace player.
The Chilwell announcent went out on Monday evening, and this ti the reaction was different again. By now, the fans had been through enough of these signings to understand the pattern.
They weren’t just celebrating individual players anymore. They were celebrating the vision. The comnts under the announcent were full of people tagging each other, posting the growing list of signings, doing the maths on the total spend and the wage savings from the purge.
Soone on the main fan forum had put together a graphic of the new signings alongside the players who had been sold, with a running total of the net spend. It was being shared thousands of tis.
Neves. Konaté. Tarkowski. Chilwell. Four signings in a week. Net spend: under fifteen million pounds.
This man is building sothing.
That was the post that kept appearing in my ntions. I didn’t have a public Twitter account. I didn’t do social dia. But Freedman showed it to
on his phone, and I read it, and I felt the weight of it. The expectation. The belief. The fans had gone from panic to euphoria in the space of ten days, and now they were invested. They were watching. They were counting on us.
That was a different kind of pressure. Not the pressure of a relegation battle, where the fear was imdiate and visceral. This was the slower, heavier pressure of expectation. Of a fanbase that had been given sothing to believe in and was now waiting to see if it was real.
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