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Chapter 349: The New Blueprint

June 26th, 2017

The morning after the triple announcent was quiet. Too quiet. I walked into the lecture hall at St. George’s Park and the usual low hum of conversation died away.

It did not stop abruptly. It just faded out, like soone had slowly turned down the volu on the room. I grabbed my coffee, found my seat, and opened my notebook. I did not look at anyone. I did not have to. I could feel their eyes on .

My phone was face down on the desk, on silent. It had not stopped vibrating since five o’clock the previous evening. The world had an opinion. A lot of opinions.

I had not read any of them. I had seen the headlines on the hotel television that morning while I was getting ready. *Palace’s Retirent Ho.* *Walsh’s Circus.* *The Boy Manager Loses the Plot.* The usual stuff. Predictable. Lazy. Easy headlines for easy clicks. It did not matter. The noise was just noise. What mattered was the work.

The instructor started the session. Sothing about defensive transitions. I wrote the heading at the top of a clean page. I tried to listen. But the silence in the room was louder than his voice. It was a new kind of silence.

Not the respectful silence of the first week, when they had all been trying to work out who I was. Not the concerned silence of the second week, when they had all been trying to work out if I was reckless. This was the silence of n who had given up trying to work it out and had simply decided that I was mad.

Dave, the forr Championship manager with the kind eyes and the worried face, was sitting two rows in front of . He did not turn around. He did not say good morning.

He just stared at his own notebook with an intensity that suggested he was trying to burn a hole in it with his eyes. He had warned

about recklessness. He had told

the Premier League was unforgiving.

And now I had signed a 31-year-old winger from Manchester City, a 27-year-old striker from Villarreal who had not been good for five years, and a 26-year-old playmaker from Stoke who had never fulfilled his potential. From his point of view, I had not just ignored his advice. I had set fire to it and danced on the ashes.

I kept my head down. I took my notes. I waited for the lunch break.

I sat in my car in the car park and ate a sandwich. The sun was warm on the windscreen. The training pitches of St. George’s Park were a perfect, manicured green in the distance. I took out my phone. I had one hour. Two calls to make. Two careers to either save or ruin.

I had been carrying the blueprint for both of them for weeks. Not from watching their highlights, though I had done that. Not from reading their statistics in the conventional sense, though I had done that too.

There was sothing else. Sothing private. Sothing I had never explained to anyone and never would. A clarity that arrived not like a thought but like a certainty.

A deep, unshakeable knowing that told

exactly what these two players were, what they could beco, and precisely how to get them there. I had learned to trust it. It had never been wrong. And right now, it was telling

that the calls I was about to make were the most important I had ever made as a manager.

I scrolled through my contacts and found the first number. Bojan Krkic.

He answered on the third ring. His voice was cautious. Quiet. "Hello?"

"Bojan. It’s Danny Walsh."

"Gaffer," he said. The word sounded strange in his mouth. Like he was trying it on for size.

"Welco to the club," I said. "I’m glad you’re with us."

"Thank you," he said. "I am happy to be here."

He did not sound happy. He sounded nervous. He sounded like a man who had been through too many transfers, too many new managers, too many fresh starts that had ended in the sa old disappointnt. He was waiting for the other shoe to drop. I decided not to keep him waiting.

"I’m going to be direct with you, Bojan," I said. "I have a very specific plan for you. And it is probably not the plan you are expecting."

There was a pause. "Okay," he said slowly.

"I don’t care about the ’New ssi’ tag," I said. "I don’t care about the goals you scored for Barcelona when you were seventeen. I don’t care about your technical ability or your vision or your first touch. I know you have all of that. Every manager you have ever played for has known you have all of that. And it has not been enough. So we are going to try sothing different."

I let that hang in the air for a mont. I could hear him breathing on the other end of the line. I had his attention.

"I want you to find joy in a one-nil win where you ran twelve kilotres and made four interceptions," I said.

"I want you to get a kick out of a fifty-fifty tackle you had no right to win. I want your defining mont in a Crystal Palace shirt to be a sixty-yard recovery run you made in the ninetieth minute to stop a counterattack. I want you to suffer for the team. And I want you to love it."

Silence. A long, deep, profound silence. I could almost hear the gears turning in his head. The confusion. The shock. The slow, dawning realisation that this was not a normal conversation with a normal manager.

"You want

to be a defensive player," he said finally. His voice was flat. Unreadable.

"No," I said.

"I want you to be a complete player. When we have the ball, you will be the brain of the team. You will play in the half spaces. You will be the bridge between the midfield and the attack. You will use your vision and your intelligence to create chances. But the mont we lose the ball, you are not a number ten anymore. You are a third central midfielder. You are the trigger for the press. You are the shadow of their deepest playmaker. You are the first line of our defence. You are the man who sets the tone for the entire team. If you don’t run, nobody runs. If you don’t fight, nobody fights. That is the new Bojan role. And it is non-negotiable."

I had been building this speech in my head for weeks. Ever since that morning in my office after the Etihad win, when I had first seen the possibility. The clarity had co in the way it always ca. Sudden. Complete. Like a light being switched on in a dark room. Not a hunch. Not a theory. A fact.

Bojan Krkic had the technical skills of a world-class player. But he had the work rate of a luxury item. And the Premier League does not tolerate luxury items. Not for long. What the clarity showed

was not just the problem. It showed

the solution. It showed

exactly who he could beco if the right person asked him the right question at the right mont. I was that person. This was that mont.

"I have never played like that," he said. His voice was a whisper.

***

Thank you to Sir nayelus and chisum_lane for the continued support.

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