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Chapter 360: The Announcent I

July 12th, 2017

The air in the classroom at St. George’s Park was stale, thick with the dry, academic language of football theory.

I was trying to focus, I really was, but the lecturer’s voice was a monotonous drone, a background hum to the frantic, silent countdown that was happening in my head. My phone lay face down on the desk, a small, black rectangle of potential energy. Any second now. Any second.

It buzzed once. A text from Dougie Freedman. "It’s done. Papers signed. Announcent at 6 pm."

I glanced at the clock. 5:55 pm. Five minutes. I took a slow, deep breath, the air catching in my throat. This was it. The mont the whisper beca a roar.

At exactly 6 pm, my phone began to vibrate. Not a single, polite buzz, but a continuous, frantic tremor, as if the device itself was having a seizure. A split second later, another phone buzzed. Then another.

A wave of soft, insistent vibrations spread through the room like a digital virus, a silent, rolling tremor of chaos. The lecturer, a man with a face like a well-worn leather football, faltered mid-sentence. He saw the distraction, the sea of faces suddenly illuminated by the glow of their screens. He stopped.

"Is there sothing more interesting happening than my lecture on the art of the defensive transition, gentlen?" he asked, his voice heavy with the sarcasm of a man who has seen it all.

No one answered. They were all staring at their phones, their faces a gallery of shock, disbelief, and pure, unadulterated confusion.

John Terry, the forr England captain, a man who had stared down the best strikers in the world without flinching, looked up from his phone, his eyes wide.

He looked over at , a question etched on his face. I gave him a small, almost imperceptible nod. He just shook his head slowly, a look of grudging, baffled respect dawning in his eyes.

The whispers started, a low, incredulous murmur that rippled through the room.

"No way."

"Is that a joke?"

"He’s gone to Palace? Crystal Palace?"

The lecturer, his patience finally exhausted, looked directly at . "Danny," he said, his voice sharp. "Is this you? Is this your doing?"

I looked up, a slow, quiet smile spreading across my face. "Maybe," I said.

Two hundred miles away, at the training ground in Beckenham, the sa wave of chaos was breaking. The first team squad was in the middle of an intense, high-tempo passing drill, the ball zipping across the pristine turf under the watchful eyes of Sarah and Kevin.

Marcus Reid, my analyst, a man who lived and breathed data, was the first to see it. He was tracking the players’ movents on his tablet when the notification popped up. His eyes went wide. He grabbed Sarah’s arm, his hand shaking slightly. He showed her the screen. Her jaw dropped.

The news spread through the staff on the sidelines like a contagion.

A quiet gasp here, a muttered "Oh my God" there. The players, sensing the sudden shift in the atmosphere, the sudden, palpable drop in intensity from the coaching staff, stopped the drill. Zaha, never one to be left out of the loop, was the first to speak.

"What’s going on?" he shouted, his voice echoing across the empty training pitch. "What’s happened?"

Before anyone could answer, a figure ca sprinting out of the main building, phone held aloft like a trophy. It was one of the junior mbers of the dia team, a young lad who was usually tasked with filming training sessions and updating the club’s Instagram story.

He was screaming, his voice cracking with a mixture of joy and disbelief. "WE GOT JAS! WE GOT JAS RODR??GUEZ!"

The reaction was instantaneous, a collective, primal roar of shock and excitent. Benteke, the big, stoic Belgian, just stood there, a slow, disbelieving smile spreading across his face. Zaha let out a loud, joyous laugh, a sound of pure, unadulterated delight.

Neves and Navas, the two seasoned European campaigners, exchanged a look of impressed, almost startled surprise. The old guard, the likes of Scott Dann and Jas McArthur, just shook their heads, a familiar, amused expression on their faces that said, "Of course he did. Of course, this is what he’s done."

But my eyes, if they had been there, would have been on two players. Eberechi Eze and Bojan Krki??. They were standing together, slightly apart from the main group. They were not celebrating. They were not shouting.

They were just watching, a new, fierce, determined light in their eyes. The arrival of a player like Jas Rodríguez, a global superstar, a man who had won the World Cup Golden Boot, could have been a threat.

It could have been a ssage that their path to the first team was now blocked. But that was not how they saw it. That was not how I had built them to see it. For them, it was not a threat. It was a challenge. It was a statent. This was the level now. This was the standard. And they were ready to et it.

Sarah, ever the professional, blew her whistle, her voice sharp and clear. "Alright, alright, settle down! The drill’s not finished!" The players, still buzzing, still laughing, slowly got back into position. But the energy had changed.

The intensity was now off the charts. The ball was moving faster, the tackles were harder, the shouts were louder. And at the heart of it all were Eze and Bojan, a pair of young, hungry playmakers who had just been shown how high the ceiling was, and were now determined to smash right through it.

While the training ground was a cauldron of renewed energy and ambition, the rest of the world was in ltdown.

The Sky Sports News studio, which just a few weeks ago had been filled with pundits calling

"reckless," "naive," and "a dangerous gamble," was now a scene of frantic, back-pedalling praise.

Jamie Carragher, his face a picture of genuine, baffled admiration, delivered the line that would define the sumr: "I don’t know what’s going on at that football club," he said, shaking his head, "but I think I love it."

The internet was a wasteland of crashed servers and broken links. The club website was down for three hours. The fan forums were a chaotic, joyous ss of all-caps declarations of love and disbelief.

Fabrizio Romano, the king of the transfer rumour, tweeted a simple, elegant, "Jas Rodríguez to Crystal Palace. Here we go. Confird." It was a deal that no one, not even the most connected journalists in the world, had seen coming.

***

Thank you to Sir nayelus for the constant suppport.

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