Chapter 361: The Announcent II
That evening, back in my hotel room, I had a conference call with Steve Parish, Dougie Freedman, and the rest of the Crystal Palace board. It was a call I had been dreading and anticipating in equal asure.
These were the n who, just a few weeks ago, had been on the verge of a full-blown panic. The n who had called Parish, demanding to know why he had entrusted the club to a 28-year-old who had just sold off a third of the squad. Now, their tone was different.
"Daniel," one of them said, his voice a smooth, corporate purr that always set my teeth on edge. "We just wanted to congratulate you. The Jas Rodríguez signing is... a remarkable piece of business. Truly remarkable."
"Thank you," I said, keeping my voice neutral. I was on speakerphone, pacing the small room. Freedman and Parish were on the line from the chairman’s office.
"The dia reaction has been... overwhelmingly positive," another board mber chid in. "The share price has seen a small but significant bump. The season ticket renewals have gone through the roof in the last twelve hours."
"I’m glad to hear it," I said.
There was a brief, awkward silence. Then, the first voice spoke again. "We have to admit, Daniel, we were... concerned. When you presented your plan to overhaul the squad, it seed... drastic. Selling twelve players, including club stalwarts... it was a significant risk."
"It was a necessary one," I said, my voice firm. "We couldn’t build anything new on the old foundations. They were rotten."
Parish cut in, his voice a welco note of sanity. "And Danny has delivered on every promise he made. He said he would clear the decks. He did. He said he would bring in a new spine. He has. He said he would make us a destination for ambitious players. And now we have the Golden Boot winner from the 2014 World Cup wearing a Crystal Palace shirt. I’d say that’s a promise kept."
"Yes, yes, of course," the board mber said quickly. "We’re not questioning the results, Steve. We’re just... expressing our satisfaction. And our anticipation for the season ahead. For the first ti in a long ti, we are genuinely excited for the future."
"But," another voice added, and I knew this was the real point of the call. "Excitent doesn’t win football matches, Daniel. This is a significant investnt. The wage bill is now the highest it has ever been in this club’s history. We support what you are doing. We are backing you. But we need to see a return on that investnt. We need to see results."
There it was. The conditional support. The quiet, unspoken threat. We love you, but don’t you dare fail.
"You will," I said, my voice cold and certain. "You’ll get your results."
When the classroom session at St. George’s Park finally ended the next day, I was mobbed. My classmates, the ex-pros, the lower-league managers, the n who had looked at
with a mixture of suspicion and amusent just a few hours ago, were now surrounding , their faces full of questions. "How?" Terry asked, his voice a low, impressed rumble. "How did you pull that off?"
"What’s the plan, Danny?" another asked, a grizzled lower-league manager with a face like a roadmap. "Where does he even fit in that team? You’ve got Eze, you’ve got Bojan... you can’t play all of them."
"Competition is a good thing," I said simply. "Iron sharpens iron."
Terry laughed, a short, sharp bark. "You’re a madman, Walsh. A complete and utter madman. But I’ll tell you what, I’m buying a Palace season ticket this year. I have to see how this ends."
I answered their questions with a calm, quiet confidence that seed to unnerve them more than any bravado would have. I was no longer the impostor in the room, the kid who had got lucky. I was a man with a plan. A man who was building sothing. And they were all starting to see it.
The next morning, we were at Gatwick Airport, ready to fly to Singapore. The press pack was a chaotic, heaving mass of caras and microphones, a stark contrast to the handful of local journalists who had turned up for my first press conference just a few months ago. The world was watching now.
At the gate, I gathered the squad together. "Alright, listen up," I said, my voice cutting through the noise of the departure lounge.
"As you all know, we have a new player joining us. Jas will complete his dical today and will fly out to join us in Singapore in two days. I know there’s a lot of excitent. I know there’s a lot of noise. But that’s all it is. Noise. The real work starts now. We have two weeks to beco a team. Two weeks to get ready for the biggest season in this club’s history. So get on that plane, get so rest, and be ready to work. Because I promise you, this is just the beginning."
The squad walked towards the plane, a strange, beautiful, eclectic mix of players, a living embodint of the chaos and ambition of the last two months. I watched them, my team, as they moved through the terminal, a slow-motion procession of hope and uncertainty.
There were the goalkeepers, Wayne Hennessey and Steve Mandanda, two veterans walking side-by-side, a quiet rivalry already brewing between them.
Hennessey, the incumbent, the man who had been there through the lean years; Mandanda, the French international, a man who had not co to sit on the bench.
At right-back, Joel Ward, the consummate professional, was deep in conversation with Aaron Wan-Bissaka, the young pretender, the academy kid who was now his direct competition. At the heart of the defence, the old guard and the new.
Scott Dann, my captain, walked with Jas Tomkins, their faces etched with a familiar, weary resolve. Behind them, the new blood: Ibrahima Konaté, a mountain of a man even at eighteen, looking around with the wide-eyed wonder of a teenager on his first school trip, and Jas Tarkowski, his face a mask of grim determination, a man who looked like he was ready to run through a brick wall for the cause.
Ben Chilwell, the new left-back, was laughing at sothing on his phone, a picture of youthful confidence. In the midfield, the engine room. Rúben Neves, the conductor, walked with Luka Milivojevi??, the enforcer, a perfect blend of silk and steel.
Jas McArthur, the tireless workhorse, was jogging on the spot, unable to stand still for even a second. And Nya Kirby, the youngest of them all, walked with his head held high, no longer a boy among n, but a man who had earned his place.
On the wings, the old and the new. Andros Townsend, the reliable, hard-working winger, was talking tactics with Jesús Navas, the World Cup winner, a man who had forgotten more about football than most people ever learn.
And then there was Wilfried Zaha, our talisman, our king, walking with an arm slung around Eberechi Eze, the heir apparent, whispering sothing in his ear that made the younger man break into a wide, infectious grin. Bojan, the forgotten genius, walked alone, a small, thoughtful smile on his face, a man who was finally, after all these years, starting to feel like he belonged.
And up front, the strikers. Christian Benteke, the giant, the target man, walked with Alexandre Pato, the ghost, the finisher, two n from different worlds, sharing a joke in a mixture of broken English and French. And Connor Blake, the academy kid with the heart of a lion, walked just behind them, his eyes wide, soaking it all in, a boy living a dream.
This was it. This was the start. I walked at the front, my face a mask of calm, my mind already on the training sessions to co, on the tactical tweaks, on the endless, relentless pursuit of perfection. The whisper had beco a roar. And the whole world was listening.
***
Thank you for reading: More to co.
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