Chapter 9: The Quiet Before the Rise
The boardroom air still clung to Niels like static—dry, tense, unspoken things crackling just under the surface. He stepped outside into the fading afternoon light, file tucked under his arm, his thoughts somewhere far beyond Crawley.
Oxford United.
Two divisions up. A team with full-time analysts, proper facilities, and players with Football League wages. Crawley wasn't supposed to beat teams like that. But that didn't mean they couldn't.
The cold wind bit at his collar as he crossed the gravel toward the changing rooms. In the distance, some of the lads were still messing around after training. Luka was juggling the ball with his heel, showing off again. Dev sat on the bench nearby, watching quietly. Jamal leaned against the wall, arms crossed, half-smiling like a proud older brother.
Niels stopped for a moment.
It wasn't just drills or heat maps that got them here. It was this. The small things. The invisible threads tying them together. Camaraderie born from grind and gravel. Grit polished by belief.
Still, the challenge ahead was real.
Back inside the office, Milan was waiting—arms folded, eyes tired but warm.
"So," he said, without needing to say more.
Niels exhaled. "Oxford United. Away."
Milan didn't flinch. "You've beaten long odds before."
"Yeah. But this one feels different. The press will be tighter. The mistakes punished quicker. It's not just about tactics anymore."
"No. It's about trust. And nerves. And who remembers who they are when the lights are brightest." Milan smiled faintly. "And that's something no league table can measure."
Niels nodded, feeling the weight settle differently. Not heavier—just clearer.
—
That night, he stayed later than usual.
The stadium lights outside flickered off one by one, until only the hum of his laptop remained. He wasn't drawing up fancy patterns or gimmicks. Just watching. Learning. Oxford's diamond shape, their press triggers, their tendency to flood wide areas then cut inside. Strong. Disciplined. But not invincible.
For every strength, he scribbled a question in the margins.
"What happens if we stretch their diamond wide?"
"Can Simons draw their DM out of shape?"
"Will Jamal be ready to cover that left channel?"
He paused often, glancing at a picture taped to the side of his screen. It was old—him, as a player, grinning with a crooked knee and bright eyes that hadn't yet seen the dark. He didn't miss the pain, but he missed that version of himself sometimes.
And yet… here he was. Reborn in a different role. Still chasing the same truth: the game was about moments. Making them. Owning them. And sometimes, defying them.
—
By the time Thursday rolled in, the staff had prepped the schedule. Wallace had already hinted that press interest was rising.
"Local TV might come by," he said with a smirk. "Try not to scare them off with your charm."
Niels chuckled, but his mind was already elsewhere.
He gathered the players after the morning warm-up.
"Oxford," he said plainly, letting the name hang. "League One. Bigger budget. Sharper tools."
He looked around. Every face met his, some cocky, some cautious, but all waiting.
"But that badge doesn't play the game," Niels continued. "You do. Eleven men, one ball. Same grass. Same goals. If we play scared, we've lost before it starts. But if we play together—not perfect, just together—we've got a shot."
The silence after his words wasn't hollow. It was heavy. Full of thought.
Then Luka clapped his hands, grinning. "So what you're saying is… we're gonna smash 'em?"
Laughter broke out. Even Dev cracked a smile. But beneath it all, Niels could see the edge tightening. Minds sharpening.
They weren't just laughing.
They were readying themselves for war.
—
Later that day, Wallace dropped off a training pitch map and lingered in the doorway.
"You alright?" he asked.
Niels leaned back in his chair, tired eyes on the Oxford report. "Yeah. Just… feels like the ground's shifting."
"It is," Wallace said. "And you're the one causing the tremors."
For a second, Niels didn't know what to say.
But deep down, he hoped Wallace was right.
Because Oxford wouldn't wait. The story had begun to write itself.
And now, Crawley needed a chapter worth underlining.