Football Manager 12 Apr 2026
2-1.
February is brutal. Four matches, no wins. Liam O’Donnell pulls his hamstring—out for 2 months. You lose 4-1 at home to Crawley. The fans boo. The board calls an emergency meeting. Your job security drops to "Very Insecure."
One match left. Away at , who are already champions. Win and you’re in the playoffs. Lose and you finish 8th. Part 5: The Final Day May 5, 2012. The County Ground. 12:15 PM. football manager 12
You decline the interview. “We’re not done here.”
Swindon dominate first half. 1-0 down. Your players are exhausted. At halftime, you don’t give a team talk. You play a recording. It’s the 2002 FA Cup Final replay—Wimbledon vs. Liverpool. Vinnie Jones. The Crazy Gang. The last hurrah. “That’s us,” you say. “Everyone wrote them off. Everyone writes us off. But we don’t lie down. We fight.” 57th minute: O’Donnell comes on. 71st minute: He receives the ball 40 yards out, turns, plays a perfect reverse pass to Lippa, who crosses first-time. Midson—who hasn’t scored in 10 hours—dives. Header. 1-1. Liam O’Donnell pulls his hamstring—out for 2 months
And in the summer of 2012, you get a phone call. It’s a Championship club. More money. More prestige.
It’s June 2011. Your phone rings. It’s Erik Samuelson, the charismatic former chief executive of AFC Wimbledon. The club has just survived its first season back in the Football League. The manager has left for a "bigger project" (Peterborough). Samuelson offers you a one-year rolling contract. “Jack, we’re not asking for promotion. We’re asking for survival. But more than that… we ask you to remember who we are. We were born from protest. From fans who refused to let their club die. Play the Wimbledon way. Hard. Honest. Never bullied.” You inherit a squad of cast-offs, loanees, and aging warriors. Your captain is , a 35-year-old centre-back whose knees are held together by tape and willpower. Your star player is Jack Midson —a poacher who scores scrappy goals but can’t outrun a League Two fullback. The board calls an emergency meeting
You don’t remember the final five minutes. You remember Lippa carrying O’Donnell on his shoulders. You remember Jamie Stuart hugging you so hard you couldn’t breathe. You remember the away end singing “We are Wimbledon, Super Wimbledon.” The playoff semi-final is against Torquay. You lose 3-2 on aggregate. O’Donnell misses a penalty in the second leg. The dream dies.
The Ghost of the Touchline Game: Football Manager 2012 Database: Original 2011-2012 season Club: AFC Wimbledon (League Two, England) Part 1: The Inheritance You are Jack Lennox , a 34-year-old former Scottish youth international whose career was ended by a double leg break at 24. For a decade, you’ve drifted—scout, U18s coach at Motherwell, tactical analyst at a Championship side. You’ve never been a head coach.
By November, you’re 9th. Inconsistent but feared. The tactical tweak that saves your season: you sign a 19-year-old unattached midfielder named (regen). He’s slow, unathletic, but has 18 for Passing and 19 for Decisions. He’s your metronome. The fans call him "The Ghost" because he never sprints, yet never loses the ball. Part 3: The Winter of Heartbreak January 2012. The transfer window. Your star loanee right-back is recalled by his parent club (Leyton Orient). Your backup goalkeeper breaks a finger. The board gives you zero transfer budget. You scour the free agents.