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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 12:47 UTC
  • UTC12:47
  • EDT08:47
  • GMT13:47
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← The MonexusSports

Glasner's Unusual Answers and the Fan Who Wants Honey: Inside Palace's Press Conference Before the Semi-Final

Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner delivered some unusual responses at his pre-semi-final press conference, including references to honey for fans — but behind the lighthearted exchanges lies a club ascending to European contention for the first time in decades.

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When Oliver Glasner arrived at his press conference on 6 May 2026, he faced the usual slate of questions about tactics, team news, and the stakes of a European semi-final. What followed was anything but routine. The Crystal Palace manager offered answers that veered into unexpected territory — including, reportedly, a reference to fans wanting honey —prompting bemused laughter and viral clips that followed the formal proceedings, according to BBC Sport's coverage of the exchange.

The episode came as Palace prepare for the second leg of their UEFA Conference League semi-final against Shakhtar Donetsk, holding a first-leg advantage that has positioned the club one step from a major European final. For a club whose recent history has been defined by Premier League survival battles and mid-table finishes, the pivot to continental competition represents a transformation that defies the club's historical trajectory.

Glasner's lighthearted press conference persona sits in contrast to the sharp tactical work that has underpinned Palace's European run. Under the Austrian manager's guidance, the Eagles navigated a difficult group stage before dispatching higher-ranked opposition in the knockout rounds. The semi-final clash with Shakhtar — a club with deep European heritage despite operating from exile in Poland — presented Palace with the most demanding test of their campaign.

What makes the honey comment particularly notable is its relationship to the broader narrative surrounding Palace's season. While the club's Premier League form has fluctuated, their European campaign has provided consistent proof of concept for Glasner's project. The squad's tactical cohesion, combined with the unity of a fanbase experiencing genuine continental ambition for the first time in a generation, has produced performances that contradict the modest expectations set at the campaign's outset.

The press conference exchange also reflects the particular pressure that surrounds a club on the verge of historic achievement. Glasner, who took over in 2024 following Roy Hodgson's tenure, has navigated that pressure with a mix of humour and precision. When asked whether winning the Conference League would merit a statue at Selhurst Park — a question that invited either grandiosity or dismissal — his response drew the kind of laughter that travels well on social media, according to Sky Sports's coverage of the moment.

A statue, of course, is the logical extreme of what a trophy would mean. For Palace, the Conference League represents more than a piece of silverware. It would confirm the club's arrival on the continental stage, secure UEFA prize money that would reshape their financial position relative to Premier League peers, and provide a platform for further recruitment ambition. The competition's value extends beyond its trophy cabinet weight — it functions as a gateway competition for clubs seeking to establish themselves in the broader European hierarchy.

Palace's run has also coincided with broader shifts in English football's continental representation. With multiple Premier League clubs prioritising domestic competition over European involvement, the Conference League has attracted clubs willing to treat it as a genuine target rather than an unwelcome distraction. That Palace have progressed this far while maintaining Premier League survival — they remain comfortably clear of relegation danger heading into the season's final weeks — demonstrates a structural capacity that few predicted at the campaign's start.

The honey reference, whatever its specific context, crystallises something important about the moment Palace find themselves in. Football's cultural texture lives in these details — the aside, the joke, the moment of levity that breaks through the professional script. For supporters who have endured playoff heartbreaks and managerial reshuffles, the image of their manager answering questions about honey while preparing for a European semi-final captures the surreal quality of their season.

Glasner's press conference chemistry with the media also reveals something about his management philosophy. Managers who can sustain a certain lightness while demanding excellence from their squads often produce environments where performance becomes sustainable rather than reactive. The honey moment, whether deliberate or spontaneous, signals a manager comfortable in his own skin — one whose players have bought into a project that has exceeded all reasonable expectations.

The second leg against Shakhtar on 8 May 2026 will determine whether Palace advance to a final against either Real Betis or Anderlecht. History awaits — and apparently, so do some fans who want honey.

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© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire