Kai turned to glance at Negredo and couldn't help raising an eyebrow. The Spaniard clearly had the physique for a bruising Premier League striker, but he didn't seem to know how to use it.
As a graduate of Real Madrid's youth academy, Negredo possessed a solid all-around skill set, yet nothing truly stood out. In England, raw physicality often decided battles in the box, but that required sudden bursts of force—something Negredo never quite summoned.
Take Carlos Tevez, for example. He used his stocky frame like a battering ram, sprinting at full tilt before crashing into his marker. The sheer speed multiplied the impact. Even Kai sometimes found Tevez's momentum tough to handle.
Negredo, by contrast, eased up before contact, arriving softly as though worried about a yellow card. Maybe he misunderstood what a proper duel required; perhaps he was cautious. Either way, if he kept playing this gently, the Premier League would chew him up.
A few yards away, Sergio Agüero darted from side to side, constantly changing angles and tempo, his studs whispering across the grass. Yet no matter how sharply he cut or how quickly he feinted, he couldn't shake the tall, broad-shouldered Chinese midfielder.
Agüero was baffled. Players built like Kai rarely possessed such agility. Every sudden pivot, every explosive sprint should have left the bigger man trailing. Instead, Kai stayed with him step for step, his balance unshaken.
Years of extra legwork paid off here. Determined to match the foot speed of wingers like Robben, Kai had drilled countless hours on rapid footwork and short bursts of acceleration. His defensive toolkit—strength, quickness, aerial dominance—was near its peak, a key reason Arsenal's back line looked so secure. Plus, his gift made things easier.
Eventually, Agüero, frustrated, turned and played the ball backwards.
Up in the Sky Sports commentary booth, Martin Taylor let out a low whistle.
"No way through for Agüero! That's outstanding from Kai," he said, his tone half-amused, half impressed.
Alan Smith chuckled beside him. "City has been up and down all season, Martin, and tonight they're running into a brick wall. Kai's reading of the game is superb. Remember, this is a lad who used to sit alongside Arteta just to do the dirty work. Now he's the heartbeat of Arsenal's midfield."
Taylor nodded. "Absolutely. Last year, he was a pure shield. But with Arteta's minutes dropping, Kai's taken ownership of the position. Ramsey and Flamini are effectively competing for the spot next to him. He's gone from apprentice to anchor."
Smith leaned forward, warming to the theme. "And Wenger clearly sees him as the long-term pivot. Arsenal still uses a dual-core system with Cazorla orchestrating up front, but you sense the manager's preparing for a future where Kai is the single holding playmaker."
"The key," Taylor added, "is whether he can keep adding that organizational spark. Early on, he hardly touched the ball in build-up. This season, he's been more adventurous, sharing the creative load with Cazorla. Arsenal's front line sees plenty of the ball, but when they hit a dead end, it's Kai who resets the rhythm."
Smith laughed softly. "Perfect for the tough matches. Manchester United, Chelsea both came to the Emirates and left empty-handed. Even Bayern last year and Dortmund this season found out what it's like to face Arsenal's midfield enforcer. He's becoming a giant-killer."
Back on the pitch, Arsenal looked to probe again. Jack Wilshere, finding no way through on the right, played it back to Kai to recycle possession.
Meeting the pass in the centre circle, Kai opened his body and swept a gorgeous inside-foot arc across the field. The ball curved past Yaya Touré, sailed beyond Zabaleta, and dropped invitingly towards the far left channel.
Tomas Rosicky sprinted after it, legs pumping, but Zabaleta tracked back and leaned in just enough to shield the ball out.
"Wonderful vision from Kai!" Taylor exclaimed. "That pass cut City wide open. Can Rosicky get there… no, not quite."
Smith winced. "That's where Arsenal miss Walcott. Even when Theo's form is patchy, his raw pace is priceless for a ball like that. Rosicky's got the technique, but he just can't win that footrace."
Rosicky offered a rueful thumbs-up to Kai, acknowledging the pass and apologizing for not catching it. Kai raised his hands back to acknowledge the apology. The midfield felt steadier with Rosický and Wilshere wide, but the tempo inevitably slowed; few could match Walcott's pace for Kai's lightning-quick switches of play.
In the technical area, Pat Rice suddenly rose to his feet the moment Kai released that through-ball. When Rosicky failed to catch up, he slapped his thigh in frustration.
"What a delivery that was," he muttered under his breath. "How has no one latched onto it?"
His brief outburst spent, Pat glanced toward Arsène Wenger. The manager, calm as ever, was bent over a notepad, scribbling steadily.
Pat leaned a little closer. The page was already crowded with observations—notes on positional issues, potential solutions, and a few names scrawled in the margins. One line stood out: speed-type winger (with technique).
"Transfer plans for January, boss?" Pat asked quietly.
Without looking up, Wenger replied, "It's difficult to find the right quality in the winter window. My focus is on the summer. We've managed to pay down a chunk of the stadium loan, so funds will be there. This squad still needs a few key pieces."
"Any particular targets?"
Wenger closed the notebook with a soft thud and gave a small, knowing smile. "There is someone in mind… but nothing certain."
Pat grinned. "Let me guess—Ligue 1 again?"
The manager shot him a look. "In the past, yes. It was a necessity. But now we can look higher. We can compete for players from stronger leagues."
"So which league has caught your eye?"
"La Liga," Wenger said simply.
Back on the field, the second half had shifted gears. Manchester City pressed harder, swinging cross after cross into the box in an effort to bypass Kai's influence.
But they met an immovable obstacle: Per Mertesacker.
"City keep aiming for those aerial deliveries," Martin Taylor noted, "but Mertesacker's reading it superbly."
Alan Smith agreed. "At six-foot-four, he's commanding everything up there. Unless City tries something on the deck, he's got it covered."
Time and again, the tall German rose above blue shirts, clearing danger with measured headers. Kai jogged over after one particularly decisive clearance, giving his teammate a hearty pat on the shoulder. Stoke-style long balls had always irritated him, a memory from bruising encounters of past seasons, but tonight City's attempts were being calmly dismantled.
Arsenal, meanwhile, began to carve out opportunities of their own. Under Cazorla's orchestration, the passing became crisper, more imaginative. One slick move almost brought the breakthrough, only for Joe Hart to fling himself full-stretch and keep it out with a stunning save.
By the 83rd minute, both sides had emptied their benches, throwing on fresh legs in search of a winner. The urgency was palpable; the finishing touch remained elusive.
After ninety tense minutes, the whistle confirmed a 0–0 draw.
"Manchester City will be the more frustrated," Martin Taylor summed up. "Home advantage, plenty of possession, and still no way through."
"And Arsenal," Alan Smith added, "will feel the absence of Walcott more than ever. Kai's through-balls are begging for a sprinter to chase them, but without that outlet, the counterattack just isn't the same."
The stalemate left City rueing missed opportunities and Arsenal pondering their attacking depth. For supporters in the away end, the message was clear: Walcott's return couldn't come soon enough.