After the dust-up earlier in the match, Arsenal—driven on by Kai—began to play with a sharper edge.
Once the Gunners shook off any hesitation and started to control possession with real intent, West Ham couldn't cope.
Repeated fouls slowed the tempo only briefly. Arsenal kept coming, relentless in their forward movement.
By now, the Hammers had collected five yellow cards.
Arsène Wenger finally lost patience and made his feelings clear to the fourth official. Even the referee sensed the pattern, stepping in to warn West Ham that the next cynical challenge might mean red.
That hint worked. West Ham reined it in, and Arsenal's passing rhythm began to flow.
Kai hovered around the centre circle, dictating play. With the rough stuff easing off, the Gunners' build-up looked effortless.
Cazorla pulled the strings in the final third while Kai held his position just behind, recycling possession and shifting the ball side to side. Even when the passes were simple, West Ham didn't dare relax—Suárez and Fernando remained constant threats near the box.
Then came the twist.
Kai suddenly drifted higher, level with Cazorla. The Spaniard spotted the movement and zipped the ball into his path. West Ham's midfielders closed in, expecting a drive forward.
Instead, Kai whipped a diagonal pass into the channel behind the right-back.
Theo Walcott was already at full throttle, blazing past his marker to collect. One touch, and he was inside the area.
The West Ham defence scattered—some converged on Walcott, others scrambled toward Suárez.
Theo feinted, slid the ball across the face of the goal, a low pass arrowing toward Suárez.
Under pressure from two defenders, Suárez barely moved, just stuck out a boot to cushion the ball. It slowed, perfectly placed three metres ahead.
Cazorla arrived like a bolt of lightning and drove a first-time shot into the far corner, the ball skimming the post on its way in.
Sixty-three minutes gone: Arsenal 1, West Ham 0.
Cazorla sprinted toward the corner flag, teammates piling in after him as the Emirates erupted.
Martin Taylor (Sky Sports): "Kai with the pass… Walcott using that blistering pace to get there first, pulls it back to Suárez—lovely touch—Cazorla! Goal! Arsenal take the lead!"
Alan Smith: "What a move. Absolutely brilliant from start to finish. The moment Kai took charge, you sensed the tempo change. Quick passes, intelligent movement—West Ham had no chance of stopping that."
Martin Taylor: "And look how clean it was—one touch, two touch, right into the corner. Modern finishing at its best."
Alan Smith: "Every player's role was spot on. Kai the metronome, Walcott stretching the defence, Suárez clever enough to hold his ground, and Cazorla timing his run to perfection. A textbook team goal."
On the touchline, Wenger and his assistant Pat Rice shared a satisfied smile.
Pat leaned closer, voice carrying over the crowd. "Kai's really settling into that deeper role. He reads the game so well now."
Wenger nodded but kept his gaze on the pitch. "He's been excellent, but the real test will come against stronger midfields. That's where he'll have to show he can handle quicker passing and tighter spaces."
Pat agreed. West Ham's rugged, old-school style suited Kai's strengths. Facing the technical side would be another challenge altogether.
Their thoughts briefly turned to Europe. The Champions League draw was later that night, and as group runners-up, Arsenal would face a heavyweight.
Pat rattled off the likely opponents: "Real Madrid, PSG, Bayern, Atlético, Barcelona…"
Wenger allowed himself a wry smile. "If we're lucky, Paris. Anyone else, it's a mountain."
And of course, those giants wouldn't relish drawing Arsenal either. Among the second-place finishers, only the Gunners and Manchester City carried that air of real danger.
When the final whistle blew, Cazorla's strike remained the difference. Arsenal collected three valuable points, moving to 41 for the season and tightening their grip on third place.
The table read:
1. Liverpool – 13W 3D 2L – 42 pts
2. Chelsea – 13W 3D 2L – 42 pts
3. Arsenal – 12W 5D 1L – 41 pts
4. Manchester City – 11W 3D 4L – 36 pts
5. Everton – 10W 6D 2L – 36 pts
A single, beautifully crafted goal had kept Arsenal right in the title chase—and sent a quiet message to the rest of the league.
As the Premier League entered its 18th round, Liverpool remained perched at the top of the table.
A tense draw with Manchester City, however, meant the Reds failed to widen the gap, leaving the race for first place wide open.
At his post-match press conference, Arsène Wenger faced a packed room of reporters and made Arsenal's ambitions crystal clear.
"No one enjoys merely fighting for a top-four finish," Wenger said, his voice firm. "In the past, we lacked the depth to aim higher and had to settle for the Champions League places. That is no longer the case.
"You can see it yourselves—every Arsenal player is hungry. We're not satisfied with qualifying for Europe; we want the title. Last season's FA Cup was only the beginning. This side will only grow stronger."
With a wry smile, Wenger added a flourish.
"People used to joke that we'd welded the safety on our gun—that we only carried the weapon for show. Well, the safety is off now."
The old man, channeling his inner Mourinho, although he will never admit it, made a mock pistol gesture, triggering a flash of cameras.
The next morning, The London Athletic devoted its front page to Arsenal, half the issue awash in red and white.
A striking photo montage showed Wenger's pistol gesture above a dramatic shot of Kai and his teammates in full kit, the headline blazing: The Gunners Are Returning!
The article captured the growing excitement:
"Arsenal are storming back into the title picture. Their balance of attacking flair and defensive steel speaks for itself.
"For years, critics called Arsenal soft. But look at the physical-duel numbers and you'll think twice before saying that again. Why can't beautiful football come with an iron edge? Arsenal provides the answer.
"Wenger has waited seven long years. Now we will see at the end of the season if the wait is over."
The piece reserved special focus for the club's new heartbeat:
"Unlike the first and second waves of Wenger's sides, this third generation—built around Kai—is a pack of wolves. They hunt together, cover for each other, and challenge anyone in their path.
"Kai himself remains a work in progress: plenty of strengths, a few rough edges. But his improvement is relentless. Arsenal's future depends on his growth, and if his trajectory continues, the Gunners may not only return to former heights—they may surpass them."