Kai's talent for reading the game had always been a strength, but it came with limits. If Bayern weren't looking to play the pass, there was nothing for him to anticipate.
That was why Kai's earlier positioning had been more about standing in the middle, blocking off lanes, and trying to coordinate the press rather than charging straight in. But the drawback was clear—when he played that way as a lone holding midfielder, he lost the ability to truly sweep the danger.
It meant Bayern could thread passes through midfield far too easily, and every time they did, Arsenal's back line was suddenly exposed to direct runners.
Just as Wenger had warned him, Kai was beginning to get stuck in a rut. He wanted to be everywhere at once: the interceptor, the shield, even the distributor. But football is never about one man doing it all. At this level, it's about eleven players carrying their share of the load.
Arsenal played as a team—or not at all.
Up in the gantry, Martin Taylor's voice carried the concern of many Arsenal fans watching.
"Guardiola's spotted the weakness. Kai's lack of outright pace is becoming a real issue for Arsenal in midfield. Bayern are targeting him, and if they keep doing it, that whole defensive structure could crumble."
Alan Smith nodded in agreement but added more balance.
"It's true, Martin. He's only twenty and still learning the role. You can't train pure speed, but what Kai does have is awareness. If he adapts here, sits a bit deeper, he can cut those angles out. The question is whether Arsenal gives him the protection to adjust."
The worry rippled into the stands as well. Many Arsenal supporters admired Kai, hailed him as the heartbeat of their midfield, but even they knew he wasn't quick across the ground. Guardiola had seen it, and Bayern were punishing him for it.
The match resumed with Arsenal in possession. From the kick-off, the ball was worked into Kai's feet. Instead of holding onto it, he quickly shifted it backwards, then retreated, sliding down and stationing directly in front of the two centre-halves.
Up in commentary, Martin Taylor's voice sharpened.
"Well, that's interesting. He's dropped right in front of the back line. That's Arsenal making a tactical tweak."
Alan Smith's tone was approving.
"It's smart, Martin. By sitting deeper, Kai can shield the centre-backs and buy the full-backs and wingers time to recover. It'll stretch Arsenal's shape vertically, but it does stop Bayern carving through quite so easily."
Taylor, though, was cautious.
"Yes, but it also leaves a hole between him and Cazorla. That gap could invite Bayern's midfielders to Arsenal. Kroos will be licking his lips at the thought of that much space to operate."
And sure enough, Toni Kroos spotted it. Advancing into Arsenal's half, he pushed the tempo, demanding the ball and beginning to orchestrate Bayern's next wave.
But the moment Kroos crossed the halfway line, the pressure hit him.
Cazorla snapped at his heels. Walcott and Rosicky dropped deeper, snapping into tackles. Chamberlain harried Götze with a ferocity that looked almost reckless.
"This is more like it from Arsenal," Alan Smith observed. "It's a coordinated press. They're not giving Kroos the time he usually enjoys."
Taylor agreed.
"It's got a touch of Dortmund about it, hasn't it? High energy, relentless. They're biting at every Bayern touch."
Kroos tried to release Martinez, but Suarez and Walcott swarmed him, forcing a hurried pass back. Kroos switched to Götze, hoping for his silky footwork to buy some breathing space.
But Chamberlain was on him immediately, body-checking, bumping, never letting him settle. Götze held strong until Rosický arrived with perfect timing, poking the ball away cleanly.
"Arsenal have stolen it back!" Martin Taylor called, voice rising. "That's brave pressing, and it's paid off."
This time, they didn't rush forward recklessly. The ball went to Cazorla, who turned, scanned, and slid it back to Kai.
Kai cushioned the pass, then swept a high diagonal to Walcott on the left.
Theo looked ready to drive, but Lahm and Boateng were already closing him down. Sensibly, Walcott fed it back inside to Cazorla, who shifted play right. Chamberlain took the ball, instantly returning it to Kai, then spun off and made a run.
Kai didn't hesitate. One touch, and he clipped it straight into Chamberlain's stride.
He hit top gear, bursting past Martinez, eating up ground with those powerful strides. Bayern scrambled to get men back, but still looked calm—until Chamberlain reached the edge of the box and squared it sharply to Suarez.
The Uruguayan's first touch was sharp, body angled for the turn, when suddenly Dante bundled into him. Suarez hit the ground, arms up.
The whistle shrieked.
Yellow card.
"First booking of the night!" Martin Taylor announced. "Dante had no choice. If Suarez had spun him there, Arsenal were in."
Alan Smith agreed. "It's cynical, but the right call. Bayern can't let Suarez roll defenders in that position."
The foul left Arsenal with a set-piece, about forty metres out.
Cazorla jogged towards the ball, but Kai strode over and said.
"I'll take it. You get forward and be ready for the second ball."
Cazorla gave him a nod and drifted towards the edge of the area.
Kai stayed back—someone had to mind the counter when the centre-backs pushed up. But he was still the man on the ball.
He studied the penalty area. Both sets of players jostled and wrestled, waiting for the delivery. His eyes locked on Mertesacker, Arsenal's aerial weapon, though Bayern had him tightly marked.
After a breath, Kai sprinted up and whipped it in.
The ball curled beautifully, not too far from goal, not too deep either. Neuer hesitated, half a step forward before retreating.
It was hanging in that dangerous zone, and Arsenal's players surged to attack it.
Mertesacker, Dante, and Boateng all charged toward the spot where the ball was dropping, a tangle of bodies jostling for position.
But Mertesacker had read it first. He planted his left foot firmly, launched upward with surprising force, and twisted his long frame sideways in mid-air.
The timing caught Bayern's centre-backs off guard. Both Dante and Boateng were a fraction late, and suddenly the German towered above them.
"They've misjudged him here!" Martin Taylor exclaimed. "Mertesacker's up early!"
Panic flashed across the Bayern pair. Dante, in desperation, tried to make contact. As he rose, his arm came across clumsily, jabbing into Mertesacker's midriff. The elbow knocked the Arsenal defender's balance, forcing his body to curl forward.
Instead of a clean header, the ball skimmed awkwardly off his scalp, looping away toward the far post.
Instantly, the penalty area erupted in chaos as players spun and sprinted towards the back stick.
And waiting there was Luis Suarez.
The Uruguayan had ghosted into position, and now, with the ball sailing his way, he shifted his body sideways, eyes never leaving the target. He arched his hips, twisted his torso, and swung his right boot in one fluid motion.
Crack!
The volley thundered goalwards, only for Manuel Neuer to fling out a desperate glove. The ball smacked off his palm, ricocheting loose into the box.
"Neuer with a huge save!" Martin Taylor cried. "That could've been 1–1 right there!"
But the danger wasn't cleared. The rebound dropped horribly at the feet of Philipp Lahm, who scrambled to adjust. He braked sharply, contorted awkwardly, and raised his right foot to lash it clear.
And then—out of nowhere—Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain launched himself into the fray.
Chamberlain's eyes were locked on the spinning ball, his face twisted with determination. He knew the risk—knew Lahm's boot was swinging down—but he flung his head forward anyway, the kind of reckless bravery that only strikers and madmen attempt.
Lahm's pupils dilated. In the split second before contact, instinct told him to pull back. His leg jerked, but too late to avoid everything.
Thud!
Chamberlain's forehead met the ball just as Lahm's boot clipped his face. The ball cannoned off his head and ripped into the top corner of the net.
The Allianz Arena fell silent for a heartbeat—then the Arsenal end exploded.
"Goooooooooaaaaaal!" roared Martin Taylor, his voice almost breaking. "Chamberlain! That is astonishing bravery! Arsenal have equalised in Munich!"
Alan Smith was laughing in disbelief. "The man has put his head where it hurts—literally—and come away with a Champions League goal. He won't forget that one!"
On the pitch, Chamberlain didn't rise. He landed with a heavy thud, clutching his nose, blood already staining his hands. His wails of pain were drowned out by the deafening roar of travelling Arsenal fans.
Arsenal players sprinted over, ready to mob him in celebration, but froze when they saw his face. Blood poured freely, and his expression was twisted with agony.
Kai was the first to kneel beside him, checking quickly.
"It's not broken," Kai said firmly, brushing Chamberlain's shoulder. "You just caught Lahm's boot—bloody nose, nothing more. He pulled his kick."
Through the pain, Chamberlain groaned. "Not broken? Feels like my whole face is gone."
Kai grinned and patted him again. "Mate, forget your nose—you've just scored in the Champions League. That's what matters."
Chamberlain blinked, stunned. Then, despite the blood, his eyes lit up. He had scored. He had actually scored against Bayern Munich.
"Yes!" he gasped, almost laughing through the pain. "I scored!"
Martin Taylor summed it up as the replays rolled.
"It's the 43rd minute, and Arsenal have struck back through sheer guts and determination. Oxlade-Chamberlain is throwing himself into danger, and Arsène Wenger's faith in him has paid off. Arsenal are level—1–1!"
...
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