On March 1st, Arsenal made the trip north to the Britannia Stadium — the home of Stoke City. For years, this fixture had carried an edge. The wind, the rain, the rough challenges — Stoke had become something of a bogey team for the Gunners.
"Every time Arsenal come here," Martin Taylor remarked on Sky Sports before kickoff, "you can almost feel that tension in the air. Britannia's never been an easy place to play — and Stoke know it."
And it was.
From the very first whistle, Stoke stuck to their trademark aerial approach. Their front line was practically a skyscraper — Crouch, Arnautović, N'Zonzi, Cameron, and Shawcross — each towering close to 1.93 meters on average. The plan was simple: pump the ball high, win the second balls, and batter Arsenal into submission.
But football rarely rewards simplicity.
As the match unfolded, Stoke quickly found that having height meant little without control. Walters and Glenn Whelan, who were supposed to deliver those crosses, barely had a moment's peace. Kai shadowed them relentlessly, pressing at just the right moments, closing the lanes, and cutting off their rhythm.
Alan Smith observed. "It looks like the Kai interception machine is up and running."
Whenever Stoke did manage to send the ball forward, it was often hopeful — launched early from awkward half-spaces rather than measured crosses. And waiting in the box was Mertesacker, whose positioning and timing were immaculate. The German center-back seemed to repel everything.
"He's winning everything in the air!" Martin Taylor said. "Crouch barely has a touch."
While Stoke huffed and puffed, Arsenal grew in confidence. With Kai and Cazorla orchestrating the tempo from midfield, the Gunners began to dictate the rhythm of the game.
Kai's long passes from deep were inch-perfect — whipping through the wind and landing precisely where Walcott or Podolski could chase. Meanwhile, Cazorla's dribbles and quick turns were a nightmare for Stoke's tall defenders, who struggled to adjust to his low center of gravity.
"The contrast between those two," Alan Smith said admiringly, "is what makes Arsenal so hard to contain. Kai controls the geography of the pitch, and Cazorla manipulates the space within it."
The pair kept interchanging positions — Cazorla dropping deeper while Kai surged forward to launch those curling through balls. More than once, Stoke's defensive line was shredded.
It was total midfield control.
But just as Arsenal looked comfortable, Stoke finally found a rare opening. A loose pass was intercepted, and Walters broke down the flank.
"Uh-oh!" Martin Taylor's voice rose. "Here comes Stoke's counterattack!"
Kai instantly reacted. From his position in the center circle, he sprinted back with those long, powerful strides — each one eating up ground at frightening speed.
The cross came in — a dangerous one, curling towards Crouch at the near post. Both Crouch and Mertesacker leapt for it, arms flailing, eyes on the ball. For a split second, it looked as though Crouch had the advantage.
Then — a blur.
A shadow rose between them, taller, faster, stronger. Kai exploded into the air, his leap perfectly timed. His body stretched upward, his right leg driving off the turf, his core twisting for balance.
"He's up there forever!" Martin Taylor gasped. "That's unbelievable elevation from Kai!"
The midfielder's forehead met the ball cleanly — thud! — redirecting it away from danger and sending it spinning toward the outside of the box.
"Magnificent clearance!" Alan Smith exclaimed. "He came out of nowhere! Look at the height he reached — he must've been nearly a head above both of them!"
As Kai landed and jogged back into position, the away fans behind the goal erupted in cheers, waving banners and chanting his name.
That one moment — that towering clearance — said it all.
And as Arsenal's midfield began stringing passes again, keeping the ball calm and composed, it was clear that the ghosts of past Britannia nightmares were being laid to rest.
.
In the coaching area, Wenger raised his eyebrows slightly, eyes following the play with a faint glint of surprise.
"Kai seems to be getting faster," he remarked, his tone carrying both curiosity and approval.
Pat Rice gave a small nod, his trademark half-smile appearing. "There's been progress, no doubt. He's picking up pace bit by bit. He'll get a little faster, but probably not much more. Still," he added, glancing back toward the field, "it's more than enough for what we need."
Wenger exhaled softly, hands resting against his chin. "But his stride pattern is still more like a track athlete. It doesn't quite suit carrying the ball."
Pat shrugged lightly, a touch of humour in his voice. "You can't have it all, Arsène. Kai's never going to be a speed merchant — that's just not in his genes."
Wenger smiled wryly, shaking his head. "Perhaps I'm asking for too much again. I keep wanting him to become a complete player — a sort of superman who can do everything."
Pat chuckled under his breath. "That's the dream, isn't it? But we'll take what we've got. He's already miles ahead of where we thought he'd be."
.
On the pitch, Arsenal began to build another wave of attack through the middle. Cazorla, with his low centre of gravity and velvet touch, suddenly burst forward.
With two quick feints, he slipped past two Stoke midfielders and cut into the penalty area, his movement sharp and deceptive.
The Stoke defenders scrambled, desperate to close him down — but just as they lunged in, Cazorla lifted his head and threaded a clever pass into Rosický's path.
Rosicky met the ball in full stride and, without hesitation, chipped a delicate lob into the box.
Suarez was a step ahead of his marker — the ball was slightly behind him, yet that didn't matter. The Uruguayan launched himself into the air and executed a flawless bicycle kick.
The strike was pure. The ball connected sweetly with the top of his foot, spinning past the goalkeeper's fingertips and into the top corner.
The Britannia Stadium fell silent except for the roar from the travelling Arsenal supporters.
67th minute — goal for Arsenal!
Suarez ran to the corner flag, punching the air as his teammates surrounded him. It was his 23rd goal of the season, a number that underscored just how unstoppable he'd been.
With ten league games still to play, Suarez was already miles ahead in the Golden Boot race — Sturridge trailed him by nine goals.
That goal didn't just decide the match; it cemented Arsenal's momentum.
By full-time, Arsenal had beaten Stoke City 1–0 — a tough, gritty win that spoke volumes about their resilience.
They were still chasing Chelsea, still within striking distance.
…
Stoke City fall at home — Arsenal edge it 1–0!
The headline stretched across the morning papers.
Inside the Chelsea training base, Mourinho sat in his office, the newspaper folded in his hand. His brow furrowed as he stared at the scoreline.
The sight of Arsenal's victory didn't please him one bit.
He leaned back in his chair, muttering under his breath, "They just won't go away…"
It's a miserable feeling — being hunted.
Arsenal were now just two points behind Chelsea. One slip, one bad afternoon, and the whole title race could flip upside down.
Chelsea couldn't afford a single mistake.
Mourinho knew Wenger's sides were never easy opponents. But this Arsenal — this version — felt different.
"They've changed," he murmured. "They've become… stable."
In the past, Arsenal might have dazzled one week and collapsed the next. Now they were disciplined, relentless, and capable of grinding out wins even when not at their best.
He thought back to their performance against Bayern Munich — fearless, clinical, everything a top European side should be.
And it wasn't just Arsenal breathing down Chelsea's neck. Manchester City and Liverpool were lurking too, waiting for their moment.
Mourinho rubbed his temple, half in frustration, half in grudging admiration.
"This is the Premier League," he sighed.
Spain had been simpler — two giants and everyone else. Here, every weekend was a warzone.
But then, his eyes hardened. He set the paper aside and muttered with quiet conviction,
"Doesn't matter. Arsenal, City, Liverpool — none of them are stopping us. Not this season. I'm taking the title back to Stamford Bridge."
His reflection stared back from the office window, the faintest smirk forming.
The hunt was on — and The Special One was not planning to be the one caught.
...
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