"Forward!"
.
"Cover!"
.
"Beat him!"
.
"Drop back, drop back!"
The noise never settled. Inside Emirates Stadium, every shout from the pitch crashed into a wall of sound from the stands, the whole ground vibrating with urgency.
This was what the Champions League looked like once it reached the quarter-finals.
The pace had increased.
N'Golo Kanté felt it imdiately.
He tried to settle into rhythm, but the ga refused to slow for him. The ball moved too quickly, the spaces closed too fast, and decisions had to be made before he fully processed the last phase.
Out wide, Ángel Di María and Alexis Sánchez demanded the ball again and again.
Direct and relentless. Every reception turned into a drive at the defense.
One touch. Two at most. Then the ball was already near the penalty area.
It was the sa on both sides. Arsenal F.C. and Paris Saint-Germain F.C. mirrored each other, pressing, breaking, resetting in seconds.
The match never truly breathed.
Kanté felt it in his chest.
Before the ga, Kai had warned him. The quarter-finals were different.
He had nodded then, thinking he was ready.
Now he understood.
Five minutes in, and he was already chasing the tempo.
"Behind you, N'Golo!"
The shout cut through everything.
Kanté turned too late.
Edinson Cavani had already drifted into the space behind him. The run was tid perfectly. By the ti Kanté reacted, the ball was already dropping over his shoulder.
He sprinted, but the distance held.
Too late.
Cavani set himself, ready to bring it down and drive into the box.
For a second, Kanté froze ntally, even if his body carried forward, trying to make ands.
Then a blur cut across his vision.
Kai.
He arrived at full speed, launched himself across Cavani's line, arms spread for balance and leverage. The contact disrupted everything. The header was forceful, sending the ball spinning out for a throw.
Danger gone.
Kanté exhaled, but the relief lasted only a mont.
Kai was already on him.
"What are you doing?" His voice was sharp. "You switch off here, you give them a goal."
Kanté lowered his head. No argunt. He knew.
Kai held his gaze for a second longer, the anger fading as quickly as it ca. He had seen enough to understand.
Last season, this player was in Ligue 2. Now he was here, dealing with this level, this speed, this pressure.
Kai sighed. It was his fault since he pushed for Kanté's move. He could have gradually grown from Leicester until he was ready.
Still, understanding did not change the demand.
Kai stepped closer, gripping Kanté's shoulders.
"Listen to . This is the Champions League. Everyone watching expects us to win. No one carries you through a ga like this. You adjust, or you get exposed."
Kanté looked up. "I understand, Captain."
Kai studied him for a brief mont, then turned away.
"Get back. Defend."
Kanté followed imdiately.
The warning ca early, but it was clear.
Paris Saint-Germain F.C. had started well. Their midfield moved the ball with control and purpose, sharper than expected.
From the comntary box, Andy Gray leaned forward, hands clasped, then released again. Tension showed in every movent.
"Arsenal look unsettled in the middle."
He did not need to say more.
Everyone watching could see it. One lapse, and Cavani was nearly through. Without Kai's recovery, the situation would have been far worse.
Beside him, George Adams spoke with asured calm.
"The Gunners have dropped deep. Kai's intervention slowed the attack just enough for the back line to recover."
. .
"Paris are pushing hard," ca the voice from the touchline.
Pat Rice stood tense, arms tight to his sides. Beside him, Arsène Wenger gave a small nod.
Backed by heavy investnt, Paris Saint-Germain F.C. had beco a different kind of opponent. Faster and more direct.
Still, Wenger's eyes settled ahead of the penalty area.
On Kai.
. .
Even through the noise inside Emirates Stadium, his voice carried to his teammates.
"Cazorla, drop. Show for it!"
"Sagna, Gibbs, watch the wide runs!"
"Koscielny, close the gaps!"
"Navas, be set. They'll hit one from distance!"
The instructions ca in quick succession, each one clear, each one landing where it needed to.
The defensive line tightened, and the midfield tucked in. The shape held.
Kanté followed the cues, but his eyes kept drifting back.
It did not make sense to him. In a mont where he could barely keep track of his own role, Kai was reading everything. Organizing, anticipating, and even shaping the next phase before the ball was recovered.
Kanté tried to reset.
For a second, his focus slipped again.
"Focus!"
The shout snapped him back instantly.
Kai's stare lingered for a mont before he shook his head. Frustration, controlled but visible.
This was a small flaw, but in this kind of match, small flaws decided everything.
Paris restarted quickly. A throw-in on the left, angled into space for Javier Pastore to chase.
"Step up!"
Kai's command ca early.
Bacary Sagna closed him down from the front. Kanté arrived from the side. Kai moved in behind, sealing the space.
Pastore took one touch and looked up.
Sagna was already set.
He turned, searching for an outlet, and found Kanté cutting off the lane.
No forward option. No inside pass.
He hesitated.
"Man on! Behind!"
The warning ca too late.
Kai was already there, tight to his back, body positioned perfectly. Pastore tried to shield, but there was nowhere to go.
Kanté stepped in without delay.
Sagna held his ground to block the escape route.
Three angles. No exit.
Around the stadium, applause replaced the tension from the ho fans
Monts earlier, fear had crept in, but now, the structure returned.
Kanté tid it cleanly, nicking the ball away with a firm touch.
He moved it forward imdiately, finding Santi Cazorla in space.
One recovery. One pass.
Arsenal were out.
. . .
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