The atmosphere in the Arsenal dressing room was stifling.
Under pressure, no one spoke. No communication, no eye contact—just silence.
They weren't solving problems. They were just sulking. As if moping around would magically fix things.
Kai had tried to break the ice, even suggesting a few team discussions to clear the air. But every ti, the sa result—blank stares, pursed lips, and crossed arms.
How were they supposed to fix anything like this?
Instead of facing the challenges head-on, they chose to retreat into their shells. And even Arteta, who used to be one of the more vocal ones, had gone completely silent.
He hadn't said a word to Kai in two days.
Every single one of them was acting like a damn rock.
Kai had been holding it in, but now, he'd had enough.
If people had issues, they needed to speak up. If there was sothing wrong, they needed to bring it to the table.
Keeping quiet wasn't helping anyone.
They were teammates—if they couldn't communicate, then what were they even doing?
Fine. If talking things out gently didn't work, it was ti to try sothing else.
Sothing louder.
That afternoon, after training had wrapped up and the last cones were cleared off the pitch, no one stayed behind for extra work.
The ground was nearly empty.
Kai stood alone at the edge of the field, took a few deep breaths, then turned and marched toward the equipnt room.
A few minutes later, the sharp click of a door echoed.
Kai returned, storming down the corridor toward the locker room, a bat he purchased so ti ago in hand.
Boom!
He kicked open the door, sending a thunderclap through the quiet room.
The players inside, half-dressed and already ntally checked out, turned to find Kai standing in the doorway, with a bat hanging loosely in his grip like a challenge.
He looked like he ant business—and then so.
Vermaelen jumped up, alard. "Kai? What the hell are you doing? Are you out of your mind?"
Kai didn't respond. Instead, he raised the bat and pointed it at Vermaelen, freezing the captain mid-sentence.
His voice was calm and polite. A dangerous for a man with a bat.
"Captain. We need to sort this out. And I need you to cooperate."
Then, turning to the room, Kai slamd the bat down on the floor.
"Starting now, nobody leaves this locker room until we've either resolved the issue or co to an agreent. Of course, if you want to leave, go ahead and try. Just know, soone's going down before that door opens."
He raised the club again. "Anyone?"
No one moved. A few exchanged nervous glances, but no one dared to test him.
"Good."
Kai let the club rest across his shoulders and nodded. "We're doing this. Let it out. Say what's been on your mind. I want honesty, even if it's ugly."
Silence.
His eyes scanned the room until they landed on Chamberlain.
"You start," he said.
Chamberlain blinked. "?"
"Yes. You."
The hesitation was written all over Chamberlain's face. "Say what, exactly? Complain?"
"Vent. Speak. Communicate. Whatever you want to call it," Kai snapped. "Just talk."
Chamberlain inhaled sharply, then let it out in a sudden eruption.
"Fine! What the hell are you even doing out there, Kai? That pass you gave last ga—who the hell was supposed to catch that? You think we're all magicians? You've been playing like crap! Absolute crap! It's been awful. It's like watching a blind dog chase shadows! And don't even get started on—"
"Ow!" Chamberlain clutched his head, scowling. "You said let it out!"
"I said talk. I didn't say insult," Kai replied amusingly while raising an eyebrow.
The room stirred with half-laughs, half-grimaces. No one was brave enough to laugh out loud—but a few were close.
Then Kai turned his gaze on Suarez. "Luis. You're next."
Suarez sighed. "After these last two gas, I honestly regret coming to Arsenal. It's true. The way things are going, I can't see any hope. Sure, we had two good gas in the Champions League, but in this state, we won't get far."
Kai gave a small nod, then looked at Podolski.
Podolski muttered, "I'm struggling out there. Nothing's clicking."
Walcott added, "Nobody's talking again. It's like last season all over—but this ti, there's no Van Persie to carry us."
Szczesny chid in, visibly frustrated. "Forwards—can you score so goals? I'm sick of being the guy everyone blas when it all falls apart."
And just like that, the room opened up. One by one, they started speaking their minds.
Cazorla, blunt as ever, looked between Kai and Arteta. "Honestly, I don't get what you two are doing. Whatever it is, it's not working."
A wave of nods swept across the locker room.
The core issue had finally surfaced—tension between Kai and Arteta.
Kai turned to Arteta. The older midfielder offered a strained smile. "It's been rough. Losing sucks, and even playing's felt like a grind."
Again, the players voiced their frustrations, letting it out at last.
Kai exhaled. "Alright, let's fix this."
Then he looked directly at Arteta. "It's on us. The two of us dragged the whole team down. So co on—let's own it. Apologize with ."
Arteta hesitated, but eventually joined Kai at the center.
"We're sorry."
The team shifted uncomfortably, surprised by the gesture.
"Honestly, it's not just your fault. The Professor is experinting too much," soone mumbled.
"Yeah, but this is a good start."
"Let's find a solution. I'm tired of losing."
"Let's go win a damn ga."
"Yes. Let's win!"
The mood changed. The silence had broken. People were talking again.
Kai nodded and turned back to Arteta. "So what now? Got a plan?"
Arteta shook his head. "I don't know. I've been searching for answers and coming up empty."
"Then hear out," Kai said. "Just try what I'm about to propose. First thing—I need you to give up the role of organizing our play."
A murmur rippled through the locker room.
All eyes were on Kai.
Arteta bristled. "You're serious? What exactly are you planning?"
Kai raised a hand to calm him. "Listen—I'm not saying you're out. I'm saying we need flexibility. Right now, we're stepping on each other's toes. So let's fix that."
"We'll create a signal system. When you feel it's ti to control the tempo, take over. I'll focus on defense. But when I feel like we can push, I'll give a signal. Then I need you to back off and let lead the charge."
Arteta frowned. "You think that'll work?"
Kai shrugged. "Can't be worse than what we're doing now. Let's just try it."
Arteta was still unsure. "How exactly would this work?"
"We'll figure it out together."
The room buzzed with energy. Players started tossing out ideas. No more hiding. No more waiting.
Outside the locker room, the coaching staff had gathered.
Tony Colbert leaned against the door, listening. "No shouting. No fists."
Gary furrowed his brow. "So...what's happening in there?"
No one answered.
Wenger wore a faint smile.
Gary was baffled. "What should we do then?"
chuckled. "Nothing. Just let them be."
"What about them?" Gary gestured to the locker room.
Wenger waved it off. "They won't fight again."
"And why's that?" Levin asked.
Pat Rice smiled and followed Wenger.
Levin turned to Ryman. "Seriously—what's going on?"
Ryman grinned. "Arsenal's finally growing a leader."
...
"Pick it up!"
"Spread wide! Where's your angle?"
"Push back! You're too slow on the reset!"
The training ground was buzzing. Players were locked in, moving with purpose.
The chaotic, disjointed style from before? It was fading fast.
The new Arsenal was starting to find its rhythm.
They could attack in different ways now. Whether it was clean, ground-passing sequences or sharp counterattacks sparked by Kai's long balls, it all felt more dangerous.
But what stood out was the shifting tempo.
Arteta's style was all about control—slow buildup, patient possession.
Kai? He was pure montum. As soon as he took over, it was like strapping a rocket to the team. They'd surge forward with relentless aggression.
It was chaos—but structured chaos. Devastating when tid right.
With Kai's uncanny anticipation and the technical brilliance of Cazorla and Suarez, Arsenal's attack beca razor-sharp.
They could tear a defense apart in seconds.
They could finish with one man—or with five.
And best of all? It was unpredictable.
Teams were lulled by Arteta's calm pace—then blindsided by Kai's blitz.
The only catch? They couldn't keep it up for long.
"Damn it! Back to Arteta's rhythm!"
rtesacker groaned, dragging himself back on defense.
Two midfielders. Two styles. But when they worked together, it was terrifying.
He had to keep an eye on both Arteta's probing passes and Kai's surges.
And worse? Now that he understood what Arsenal was doing, he had to deal with it firsthand.
If teams didn't catch on, they'd be flattened before they knew what hit them.
This rhythm-switching was lethal.
"Good thing they're still figuring it out," he muttered.
Then he looked down at his soaked jersey and nodded to himself. "We'd better figure it out faster."
....
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