If you watched Manchester City's 5-1 win over Bournemouth at the weekend, you will have witnessed the latest indication of Jesus Navas bewildering lack of composure in front of goal.
Rounding the keeper, with a seemingly simple finish to follow, the winger managed to fluff his lines and was fortunate that the chance did not completely disappear as Raheem Sterling finished things off.
Primarily Navas is an old-school winger and not the first to emerge from the Sevilla FC academy to enjoy a degree of prominence.
So, as the Spain World Cup winner takes on his boyhood club in the Champions League tonight, its worth noting that Sevilla will be bringing an aged but still useful Jose Antonio Reyes to the Etihad Stadium.
Arsenal fans will certainly remember the winger and current Sevilla club captain from his brief spell at Highbury from the second half of the Invincible season to his departure after a couple of inconsistent seasons.
Coincidentally the 32-year-old's Arsenal debut came against Manchester City in February 2004 and perhaps it is just a coincidence, but he does share parallels with fellow Sevillan Navas.
Both men were born and raised in the province of Seville and from my time on an Erasmus year abroad there, both are loved by Sevilla's fans due to that fact.
Jose Antonio Reyes (R) scores for Arsenal against Man City in 2006 (Martin Rickett / PA Archive/PA Images)
Even other aspects of their background bear similarities. Both are from gitano families (Spanish Romanis) and progressed through the youth ranks at Sevilla before making their first team debuts as teenagers - the tender age of 16 in Reyes' case.
And interestingly, both have suffered some degree of homesickness during their careers. In Reyes' case, it arose during his time at Arsenal as he failed to settle in England, admitting that he never "adapted to life" there.
That's despite the fact that some of his family moved over with him and his mother made sure to to supply him with a diet of Andalusian food (from experience you'd miss it alright). Eventually he did return to Spain with Real Madrid, initially on loan but eventually on a permanent deal in 2007, before a slightly nomadic career which eventually led him back to Seville in 2012.
Navas' experience of homesickness was more chronic and it was something he had to get professional help to deal with. Indeed, it hampered his initial experiences of international football as he found himself enduring panic attacks the further he moved from Seville - even for training camps. There is even a story of his father and brother having to pick him up from a training camp in Huelva, which is pretty much down the road from Seville.
Fortunately he has been able to overcome those problems, allowing him to go to the World Cup with Spain in South Africa - playing a small role in Andres Iniesta's extra-time winner against the Netherlands - and finally make a move to Man City.
Like Reyes, he has flickered but not quite enjoyed consistency during his time in the Premier League, but at least tonight's Champions League tie will throw two Sevillan favourites together.
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