“That’s amazing” – The “magic move” Estevao has according to tactical analyst | OneFootball

“That’s amazing” – The “magic move” Estevao has according to tactical analyst | OneFootball

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·7 octobre 2025

“That’s amazing” – The “magic move” Estevao has according to tactical analyst

Image de l'article :“That’s amazing” – The “magic move” Estevao has according to tactical analyst

The Sun’s Tactics Exposed saw Dean Scoggins break down Chelsea’s win over Liverpool at Stamford Bridge, highlighting a couple of individual performances from the vital victory for Enzo Maresca’s men.

Estevao’s special skill hailed by pundits

Image de l'article :“That’s amazing” – The “magic move” Estevao has according to tactical analyst

Estevao Willian taps the badge. (Photo by Michael Steele/Getty Images)


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First up was Estevao Willian, who scored the late winner for the Blues. They were amazed by his very mature understanding of space and movement on the pitch in this game.

“We can go on all day about his touch, his skills. But the thing I picked out was this magic move into space,” Scoggins said.

“The samba space man was what it was. He has this ability to move the opposite way to where the play goes and still get the ball. To have that ability to find space at that age, that’s amazing.”

The move ultimately led to Chelsea’s winning goal – Estevao appears from nowhere at the far post to score, with Andy Robertson checking one side when the Brazilian has drifted into his blind side.

You can see the discussion in the clip embedded here:

Caicedo’s key tactical role for Maresca’s press

They also took a look at Moises Caicedo, who has been credited from all over for his excellent showing:

“Let’s concentrate on Moises Caicedo and give him the plaudits he deserves. That was a ten out of ten for me. I don’t think he did anything wrong in the whole game. He was involved in everything. Goal, moves, interceptions,” he continued.

He highlighted that Caicedo’s positioning was so perfect that he was able to stay close enough to his man to discourage a pass, while also managing to block the main passing lane into the striker.

“Caicedo did it all afternoon. I was rewinding it thinking ‘there’s two of him!'”

There’s not, but it feels like it!

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