In an intriguing turn of events, teenage starlet Estevao will be free to line up against his future employers on Friday when Palmeiras play Chelsea in their Club World Cup quarter-final.The 18-year-old is bound for the Premier League next season after agreeing a €34million (£29m, $39m) deal that kicks in after the Club World Cup.AdvertisementThere has been no shortage of reasons to watch Estevao this summer and there was another on Saturday afternoon, with manager Abel Ferreira asking him to play a less familiar role on the left side of his attack in an all-Brazilian clash with Botafogo.It seemed that Ferreira was doing his best to bamboozle the Botafogo coach, Renato Paiva, with the Portuguese pair having a close friendship for many years, often swapping notes on training sessions and matches over Zoom during the pandemic when they were working in Europe.“There were some changes, we put Estevao as a left-winger, so this might have been surprising,” Ferreira said after the game. “But they didn’t last more than 10 minutes because he (Paiva) adapted to the new dynamic, and he also surprised me. I have played against Renato for a while and he has upgraded his mindset.”So often causing chaos from the right wing or in a No 10 position during his 18 months of senior football, Estevao’s task to operate on the left flank was novel. As a pawn in the game of tactical chess between Ferreira and Paiva, the broad conclusion was that the experiment did not quite work out for the teenager.Given his tendency to drop a shoulder and wriggle out of tight areas from the right, Estevao was less sure which direction to go when he received the ball on the left, often running into cul-de-sacs early on. Being unable to cut inside onto his stronger foot meant that he was often running out of space, forced onto his right foot before making safe passes into the middle of the pitch.Knowing that he was looking to run the line on his stronger left foot, Botafogo right-back Vitinho was able to step in with ease and shrug Estevao off the ball with tackles like the example below.Things improved in the second half, as Estevao moved into a slightly more narrow position from the left — being afforded less defensive responsibility as he looked to stay high and punish Botafogo if they dared to commit too many players forward.There were promising moments, including threatening crosses, a stinging shot and a disallowed goal, with the highlight of the second half including a beautiful, Neymar-esque flick and near-perfect threaded pass.Ferreira’s experiment with Estevao on the left was underwhelming, though, with the 18-year-old taken off just after the hour mark when Palmeiras were still looking to unlock the Botafogo defence.The dazzling qualities are without doubt, but the pertinent question is whether Estevao is ready to challenge for a place in Chelsea’s starting XI next season.With Noni Madueke, Pedro Neto, and the incoming Jamie Gittens all vying for a spot on the flanks, Estevao will have to push his way past stiff competition to regularly get his name on Enzo Maresca’s teamsheet.AdvertisementIf he is looking for a spot in the No 10 role — a position he is comfortable playing — displacing Cole Palmer may be one of the toughest tasks in European football.It would be sensible for Chelsea to ease Estevao in, with the physical step up from the Brazilian Serie A needing to be managed.Chelsea have taken that approach with 18-year-old Kendry Paez, who joined the club from Ecuadorian side Independiente Del Valle in 2023. Having built up his fitness and physique with Chelsea and BlueCo-owned Strasbourg, Paez will now join the French club on loan next season.Andrey Santos, who arrived at Chelsea from Vasco da Gama, has done the same — loan spells at Nottingham Forest and Strasbourg have helped his development and transition from Serie A to the Premier League.Will Estevao follow the same path? Probably, so Chelsea fans may not see the best of the Brazilian international for a couple of seasons.Such a steady pathway is not uncommon for South American prodigies making the move to Europe. Real Madrid’s Endrick has needed time to settle into life in La Liga since making the move from Palmeiras last summer, with the 18-year-old seemingly following a similar, scaffolded development pathway as Madrid team-mates Vinicius Junior and Rodyrgo — who arrived in Spain directly from Brazil.If Estevao needed a cautionary tale about the step up to European demands, he need only look as far as Palmeiras team-mate Vitor Roque, who left Athletico Paranaense for Barcelona as an 18-year-old in 2023. He made just 14 appearances for Barca, scoring only two goals, and returned to Brazil permanently in February.Palmeiras’s group-stage clash with Porto was Estevao’s first game against European opposition. Friday’s quarter-final will provide extra motivation for the teenager to show his future club what they have invested in.If Chelsea want a true live scouting report, restoring Estevao to his preferred right flank might be the best way for him to showcase his quality.(Top photo: Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)
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