DMF ZONE

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DMF ZONE

DMF ZONE

@dmfzone

Deep tactical analysis & scouting of Europe's best young & exciting midfielders | DMFs, CMs, progressors & connectors | Video Comps + data breakdowns ⚽

가입일 Haziran 2026
64 팔로잉135 팔로워
고정된 트윗
DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
🚨Just In: Should Mateus Fernandes play alongside Kobbie Mainoo and Bruno Fernandes in Michael Carrick's Manchester United? 🔴🇵🇹 At first glance, the answer is yes. ✅ 1,575 Passes Attempted ✅ 87.8% Pass Accuracy ✅ 33 Chances Created ✅ 3 Goals ✅ 4 Assists ✅ 50+ Tackles But the tactical reality is more complicated. - Mateus isn't a controller. - He isn't a destroyer. - He's a connector. 🎯 Mainoo controls tempo. ⚡ Mateus accelerates possession. 🎨 Bruno creates chances. In possession, the trio could be devastating. All three are comfortable receiving under pressure, progressing play through central areas, and sustaining attacking sequences. The problem comes when possession is lost. ❌ None are natural defensive anchors. ❌ None specialise in protecting Zone 14. ❌ All three are naturally attracted to the ball. Without a genuine ball-winner behind them, transitions could become a nightmare against elite opposition. That's why the success of this midfield depends entirely on the player sitting underneath it. 🛡️ Add a true defensive presence such as Ederson behind them, and everything changes. Ederson wins duels. Mainoo dictates. Mateus connects. Bruno creates. Suddenly, United have a midfield capable of controlling matches while maintaining defensive balance. My verdict? Mateus Fernandes shouldn't replace Kobbie Mainoo. He should amplify him. The ceiling of a Mainoo–Mateus–Bruno midfield is elite. The structure behind it will determine whether it's a title-winning unit or a transition trap. 📽️ @ScoutNationHD #MUFC
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

Why should Manchester United sign Matheus Fernandez?

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Jake Burns
Jake Burns@JakeBurns4·
@dmfzone He does almost none of this. In terms of the control part that couldn’t be anymore off the mark
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali
David Ornstein@David_Ornstein

🚨 Tottenham Hotspur want Sandro Tonali from Newcastle United. Positive talks between #THFC & 26yo; no contact yet with #NUFC. Transfer fee bigger challenge than player deal. De Zerbi driving pursuit, backed by ownership @TheAthleticFC post @FabrizioRomano nytimes.com/athletic/73179…

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chris whight
chris whight@WhightChris·
@dmfzone Great insights and points, very well made. Thanks for sharing
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@markgoldbridge Why won’t they go hard. De Zerbi needs good midfield and Tonali is one of the best in the premier league x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali

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Mark Goldbridge
Mark Goldbridge@markgoldbridge·
Spurs going hard after Tonali fair play! United walking away from Anderson, Diomonde, Tonali on price just shows our owners are clearly working to a low wage budget. Not sure that's an ambitious way of building a title winning team
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@TheSpursExpress @FabrizioRomano How much do you reckon spurs would pay for him? x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali

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The Spurs Express
The Spurs Express@TheSpursExpress·
🚨🥇Tottenham believe Sandro Tonali is open to a move and talks on price / package will now commence with Newcastle. Tottenham want to go ahead strong and get the deal done as it’s a priority target wanted by Roberto De Zerbi. [@FabrizioRomano]
The Spurs Express tweet media
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@ActuFoot_ @FabrizioRomano A statement signing for spurs midfield x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali

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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@TottenhamTiers @David_Ornstein He would fit De zerbi tottenham stylistically x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali

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Tottenham Tiers
Tottenham Tiers@TottenhamTiers·
Sandro Tonali has attracted interest from Arsenal and Manchester City but at this stage #Tottenham are most advanced over a proposed deal. [@David_Ornstein] 🥇
Tottenham Tiers tweet media
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@SkySportsPL De Zerbi wants to challenge for top 3 x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

I understand why Roberto De Zerbi wants him. De Zerbi's football places enormous responsibility on the deepest midfielders. They aren't there to simply protect the defence. They're there to control the entire structure. They must receive under pressure, attract opponents, manipulate pressing schemes, and still find solutions in the most congested areas of the pitch. That's exactly where Tonali thrives. What stands out isn't his passing range. It's his composure. Tonali is one of those midfielders who looks more comfortable the more pressure you place around him. He constantly scans before receiving, understands where the next pass is before the ball arrives, and rarely loses control when opponents try to close central spaces. Those qualities are essential in a De Zerbi system. The objective isn't to avoid pressure. It's to invite it. And very few midfielders are as comfortable operating inside that environment as Tonali. Once the press is drawn in, his value becomes even clearer. He has the vision to break lines, the range to switch play, and the technical quality to connect every phase of possession. He doesn't just circulate the ball. He changes the angle of attacks. He changes the speed of attacks. Most importantly, he helps his team progress through the pitch rather than around it. What also makes the fit so logical is his defensive work. Tonali covers ground relentlessly, wins second balls, protects transitions, and provides the intensity needed to maintain structure when possession is lost. That balance between control and aggression is difficult to find. The more I study the profile, the less this feels like a luxury signing. It feels like a tactical one. Because when you strip everything back, De Zerbi's football depends on midfielders who can remain calm when the game becomes chaotic. Tonali doesn't just survive those moments. He uses them to take control. #THFC #COYS #SandroTonali

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Sky Sports Premier League
Sky Sports Premier League@SkySportsPL·
One of Spurs' top priorities this summer is improving the technical ability of the squad and bringing in a midfielder that can dictate play. Sandro Tonali has been identified by Roberto De Zerbi an ideal candidate for that role. 🧐
Sky Sports Premier League tweet media
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
🚨NEW: The discussion around Jorthy Mokio often focuses on his versatility. I think that misses the most interesting part of his profile. The reason clubs rate him so highly isn't because he can play centre-back, left-back, or defensive midfield. It's because many of his best qualities are those of a modern No.6. At 18, Mokio already shows a level of composure that is difficult to teach. He consistently receives in central areas under pressure, remains calm when opponents close space, and has the technical security to progress possession rather than simply recycle it. What stands out most is his relationship with pressure. Many young midfielders look to avoid it. Mokio often uses it. He is comfortable receiving with opponents around him and has the awareness to find solutions through progressive passes, switches of play, or carrying into space. That ability immediately raises his ceiling as a midfielder. His game is built around progression rather than possession for the sake of possession. A lot of young holding midfielders become overly safe on the ball. Mokio's first instinct is usually to improve the team's position on the pitch. Whether through line-breaking passes or advancing with the ball himself, he consistently looks to move the game forward. Defensively, his background as a defender is evident. He understands distances, protects central spaces well, and shows a level of positional discipline that is uncommon for players his age. Rather than chasing actions, he focuses on controlling the zones where actions happen. That's an important distinction. The best defensive midfielders aren't always the players making the most tackles. They're often the players preventing situations from developing in the first place. What makes Mokio particularly intriguing is how complete the profile already looks. Technical quality. Defensive intelligence. Progressive passing. Mobility in transition. Most young midfielders are still developing one or two of those traits. Mokio already combines all four. That's why I increasingly view him as a midfielder who can play in defence rather than a defender who can step into midfield. And that's also why he remains one of the most fascinating young No.6 profiles in European football. CC @ballers2watch #AFCAjax #AjaxYouth
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

What is your thoughts on Jorthy Morkio?

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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
What is your thoughts on Jorthy Morkio?
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Brasil Football 🇧🇷
Brasil Football 🇧🇷@BrasilEdition·
🚨🚨🚨OFFICIAL: The Brasil XI to face Morocco!!!! 🇧🇷
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EuroFoot
EuroFoot@eurofootcom·
🇧🇷 BRAZIL vs MOROCCO 🇲🇦 STARTING XI'S CONFIRMED! ✅
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brasil
brasil@CBF_Futebol·
BRASIL DEFINIDO! 🇧🇷 Confira os 11 nomes escalados pelo Mister para a estreia da Seleção Brasileira na Copa do Mundo FIFA 2026 diante do Marrocos. 📺 TV Globo / GE TV / Cazé TV / SBT / NSports 🏟️ Estádio de Nova York Nova Jersey #BateNoPeito, ISSO É BRASIL! 🫵🇧🇷
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
Brazil double pivot would be very aggressive for Morocco. Bruno G & Casemiro
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
🚨NEW: Johan Manzambi’s Role Within Switzerland’s Midfield One of the most interesting aspects of Johan Manzambi’s development is how naturally his profile complements the evolution of Switzerland’s midfield. At international level, he is not defined by possession control or passing volume. He is defined by progression. Manzambi is a midfielder who advances attacks through movement, carrying, and vertical actions. His game is built around driving play forward rather than orchestrating it from deeper areas. That distinction is important. Switzerland possess midfielders capable of providing structure and circulation. What Manzambi offers is a different dimension: dynamism. His ability to receive under pressure, attack space aggressively, and carry possession through midfield allows Switzerland to progress up the pitch with greater speed and unpredictability. The profile is best suited to an advanced No.8 role within a midfield three. Operating from this position allows him to influence multiple phases of the game without restricting the qualities that make him effective. He can support build-up, contribute during transitions, press aggressively out of possession, and arrive in advanced areas where his athleticism and timing become genuine attacking weapons. What stands out most is his impact between the boxes. Many midfielders contribute through possession. Manzambi contributes through progression. He consistently turns defensive actions into attacking situations and provides forward momentum whenever Switzerland regain the ball. That quality is particularly valuable in international football, where matches are often decided by transitional moments and the ability to exploit space quickly. His emergence also adds greater balance to Switzerland’s midfield structure. The combination of technical security, physical intensity, ball-carrying ability, and final-third presence gives the national team a profile capable of influencing games in multiple ways. Rather than slowing the game down, Manzambi increases its tempo. Rather than maintaining attacks, he accelerates them. From an analytical perspective, his role is clear. He is not Switzerland’s controller. He is Switzerland’s accelerator. A modern No.8 whose primary value lies in progressing attacks, connecting phases of play, and providing consistent verticality from midfield. As Switzerland continue integrating the next generation of talent, Manzambi represents one of the most important pieces of that transition. Not because he dictates every phase of possession. Because he changes the speed, direction, and intensity of the game whenever he becomes involved.
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@Sports @FIFAWorldCup What a thrilling watch, Whats your thoughts? I thought Ismael Kone played exceptionally x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

FT: Canada 1-1 Bosnia & Herzegovina From a midfield perspective, this was a game of territory vs access. Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access. For much of the match, Stephen Eustaquio and Ismaël Koné helped Canada dominate possession and pin Bosnia deep. The ball spent long periods in Bosnia’s half, but territorial control didn’t always translate into central penetration. Bosnia’s midfield deserves enormous credit for that. Benjamin Tahirović and Ivan Bašić consistently protected the space in front of the back line, screened passing lanes, and forced Canada into wider areas. They were comfortable conceding possession as long as they controlled the routes into dangerous zones. The match changed after halftime. Canada increased the speed of circulation, counter-pressed more aggressively, and began occupying central spaces more consistently. Bosnia’s block was forced deeper and deeper, making it increasingly difficult to sustain the same level of compactness. The standout midfielder for Canada was Ismaël Koné. Eustaquio controlled rhythm. Koné changed the game. Whenever Canada looked capable of disrupting Bosnia’s structure, it was usually through his ball carrying, progressive actions, and ability to break pressure lines. He provided the verticality that Canada’s possession often lacked in the first half. That’s why the equaliser felt like the product of sustained pressure rather than a single moment. Canada gradually increased the stress on Bosnia’s midfield structure until it finally gave way. My main takeaway: Canada won the ball. Bosnia won the space. By full time, Canada had done enough to earn a result, but Bosnia’s midfield organisation ensured that possession dominance never became complete control. Best Midfielder: Ismaël Koné. Not because he saw the most of the ball, but because he was the midfielder most capable of changing the game when he received it. The strongest line here is “Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access.” That’s the kind of concise observation professional analysts build an entire post around. #CANMNT

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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@SkyFootball A wonder way to earn your first point with a good midfield display from Ismael Kone
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

FT: Canada 1-1 Bosnia & Herzegovina From a midfield perspective, this was a game of territory vs access. Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access. For much of the match, Stephen Eustaquio and Ismaël Koné helped Canada dominate possession and pin Bosnia deep. The ball spent long periods in Bosnia’s half, but territorial control didn’t always translate into central penetration. Bosnia’s midfield deserves enormous credit for that. Benjamin Tahirović and Ivan Bašić consistently protected the space in front of the back line, screened passing lanes, and forced Canada into wider areas. They were comfortable conceding possession as long as they controlled the routes into dangerous zones. The match changed after halftime. Canada increased the speed of circulation, counter-pressed more aggressively, and began occupying central spaces more consistently. Bosnia’s block was forced deeper and deeper, making it increasingly difficult to sustain the same level of compactness. The standout midfielder for Canada was Ismaël Koné. Eustaquio controlled rhythm. Koné changed the game. Whenever Canada looked capable of disrupting Bosnia’s structure, it was usually through his ball carrying, progressive actions, and ability to break pressure lines. He provided the verticality that Canada’s possession often lacked in the first half. That’s why the equaliser felt like the product of sustained pressure rather than a single moment. Canada gradually increased the stress on Bosnia’s midfield structure until it finally gave way. My main takeaway: Canada won the ball. Bosnia won the space. By full time, Canada had done enough to earn a result, but Bosnia’s midfield organisation ensured that possession dominance never became complete control. Best Midfielder: Ismaël Koné. Not because he saw the most of the ball, but because he was the midfielder most capable of changing the game when he received it. The strongest line here is “Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access.” That’s the kind of concise observation professional analysts build an entire post around. #CANMNT

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Sky Sports Football
Sky Sports Football@SkyFootball·
Canada earn their first point at a World Cup Finals to share the spoils with Bosnia and Herzegovina 🤝
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DMF ZONE
DMF ZONE@dmfzone·
@ESPNFC A beautiful way to get your first World Cup point x.com/dmfzone/status…
DMF ZONE@dmfzone

FT: Canada 1-1 Bosnia & Herzegovina From a midfield perspective, this was a game of territory vs access. Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access. For much of the match, Stephen Eustaquio and Ismaël Koné helped Canada dominate possession and pin Bosnia deep. The ball spent long periods in Bosnia’s half, but territorial control didn’t always translate into central penetration. Bosnia’s midfield deserves enormous credit for that. Benjamin Tahirović and Ivan Bašić consistently protected the space in front of the back line, screened passing lanes, and forced Canada into wider areas. They were comfortable conceding possession as long as they controlled the routes into dangerous zones. The match changed after halftime. Canada increased the speed of circulation, counter-pressed more aggressively, and began occupying central spaces more consistently. Bosnia’s block was forced deeper and deeper, making it increasingly difficult to sustain the same level of compactness. The standout midfielder for Canada was Ismaël Koné. Eustaquio controlled rhythm. Koné changed the game. Whenever Canada looked capable of disrupting Bosnia’s structure, it was usually through his ball carrying, progressive actions, and ability to break pressure lines. He provided the verticality that Canada’s possession often lacked in the first half. That’s why the equaliser felt like the product of sustained pressure rather than a single moment. Canada gradually increased the stress on Bosnia’s midfield structure until it finally gave way. My main takeaway: Canada won the ball. Bosnia won the space. By full time, Canada had done enough to earn a result, but Bosnia’s midfield organisation ensured that possession dominance never became complete control. Best Midfielder: Ismaël Koné. Not because he saw the most of the ball, but because he was the midfielder most capable of changing the game when he received it. The strongest line here is “Canada controlled territory. Bosnia controlled access.” That’s the kind of concise observation professional analysts build an entire post around. #CANMNT

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ESPN FC
ESPN FC@ESPNFC·
CYLE LARIN FRESH OFF THE BENCH TO EQUALIZE FOR CANADA 🇨🇦 RYAN REYNOLDS WAS LOVING IT 🌟
ESPN FC tweet mediaESPN FC tweet media
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