From the Cruyff and Maradona turns to the elastico, rainbow flicks and a piece of skill named after a tapas dish, it’s time for some individual flair.We are talking about the dribbling moves and the clever turns that enable players to deceive and outwit an opponent, bringing a mixture of freedom and fun to the football pitch, and entertaining team-mates as much as the supporters at times.There’s the stepover loved by the two Ronaldos (Cristiano and Nazario, the original from Brazil), the two-touch turn that took off on a video game, and the hocus pocus skill that humiliated one Brazil legend and earned another a free meal.But where and when did these moves first surface, which players are most likely to produce them at this summer’s World Cup and, most importantly, how can you learn to do them?To walk and talk you through that process as part of The Athletic’s How To Series, we’ve got YouTuber and content creator Eman SV2, the king of the showboat Lee Trundle, former Premier League midfielder Tom Davies, and 14-year-old Liverpool academy player Rafferty Bolshaw…StepoverThe first thing to say is that Trundle is wearing the perfect boots to demonstrate — the Nike Mercurial R9. Ronaldo — the Brazilian Ronaldo, that is — loved a stepover and would often use it to go past a goalkeeper as well as defenders.