The Borneo Post

Shootout might not favour England, Mexico, Switzerlan­d in World Cup

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England have lost all three of their shootouts, and Mexico two out of two.

The Swiss, bucking the national stereotype of calm efficiency, failed to convert any of their kicks in their one previous shootout, going out to Ukraine in the last 16 in Cologne in 2006.

For Colombia, Croatia, Denmark and Russia it will be a new World Cup experience if they are forced into the post-match tie breaker, although the Danes succeeded in the semi-finals on their way to their shock European Championsh­ip success in 1992.

In the entire World Cup finals history, there have been a total of 240 post-match penalties taken, with 170 of them scored.

That is a decent conversion rate given the gut- thumping tension that always goes with the shootouts. The stress of nail-biting fans in the stands has nothing on the pressure felt by the players involved, many of whom often cannot bare to look while their colleagues step up to take their shots.

Penalty shootouts were first introduced at the 1978 World Cup but were not needed until four years later. Before that, an even more unsatisfac­tory toss of the coin was used to break the deadlock.

One consolatio­n for the teams now faced with the prospect of penalties in Russia is that they will not have to face Germany.

Their 100 per cent record in World Cup shootouts remains intact due to their unexpected­ly early departure. — Reuters

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