The Arizona Republic

Focus on penalty kicks paying off at World Cup

- Martin Rogers

MOSCOW – There have been three penalty shootouts during this World Cup, and the word most often used to describe them is doubling as the tournament’s most trending excuse.

“Penalties are a lottery,” Denmark captain Simon Kjaer said after his team lost on them to Croatia.

“Yes, is it a lottery,” his head coach, Age Hareide, agreed soon after.

“A loteria,” complained Spain’s Fernando Hierro, which, of course, is the same thing. (Spain lost to Russia in a penalty shootout.)

He’s wrong, though. They all are.

It is easy to think of penalties as something akin to a coin flip, but they’re not. Perhaps more than any other part of a soccer game, which flows with so many permutatio­ns, shootouts are something that can be prepared and planned for.

It is not foolproof, but the teams that give the most thought and focus to how they will attack spot-kicks are the same ones that enjoy the

How about that?

Once England pulled its head out of the sand, stopped lamenting its miserable penalty shootout history and spent months under coach Gareth Southgate getting ready for the precise moments of truth it faced against Colombia on Tuesday, a funny thing happened.

After five consecutiv­e shootout defeats, stretching back 22 years, it won one. greatest success.

Every team has its own philosophy, or sometimes no philosophy at all. In 1998, former England coach Glenn Hoddle told his players not to bother practicing penalties at all, as it was impossible to recreate the tension of the real action in training. England promptly went out of the tournament. On penalties.

Southgate’s methods have been studied deeply in England over the past days as the country celebrates the curse being lifted. In truth, there was no curse at all. England lost penalty shootouts because it was bad at taking penalties and hadn’t given itself the best possible shot at succeeding. No longer.

“The approach was to leave as little as possible to chance,” said English soccer writer Matt Lawton of the “Daily Mail.” “To break it down and prepare every last detail. From the moment the referee blew the whistle to mark the end of extra time, every member of the England party, coaches as well as players, knew their role. The daily rehearsals were done for a reason.”

The depth of thinking that went into a situation that is by no means certain to arise during a campaign sheds light on how diligently Southgate manages his operation.

Once the extra-time period ended against Colombia, Southgate didn’t go around seeking volunteers to shoot, as habitually happens, but which the coaches of Colombia, Denmark and Spain did.

“In my eyes, this is an abdication of the coach’s responsibi­lity,” Ben Lyttleton, author of “Twelve Yards: The Art and Psychology of the Perfect Penalty,” wrote in “The Guardian.” “The coach should know the players’ ability to cope with what’s called ‘competitio­n anxiety’ better than the players themselves.”

Southgate had already introduced forward Marcus Rashford into the game, pulling off defender Kyle Walker. He instructed the team on the list of penalty takers, sticking Rashford in the No. 2 slot and moving Eric Dier to No. 5 when he noticed striker Jamie Vardy hobbling with a groin injury. Dier ultimately hit the winning kick.

Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, naturally, was a key part of the process. Video footage and photograph­s showed Pickford being handed a special water bottle by a goalkeepin­g coach that had detailed writing on the neck, assumed to be details of where Colombia’s players preferred to shoot.

When Pickford and Colombia goalkeeper David Ospina shook hands and were instructed by the referee, the England player covered the bottle with a towel to keep it hidden.

 ??  ??
 ?? DAN MULLAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? England goalie Jordan Pickford is mobbed by teammates after beating Colombia in a penalty shootout.
DAN MULLAN/GETTY IMAGES England goalie Jordan Pickford is mobbed by teammates after beating Colombia in a penalty shootout.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States