FourFourTwo

GYLFI SIGURDSSON’S FREE-KICK SECRETS

Become your team’s dead-ball specialist by following these tips from Swansea’s Euros-bound Icelandic internatio­nal, statistica­lly one of the Premier League’s most potent set-piece takers

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1 Gauge your yardage

“The distance of your free-kick to the goal is significan­t. Kicking from about six or seven metres outside of the penalty area is what I like best, but you have to train to cover all the options. Start 18 yards from the goal, then move further out, and to the left and right. Try to hit the goal from all angles.”

2 Do your homework

“Before a game, I look at videos of the keeper to see if they take a guess at where a free-kick will go or if they stay in their place. Then, when I’m standing over the ball, I try to look at the goalkeeper to see what he’s doing. If he takes a step one way, there’s sometimes a chance to score the other side.”

3 Work out a regime

“Many players do the exact same things before every kick – just look at Ronaldo. Get used to what you like – for example, three steps or five steps – and train at it. Then you will have a bigger chance of hitting the target. It’s good when you have somebody like David Beckham to look at and learn from.”

4 Stay focused on the ball

“There will be situations when opposititi­on players try to confuse you before you take a free-kick. So, I concentrat­e solely on making sure the wall is at a good distance, and then getting the ball over that wall. I never think about what other players are doing. Concentrat­e only on what you are doing.”

5 Repetition, repetition…

“The most important thing if you want to be good at taking free-kicks is practice. Put a wall of mannequins on the pitch, and to try to get the ball over it and hit the corner of the goal. It is all about repetition­s – keep doing it again and again. Do it for 15 minutes a day, and in time you will improve.”

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