How to win the penalty mind game

The classic mind game of soccer penalty taking begins when the referee points to the spot. Anticipation, strong nerve, cool head, firm resolve - all these factors come into play in a brief but highly intense drama. Will the keeper second-guess the striker? Will the kick fly high over the goal? Science has now come to the aid of goalies with research that may help them to stay calm. It seems that in the split second before the striker hits the ball, the orientation of his or her hips indicates which way the ball will fly. The results were presented at the second Asian Congress on Science and Football in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Watch the hips

Mark Williams, head of science and football at Liverpool John Moores University, explained: "If the taker's hips are square-on to the goalkeeper in a right-footed kicker, the penalty tends to go the right-hand side of the keeper. If his hips are more 'open', the kick tends to go the left.".

His study investigated saving strategies by showing goalkeepers life-sized video footage of strikers before and during penalties. He stopped the film four times: 120 milliseconds before the kick; 40 milliseconds before; at the point of impact; and 40 milliseconds afterwards. Each time, he asked the keepers to predict the outcome.

Semi-professionals were consistently better than unskilled amateurs at guessing which of four target spots in the goal the ball would hit. At 120 milliseconds before impact, half the semi-pros guessed correctly. The success rate rose to 62 per cent 40 milliseconds before, and 82 per cent at impact. At each stage, the amateurs lagged ten percentage points behind the semi-pros.

Williams reported that other visual cues include angle of the striker's run-up and the orientation of the non-kicking foot. lan Franks and Todd Harvey at the University of British Columbia identified this latter factor as the crucial cue in a study of 138 penalties in World Cup competitions between 1982 and 1994. The non-kicking foot pointed to where the ball would go 80 per cent of the time.

The question is, will this information make things harder for strikers, or will it introduce a new dimension to the mind game as strikers try even harder to disguise their intentions?

Article Reference

This article appeared in Issue 144 of the Peak Performance Newsletter.

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Associated Pages

The following Sports Coach pages should be read in conjunction with this page:

Associated Books

The following books provide more information related to this topic:

  • Strength and Conditioning for Games Players, C. Brewer, ISBN 1 902523 85 7
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  • Essentials of Exercise Physiology, W.D. McArdle et al., ISBN 0 683 30507 7
  • Physical Education and Sport Studies, D. Roscoe et al., ISBN 1 901424 20 0
  • The World of Sport Examined, P. Beashel et al., ISBN 0 17 438719 9
  • Advanced PE for Edexcel, F. Galligan et al., ISBN 0 435 50643 9
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  • Sport and PE, K Wesson et al., ISBN 0 340 683821
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