Although English football fans complain that the lottery of penalty shoot-outs has often gone against them in major tournaments, sports psychologists have long maintained that academic research can help and that the team are following the science in Euro 2024.
Having been knocked out of tournaments on penalties on six occasions between 1990 and 2012, England have triumphed in three of their last four shoot-outs under manager Gareth Southgate, including a faultless display to beat Switzerland last weekend.
Their recent change in fortune has not been an accident but is the result of scientific expertise and preparation with sports psychologists since Mr Southgate became manager, according to Geir Jordet, professor of sports and psychology at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences.
Professor Jordets work on social psychology including years of research and peer-reviewed papers on penalty shoot-outs indirectly fed into Englands new and improved process via a dedicated five-man penalty project group at the Football Association, along with other breakthroughs.
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While the England camp refuse to reveal their exact techniques to the press, that research was on display in the teams recent quarter-final victory.
Professor Jordet said a four-phase process explained in a paper of his had become the foundation for their approach宇o gain more control over the penalty shoot-outs. Other elements that come from academia include a buddy system so players are less isolated, an efficient team huddle, the positioning of where players stand, how they celebrate and taking more time with their spot kicks.
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These are things weve spoken about for 15 years, and its fantastic to see that now were getting there and there is widespread adoption of some of these principles, and thats of course very fun, said Professor Jordet.
But its also a little bit scary that players and teams are adopting this knowledge and its a part of whats happening她n the big stage.
The influence of such language on England is clear. Speaking to the BBC on the eve of the semi-final, Mr Southgate said penalties were not a lottery, but something that you can prepare for and that you can take some controlof.
According to reports, England have also consulted Ignacio Palacios-Huerta, a professor of managerial economics and strategy at the London School of Economics, about penalties.
Jon Rhodes, a lecturer in psychology at the University of Plymouth and an expert on performance routines and imagery, said it was obvious that captain Harry Kane and the rest of the players were following a well-planned, well-developed, well-rehearsed mental process and a routine that was grounded in academia.
Thats the point of science we can test what works, see what doesnt work and improve on it, which is what theyve been doing. Thats what Gareth Southgate has done very well at宇o connect the players through these routines, which are very well-rehearsed and are science-backed, Dr Rhodes said.
Professor Jordet, who recently published Pressure: Lessons from the Psychology of the Penalty Shootout, agreed that MrSouthgate, who infamously missed a penalty in Englands Euro 1996 defeat to Germany, had played a big role as part of the FAs knowledge-based, academia-positive environment.
That approach was a break in tradition from footballs conservative nature, which is partly why he thinks it has taken a long time for psychology to be welcome in the sport.
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I think academia has played a role in football with more tangible contributions weve had a physical revolution in the last 20years or so, an analytics and data revolution, but penalty shoot-outs are about psychology, he said.
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Its about the emotional, social aspect; its much more vague and abstract地nd thats much more difficult for football to embrace.
Professor Jordet said academics had historically struggled to communicate their findings to sports practitioners, but he hoped the attention being paid to psychologists would trigger more research in this area.
According to the evidence, Englands win over Switzerland means they are more likely to triumph in their next shoot-out which is good news for fans ahead of their semi-final against the Netherlands this evening.
Professor Jordet estimated that Englands seven years of preparation and their robust processes gave them a 60per cent chance of victory against the Dutch if the match were to go beyond extra time.
The probability is based on limited data在ut of course theres no guarantee and, England being England, there could be other factors here as well, he added.
Englands process failed them in the European Championships final against Italy in 2021, with the players who missed penalties all receiving vile abuse online from fans. Professor Jordet said this, too, was a failure of sports psychology to learn from the 50years of pain since penalty shoot-outs were introduced.
Weve tossed players out into these events without giving them strategies or support地nd theyve come back and failed and become scapegoats for their whole country, he said.
I feel like Im on a mission to help these players, and for that Im ecstatic that were getting somewhere now.
And according to Dr Rhodes, MrSouthgate has used academic principles to create a team in which the players feel protected so that player well-being now comes first, no matter the result.
We win and lose together as a team, and thats been amazing to watch as a psychologist.
I can look at this and look at the research and say what Gareth Southgate is doing is [that] hes employing the best sports psychology techniques in this really pressure-heavy environment, and clearly the players are thriving.
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