ABSTRACT
In the present study, we tested the consequences of attention towards goalkeepers in association football penalty shootouts that have exclusively been derived from laboratory experiments. We conducted a retrospective analysis of all penalty shootouts during FIFA World Cups (1986–2010) and UEFA European Football Championships (1984–2012). We linked key variables of previous laboratory research to observable behaviour in the field that was coded by two independent coders. The following hypotheses were tested: first, attention towards goalkeepers results in more saves/better goalkeeper performance; second, goalkeepers can deliberately distract penalty takers by drawing attention towards themselves which results in less accurate penalty kicks/better goalkeeper performance. Results were in line with previous laboratory analyses as they showed that attention towards goalkeepers resulted in more saves/better goalkeeping performance. Further, if goalkeepers distracted penalty takers this also resulted in better goalkeeping performance. The applied implications of these findings are discussed for both goalkeepers and penalty takers in association football.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 Though overt and covert attention are clearly distinguishable, we expect that gaze direction and allocation of visual attention are highly correlated in the current study. There are several eye-tracking studies on penalty kicking that are based on the same assumption (e.g., Noël & van der Kamp, Citation2012; Wilson et al., Citation2009).
2 There were several rule changes between 1984 and 2012 that potentially could have impacted on the current dependent variables. To rule out any effects of these, we tested if earlier penalty kicks differed from later penalty kicks but found no effects of time (all ps > .096).