Practice Can’t Replicate Pressure
The fundamental problem is that practice is sterile. A player can take 100 penalties a day against their team's goalkeepers, sinking 99 of them. But that serene training ground has nothing in common with the crucible of a World Cup knockout match. There
is no roaring crowd of 80,000 people. There are no millions watching at home. The weight of a nation’s hopes and dreams isn't resting on your shoulders. In practice, a miss means jogging to get the ball. In a shootout, a miss can mean becoming a national villain overnight. Sports psychologists refer to this as the difference between technical execution and performance under pressure. Practice perfects the former, but it can never truly simulate the latter. The sudden flood of stress hormones like cortisol and adrenaline changes everything, tightening muscles and narrowing focus in ways that practice simply cannot prepare you for.
The Brain Under Siege
When a player steps up to the spot, their brain is at war with itself. The rational part knows the technique: side-foot, laces, placement over power. But the emotional, primal part of the brain—the amygdala—is screaming about the threat of failure. This cognitive load is immense. Players often try to cope by rushing, which leads to snatching at the shot, or by taking too long, allowing doubt to creep in. Studies, notably by sports psychologist Geir Jordet, have shown that players who celebrate winning the coin toss or who take a brief, deliberate moment before their kick tend to perform better. This suggests that managing the mental chaos is as important as striking the ball cleanly. Players who show signs of stress—avoiding eye contact, rushing their routine—are statistically more likely to miss. Their technique hasn't vanished; their brain is simply too overwhelmed to execute it properly.
The Crushing Weight of Fatigue
It’s easy to forget that a penalty shootout doesn’t happen at the start of a game. It happens after 120 minutes of grueling, lung-searing, leg-cramping soccer. Players have run upwards of seven to nine miles. Their bodies are depleted of glycogen, and their muscles are screaming with lactic acid. Physical fatigue has a direct impact on motor skills, coordination, and power. A player might intend to hit the ball with precision into the top corner, but their tired legs might not respond with the same crispness they would when fresh. More than just physical, there's mental fatigue. A tired brain makes poorer decisions and is less able to manage the anxiety of the moment. That simple choice—left, right, or center—becomes a monumental calculation for a mind that is already running on fumes.
The Goalkeeper's Advantage
The dynamic of a penalty is fundamentally unfair, and it’s stacked against the shooter. For the player taking the kick, anything less than a goal is a failure. For the goalkeeper, the opposite is true. They are expected to concede. Every save they make is a moment of heroism, but no one blames them for getting beaten from 12 yards. This psychological asymmetry is massive. The keeper is free to be the protagonist—they can dance on the line, point, wave their arms, and play mind games, all in an effort to disrupt the kicker’s fragile concentration. The data backs this up: a goalkeeper only needs to save one or two kicks to win the shootout for their team, while every single kicker is expected to score. This puts all the pressure on the shooter and none on the person they’re trying to beat, turning a technical skill into a high-stakes guessing game where one person is playing with house money.













