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Why do players choke during penalties?

Explained by SportCells · 22 June 2026 · 3 min read

Why do players choke during penalties?

Players miss penalties not because they lack skill, but because anxiety, heightened pressure and a split‑second loss of visual focus hijack the brain at the decisive moment.

The roar of the crowd, the weight of a nation’s hopes and a single, solitary spot on the grass can turn a practiced routine into a mental minefield.

The Pressure Cooker of a Penalty

When a player steps up, the situation is unlike any other in the 90‑minute game. The outcome hinges on a single strike, and the audience’s attention is laser‑focused. Research by Jordet and colleagues, analysing almost 400 kicks from major tournament shoot‑outs, showed a clear dip in conversion rates as the stakes rose. The study linked this drop to heightened anxiety, not a decline in technical ability.

England’s national side exemplifies the phenomenon. Despite supplying the Premier League’s finest talents, the Three Lions have “lost almost every penalty shoot‑out” in recent decades, a pattern that mirrors the psychological findings more than any tactical flaw.

The Mind‑Body Disconnect

A penalty is a motor skill honed through repetition. In calm conditions, the brain delegates the action to “muscle memory.” Under pressure, however, the prefrontal cortex hijacks the process, forcing the player to consciously control each element of the kick. This over‑control disrupts the fluidity of the strike and often leads to mis‑placement or a loss of power.

“Pressure turns a practiced kick into a question‑and‑answer session with yourself.”

The phenomenon of “threatened egotism” – the fear that a miss will tarnish one’s self‑image – compounds the issue. Players become preoccupied with the potential embarrassment, which impairs self‑regulation and triggers a cascade of over‑thinking.

What Science Suggests for Managing the Panic

Experimental work in sport psychology recommends three practical levers:

  1. Pre‑performance routines – Repeating a consistent set of actions (deep breaths, ball placement, visualisation) signals the brain that the situation is familiar, preserving automaticity.
  2. Chunking focus – Instead of scanning the entire goal, players are trained to fixate on a single spot (e.g., the bottom‑right corner) to counteract the narrowing of visual attention caused by anxiety.
  3. Reframing pressure – Viewing the penalty as an opportunity rather than a threat reduces the “threatened egotism” response. Teams that adopt a growth‑mindset see marginally higher conversion rates in shoot‑outs.

England’s recent attempts to embed these tactics have met mixed results, underscoring how ingrained the mental barrier can be. For a deeper dive into how national narratives shape pressure, see the piece on What if England had won the 1990 World Cup?.

Cultural Echoes and the Fan Factor

Fans, broadcasters and pundits amplify the drama. The collective chant before a penalty, the replay‑slow‑motion analysis, and the post‑miss headlines all feed back into the player’s stress loop. Understanding that the crowd’s energy is a double‑edged sword helps clubs craft better support structures.

A look at other football myths, such as Why do fans sing before kickoff?, reveals how ritual can both calm and ignite nerves, depending on the individual’s perception.

Frequently asked questions

Because the isolated, high‑stakes environment triggers anxiety that narrows visual focus and forces conscious control over a skill that is normally automatic.

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