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Home Featured

Footballers sacrificing ‘better shots to prioritise their credibility,’ study shows

Jake Clothier by Jake Clothier
Wednesday, March 19, 2025 6:48 am
in Featured, Sport
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Football Picture: Pixabay

Football Picture: Pixabay

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RESEARCHERS have released a study showing that footballers taking penalty kicks are sometimes sacrificing the best shots to prioritise their credibility.

A team of researchers analysed 536 penalty kicks from the UEFA Champions and Europa Leagues to reveal that when given the choice of aiming for the top corner of a net, kick takers are choosing to shoot towards other areas of the net.

The paper explains that the top corners of the net are statistically more likely to result in a goal but also run the risk of missing the goal completely, where other parts of the net see a greater chance of the goalkeeper making a save, but the overall kick success rate is lower.

It found that for every hundred penalty kicks, players choose safer shots that put 3 more kicks on target (forcing the goalkeeper to make a save), but this caution costs them 1 goal they would have scored with riskier shots to the corners.

The study was carried out by the University of Reading’s economics professor James Reade with co-authors from the University of Stirling and Syracuse University in the USA.

It also draws comparisons to elite basketball players, such as Shaquille O’Neal and Andre Drummond, who have stated publicly that they won’t attempt underhand free throws despite evidence that they could improve their rates of scoring.

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The authors were commended last week after beating thousands of submissions and six other finalists to win the annual research paper competition at last week’s MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference in Boston, USA.

The event is a major forum for sports professionals, business leaders, and researchers to discuss trends, analytics and innovation in the global sports industry.

Professor James Reade said: “Penalty kick takers are happy to trade off the chance of scoring a goal with looking like they made a mistake by missing the target.

“Missing the goal versus being saved by the goalkeeper might be the same outcome for the team, but to the player, that distinction matters enormously.

“Footballers’ ego is getting in the way of optimal performance.”

The study is currently awaiting journal publication.

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