Quite.
Henry Winter is right to dismiss all the excuses; I'm not so sure of his belief that bringing n Shearer will do much good. Most players have all the technique needed to slot a ball in the corner of a goal from a penalty kick. What few of them have is the composure to do so after 120 minutes in a high pressure environment. Instead of the obsession with practising taking them in the relaxed context of the training ground, they'd surely be better trying to work on improving the mentality:
Only those Englishmen who make the journey down the avenue of anxiety from the halfway line for shoot-outs, from Turin to Tychy, knowing all eyes burn upon them and that stigma is a fluffed kick away, can fully appreciate the exacting pressure, but there has to be a new mindset adopted by those awaiting their turn.
Before their latest shoot-out collapse, their eighth in ten at under-21 and senior tournaments since 1990, England’s youngsters “practised and practised” penalties, according to Aidy Boothroyd, working on their preferred approach, but the later kickers also need to react to the goalkeeper’s movement.
For each of England’s five penalties in Tuesday’s European Under-21 Championship semi-final misery, Germany’s Julian Pollersbeck dived to his right every time, his stronger side. England’s best two penalties were their third and fourth, from Ben Chilwell and James Ward-Prowse, who placed the ball the other way. This was always their plan, but as Pollersbeck kept diving right, there was surely some incentive for the fifth taker, Nathan Redmond, to follow Chilwell and Ward-Prowse to go to the goalkeeper’s left. England’s second kick, by Tammy Abraham, had been easily saved by Pollersbeck, diving right.
However much England rehearse, they also have to adapt when “live”. It would be preferable if they did not become so passive during games, sitting back as they did against Germany, and actually try to win the game in normal, or extra time, but a more considered approach to shoot-outs would be welcome. They are not lotteries; they are tests of technique, undeniably, but also thought and fortitude. England’s shattered players held a debrief with Boothroyd here yesterday morning, although the FA’s technical director, Dan Ashworth, had already left town for a long-standing engagement back home.
Ashworth was very active on the touchline before kick-off, pointing things out to Boothroyd, and it will be his views on more dead-ball downfall that will shape another FA plan to make players better equipped to negotiate a shoot-out. Bringing in Alan Shearer and Michael Owen, such clinical penalty-takers for England, and Matt Le Tissier, imperious for Southampton, to work one-on-one and collectively with the age-group players would be a start. Sports psychologists will assist, as would creating more of a culture of responsibility-taking in academies.
It’s not simply a question of technique, as maestros such as Michel Platini, Roberto Baggio and Zico proved by failing from 12 yards. It’s about handling the pressure, body language, applying intelligence.
As well as honing a technique, delivering the ball quickly and rising, and making his penalties hard to reach, Shearer also worked on the mind games. Knowing the opposition spied on training on the eve of matches, Shearer would always place his practice penalties the other way to his intended match-day ones.
England’s goalkeeper in Tychy, Jordan Pickford, yesterday remarked that it was “unfortunate” to lose on penalties. Luck plays no part. “It’s one of them, isn’t it?” he reflected about the outcome. It isn’t. Germany are stronger mentally.
Pickford may simply have been diplomatic in public, but clearly an even more scientific approach needs to be taken by Ashworth’s coaches at St George’s Park, including following Dutch research involving taking a second longer to place the ball before addressing the kick, not hurrying. Ashworth’s organisation encourages the staging of plenty of shoot-outs at age-group level but the English mindset remains racked with nerves
Redmond, who came to Poland desperate to win the trophy, was wrapped in the collective, supportive embrace of his team-mates. “Nathan’s a very close friend of mine and a team-mate at club level as well,” Southampton’s Ward-Prowse said. “I know his mindset and I know this experience will make him stronger as a person and as a footballer.”
Nathaniel Chalobah posted two emotional tweets backing a “true winner in my eyes”. Redmond’s mother, Michelle, also took to social media to reiterate the Joshua J Marine maxim that “challenges are what make life interesting, overcoming them is what makes life meaningful”.
Redmond, pacey and skilful, will recover and clearly has a role to play in the senior side in the future. Of England’s successes out in Poland, the shot-stopping, attack-launching Pickford could become a regular in Gareth Southgate’s squad if he continues his recent progress and keeps on top of his weight.
The two centre backs, Alfie Mawson and Calum Chambers, returned with reputations enhanced, although England’s serial failure to mark properly at set pieces is reaching epidemic proportions. If Ward-Prowse asserts his talent more, he could make the step up. Demarai Gray, 21 yesterday, seized his chance, scoring twice in the tournament, and will surely feature regularly for Leicester City. “I’ve taken it in my stride and I’m always learning,” Gray said. “These tournaments are about development.”
Even more so if England learn from their mistakes.