Crowd reception influences avoidance behavior during football penalty-kicks, but you wouldn`t know it: A retrospective analysis of professional games

For most soccer players, penalty-kicks are unpleasantly valenced, but the extent to which intensity of emotions affects their decision-making is unclear. We hypothesized that a hostile crowd raises emotional intensity more than a supportive crowd during penalty-kicks, which causes players to make avoidance based decisions more often in the presence of a hostile crowd. We sourced video footage of penalty-kicks during professional games between 2000 and 2005 (N = 91), during which the goalkeeper was marginally off-center (1.6%-3.0%) or obviously off-center (>3.0%). Taking the easiest option is a marker of avoidance behavior, so we analysed the proportion of penalty-kicks directed towards the larger side of the goal. Players kicked towards the larger side more often in front of a hostile crowd than a supportive crowd, but only when the goalkeeper was marginally off-center. The findings suggest that in the high-pressure environment of penalty-kicks, emotional intensity moderates the decisions that kickers make, without their awareness.
© Copyright 2022 Psychology of Sport and Exercise. Elsevier. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games
Tagging:Elfmeter Torwart
Published in:Psychology of Sport and Exercise
Language:English
Published: 2022
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2022.102169
Volume:61
Pages:102169
Document types:article
Level:advanced