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The goalie’s anxiety at the penalty kick

May 27, 2021 10:16 PM IST

What would Man United's de Gea have gone through at the penalty spot at 11-10, knowing that one of his feet had to do what his hands couldn’t?

Perhaps the only consolation for David de Gea during the penalty shootout that decided the Europa League in Villareal’s favour was that the Manchester United goalkeeper did not have to walk all the way from the centre-line of the football field to the spot in the box. Don't underestimate the harrowing effect of the penalty walk. Ask the great Italian midfielder Andrea Pirlo – who won and lost major finals on penalties had this to say in his memoir: “It’s barely 50 metres, but it’s a truly terrible journey, right through the heart of your fear. The comparison with the dead man walking is exaggerated, but it does get the idea across.”

PREMIUM
Manchester United's David de Gea attempts a save during the shootout.(REUTERS)

De Gea’s walk was shorter, exactly 12 yards, or the distance between the goal-line and the penalty-spot. But as he got across, he still had to pass his counterpart from Villareal in Geronimo Rulli, who had just a moment ago slotted one past de Gea to make it 21 consecutive penalty strikes in a row – a finals record in Europe.

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The 30-year-old second-choice goalie for Man United this season had witnessed Villareal’s entire playing eleven shoot past him in the space of minutes and now he had to do the same against Rulli to complete the unprecedented set of all 22 players on the pitch scoring during penalties in a match of such consequence (and in turn restarting the whole shootout process, albeit in the ongoing, sudden-death format).

Spare a thought here for the Argentine Rulli as well, who, incidentally, has also been kept on the bench by Villareal’s first-choice goalie Sergio Asenjo for almost the entirety of the 2020-21 La Liga season. But Unai Emery is known to be a player’s manager for a reason. Because Rulli had stood between the sticks for almost all of Villarreal’s Europa League fixtures (including in the semifinals against Emery’s former club Arsenal), the manager picked him for Villarreal’s first ever European final. It was sink or swim time for Rulli, but he does after all play for a team known as the Yellow Submarines.

For each of the first six penalties – taken by Villarreal’s Gerard Moreno, Daniel Raba and Paco Alcacer and United’s Juan Mata, Alex Telles and Bruno Fernandes respectively and in that order – the shooter chose to go to his own left, or the goalie’s right. Only Rulli managed to get more than a fingertip on any of the shots when he nearly stopped Fernandes (captain on the night in Harry Maguire’s absence), but the ball squirted under him anyway.

Yet by the time it was down to the two goalies at 10-10, the Villarreal stopper was brimming with a whole lot of confidence, after having nearly blocked Luke Shaw’s attempt as well (this was at 8-7). There is no denying that he took that courage to the spot and lashed the ball against the preferred direction of the night – which is to his right. The left-bound de Gea stood no chance.

Absolutely no one in their right minds will blame De Gea for all that went down on Wednesday night; but one can bet that Gdansk will be largely remembered for him. That’s just how penalty shootouts work – they skew the very nature of the sport: from 11-versus-11 to, in the case of Gdansk, 11-versus-1. Tennis and cricket have their versions of end-game punishments too; but tiebreaks and super-overs don’t alter the essence of the sport.

So, there de Gea was, facing his Villarreal equivalent for the second time in a few seconds, but now from the other direction. He stuttered halfway through his run-up and chose the same direction that Rulli did. This kick was goal-bound too but lacked both power and elevation, so Rulli easily swatted it away. This made de Gea’s shootout experience possibly the most unenviable shootout experience at this level, at least statistically speaking. He, after all, had stopped zero penalties in 11 attempts and then failed to pick up his only lifeline, literally thrown at his feet.

Rulli, on the other hand, instantly turned Villarreal legend for having saved all of one penalty out of 11 – that of the other goalie's. But that wouldn’t have mattered one bit to the fans, for Villarreal were now European champions, thanks to not just to their second-choice goalie’s hands, but also his foot.

Perhaps the only consolation for David de Gea during the penalty shootout that decided the Europa League in Villareal’s favour was that the Manchester United goalkeeper did not have to walk all the way from the centre-line of the football field to the spot in the box. Don't underestimate the harrowing effect of the penalty walk. Ask the great Italian midfielder Andrea Pirlo – who won and lost major finals on penalties had this to say in his memoir: “It’s barely 50 metres, but it’s a truly terrible journey, right through the heart of your fear. The comparison with the dead man walking is exaggerated, but it does get the idea across.”

PREMIUM
Manchester United's David de Gea attempts a save during the shootout.(REUTERS)

De Gea’s walk was shorter, exactly 12 yards, or the distance between the goal-line and the penalty-spot. But as he got across, he still had to pass his counterpart from Villareal in Geronimo Rulli, who had just a moment ago slotted one past de Gea to make it 21 consecutive penalty strikes in a row – a finals record in Europe.

Hindustan Times - your fastest source for breaking news! Read now.

The 30-year-old second-choice goalie for Man United this season had witnessed Villareal’s entire playing eleven shoot past him in the space of minutes and now he had to do the same against Rulli to complete the unprecedented set of all 22 players on the pitch scoring during penalties in a match of such consequence (and in turn restarting the whole shootout process, albeit in the ongoing, sudden-death format).

Spare a thought here for the Argentine Rulli as well, who, incidentally, has also been kept on the bench by Villareal’s first-choice goalie Sergio Asenjo for almost the entirety of the 2020-21 La Liga season. But Unai Emery is known to be a player’s manager for a reason. Because Rulli had stood between the sticks for almost all of Villarreal’s Europa League fixtures (including in the semifinals against Emery’s former club Arsenal), the manager picked him for Villarreal’s first ever European final. It was sink or swim time for Rulli, but he does after all play for a team known as the Yellow Submarines.

For each of the first six penalties – taken by Villarreal’s Gerard Moreno, Daniel Raba and Paco Alcacer and United’s Juan Mata, Alex Telles and Bruno Fernandes respectively and in that order – the shooter chose to go to his own left, or the goalie’s right. Only Rulli managed to get more than a fingertip on any of the shots when he nearly stopped Fernandes (captain on the night in Harry Maguire’s absence), but the ball squirted under him anyway.

Yet by the time it was down to the two goalies at 10-10, the Villarreal stopper was brimming with a whole lot of confidence, after having nearly blocked Luke Shaw’s attempt as well (this was at 8-7). There is no denying that he took that courage to the spot and lashed the ball against the preferred direction of the night – which is to his right. The left-bound de Gea stood no chance.

Absolutely no one in their right minds will blame De Gea for all that went down on Wednesday night; but one can bet that Gdansk will be largely remembered for him. That’s just how penalty shootouts work – they skew the very nature of the sport: from 11-versus-11 to, in the case of Gdansk, 11-versus-1. Tennis and cricket have their versions of end-game punishments too; but tiebreaks and super-overs don’t alter the essence of the sport.

So, there de Gea was, facing his Villarreal equivalent for the second time in a few seconds, but now from the other direction. He stuttered halfway through his run-up and chose the same direction that Rulli did. This kick was goal-bound too but lacked both power and elevation, so Rulli easily swatted it away. This made de Gea’s shootout experience possibly the most unenviable shootout experience at this level, at least statistically speaking. He, after all, had stopped zero penalties in 11 attempts and then failed to pick up his only lifeline, literally thrown at his feet.

Rulli, on the other hand, instantly turned Villarreal legend for having saved all of one penalty out of 11 – that of the other goalie's. But that wouldn’t have mattered one bit to the fans, for Villarreal were now European champions, thanks to not just to their second-choice goalie’s hands, but also his foot.

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