Tuchel will stick to Southgate’s penalty plan
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England manager Thomas Tuchel has revealed that his team will follow Gareth Southgate’s penalty shoot-out blueprint at the World Cup.
Tuchel’s side face DR Congo in their first knockout game of the tournament on Wednesday, a scenario that opens up the potential for a penalty shoot-out.
The match from Atlanta at 17:00 BST is live on BBC One and the iPlayer.
Prior to Southgate’s appointment as England manager in 2016, the national team had a poor record in tournament shoot-outs – winning just one of seven.
But under Southgate, England took their penalty preparations to a new level which resulted in the team winning three out of four shoot-outs.
Tuchel had confirmed the team would continue with the processes established by Southgate.
“The FA has a programme that has been in place for years and we follow the programme,” Tuchel said.
“We are prepared. We have a process, the players have a process.”
Despite the plan, Tuchel also added a note of caution.
“I think it is difficult to simulate the situation (of a penalty shoot-out),” he said.
“I heard Thierry Henry say he can’t remember the walk from the halfway line to the penalty spot in his first penalty shoot out for France – you cannot train that.”
Asked if the players will be given the option to take a penalty, Tuchel replied: “We know who takes them and we know the order but we don’t know who finishes the game.”
What was the Southgate approach?
Southgate’s meticulous planning saw a philosophy that was based on the belief that penalties were not a lottery and that clarity and preparation were key.
The team practiced penalties regularly and sought to replicate, as far as possible, the actual experience in training to help the process become more driven by muscle memory.
Southgate decided the penalty takers well in advance based on the training, and he strove publicly to take full accountability to take any blame away from his players.
He also assigned each player taking a penalty a “buddy” to greet them at the halfway line after the long walk back. This was designed to share the pressure.
Goalkeeper Jordan Pickford also had shoot-out notes from detailed research of the opponents’ likely approach written on his water bottle.
In the Euro 2020 loss Southgate brought on Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho with seconds to spare for penalties. After that he felt that this didn’t allow them enough time to be part of it, so he adjusted the approach to give penalty takers more time on the pitch beforehand.
Southgate’s shootout record
England have been part of 11 penalty shootouts at the World Cup, Euros and Nations League in their history.
Before Southgate took charge the only success was against Spain at Euro 96.
Southgate led them to England’s first World Cup penalty shootout win in 2018 with victory over Colombia.
This was followed up with a 6-5 shootout win over Switzerland in the Nations League the following year.
In 2021, their one shootout loss happened – and it was a big one with Italy prevailing it the final of Euro 2020 at Wembley.
At Euro 2024, they bounced back from 12 yards by knocking out Switzerland 5-3.
Don’t expect a glamorous performance, says Tuchel
Meanwhile, Tuchel also said England should not expect a “glamorous performance” against DR Congo.
Tuchel’s side won Group L with wins over Croatia and Panama and a goalless draw against Ghana in between.
The German expects them to play better against better teams in the latter stages of the tournament.
He told BBC Sport: “We face actually a copy of Panama and Ghana in the round of 32.
“We will see the best version of us if we overcome the next rounds and go further in the tournament once… teams want to actually beat us and not hold us down and refuse us to play.
“We expect us to win. Everyone expects us to win. So there’s not a lot to win except for matching our expectations.”
DR Congo finished third in Group K after a 1-1 draw with Portugal, 1-0 loss to Colombia and 3-1 win over Uzbekistan.
“I think this is not the moment now to shine and to expect glamorous performances. This is the moment to go through, to get the job done, to step up, to show individual quality and little moments,” continued Tuchel.
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Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: BBC








