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Inside England's secrets of the shoot-out after Euro 2024 victory

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When the whistle blew after 120 minutes of back-and-forth action in Dusseldorf on Saturday night and a penalty shootout was looming, the overwhelming feeling in the England camp was one of calm.

There was a chaos about Switzerland - more on that later - while England looked every bit a group that was prepared for the moment.

In the Euro 2020 final it was noticeable in the pre-shootout huddle that Gareth Southgate was asking players if they wanted to take one. Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho were sent on with seconds to go purely to take a spot-kick and there was calm lacking.



Here on a memorable night in Dusseldorf it was a penalty dossier that was passed to Southgate from assistant Steve Holland and instead of looking for volunteers, it was all about instructions for Plan A.

Mail Sport takes a look into the secrets of England's penalty shootout success.




England players celebrated wildly after a perfect penalty shoot-out win over Switzerland





Gareth Southgate does not like to give much away but there is an art to England's planning



 



THE HUDDLE
Switzerland could count themselves unfortunate that they didn't nick a winner in the second half of extra-time, not least when substitute Xherdan Shaqiri struck the post direct from a corner.



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Gareth Southgate will think about dropping sluggish Harry Kane, writes DANNY MURPHY


But when Murat Yakin and his players reconvened for the shootout it was bedlam.

There was one point where goalkeeper Yann Sommer took to the middle of the hastily assembled huddle and began a rallying cry for his team-mates to embrace the moment and make history against a star-studded England side.

Yakin did not have the same control over his tired troops as his counterpart did with England and so on the surface level, England's calmness immediately stood out.

Harry Kane's withdrawal - he is England's primary penalty taker under normal circumstances - may well have flustered this group earlier in Southgate's reign but not these days, with so much penalty preparation beyond the Bayern Munich striker.

'I was weirdly calm on the bench,' Kane told BBC 5 Live.

'I see the way the guys prepare and the way they take them. We have a lot more players who take them for their clubs, and I know Pickers is going to save one.'




Southgate took control of the huddle and it set the tone of calm as the takers were pre-planned





Assistant Steve Holland gave Southgate a dossier of takers - there was no need for volunteers


INFLUENCE OF JIMMY FLOYD HASSELBAINK
There is an art to penalties - just look at Ivan Toney's phenomenal record from the spot, which continued with a stunner in Dusseldorf.

And while players are the ones carrying all of the responsibility, many in the backroom team put in endless hours.



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Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink has been one particular key influence and it was no surprise to see the former Chelsea striker singled out for specific praise on Saturday night following England's five perfect spot kicks.

'I was really confident in my preparation and the things I'd talked through with Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink,' Bellingham, who scored England's second penalty, said.

'He's stepped up for us massively and it's the work he does behind closed doors with the lads willing to take on that information that put us in those situations to be able to win.

'This is a massive team effort.'

Hasselbaink was drafted into the England set-up to replace Chris Powell in March 2023 and he's been a huge hit with the players.

The 52-year-old was a brilliant finisher in his heyday and it was his calmness in front of goal that many remembered. That ability to stay cool under pressure has clearly rubbed off onto this England group.

Each of England's takers looked incredibly calm and while all the credit cannot go to Hasselbaink, his influence has proven undeniable.




Jude Bellingham was keen to highlight the impact of coach Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink after





Bellingham kept his cool to slot his penalty past Yann Sommer in the shootout in Dusseldorf







Bellingham also pointed to the influence of having four goalkeepers in the camp, keeping the unpredictability for the outfield players when they are practising each day.

Southgate made the decision to take Jordan Pickford, Dean Henderson, Aaron Ramsdale and Tom Heaton to Germany.

'They won't get the credit they deserve but essentially if they don't put in the right effort we don't get to practice properly. And in those moments you don't have the right practice to go out and execute,' Bellingham added.

'There is so much that goes into it now. You are always trying to find the edge in every game.'

REGULAR TAKERS STEP UP
It cannot be understated how important it was to England to have a set of takers that have been there and done it week after week in the Premier League and LaLiga from the spot.

Cole Palmer is Chelsea's go-to man, who scored nine from nine last season, while Bukayo Saka netted six from six for Arsenal.

Ivan Toney is arguably the best penalty taker of the lot and has scored 23 of 24 penalties in his Brentford career.

As for Trent Alexander-Arnold he is the best ball striker at Gareth Southgate's disposal.

'A lot of practice goes into that moment,' Alexander-Arnold said.




Cole Palmer showed incredible poise as he took the opening spot kick for England for 1-0





Trent Alexander-Arnold wrapped up the tie smashing the fifth and final penalty into the net





Brentford fans would have been familiar with Ivan Toney's penalty style as he stared down Sommer before smashing the ball beyond the Swiss goalkeeper







'When the gaffer tells me I am taking one, my belly does not drop. I enjoy it. I practise it. I knew what spot I just needed to execute it.'

Bellingham, too, has shown a desire to ramp up the pressure and embrace the moment. It was a high-pressure penalty against Man City in the Champions League that helped keep them alive en route to the final, kingslot96 which they won.

'I do the practice like all the other lads and I have my process,' Bellingham said.

'Sometimes you can step up and miss penalties but I think there is a comfort when you are following a process that you have come to terms with.

'I did not see one person change or fault their run up or the way they breathe. It is really impressive that they can keep that cool in that situation.'

PICKFORD'S CHEAT SHEET
For as good as England's takers were, it proved incredibly useful that Jordan Pickford saved Switzerland's first effort from Manuel Akanji.

The Everton shot-stopper has been Mr Reliable from the spot in an England shirt and that Akanji save makes it four of the 14 he's faced at major tournaments denied.

It didn't take long for Pickford's water bottle 'cheat sheet' to surface online - and it was a valuable aide.

Written next to Akanji was 'dive left', and Pickford duly did so, keeping out the Swiss' effort.




Jordan Pickford has come up big for England in shootouts and he did so again in Dusseldorf











It appears Pickford can thank his water bottle for the crucial save as a cheat sheet was imprinted onto it - although he chose to ignore the instructions for defender Fabian Schar

Only once did Pickford deviate from his water bottle guider - and he was left to rue that decision as he'd have saved Fabian Schar's effort had he played along.

hq720.jpgThe note for Schar read 'fake right, dive left', but Pickford chose to do the opposite and dive left, allowing Schar to score Switzerland's second penalty.

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