Englandās new penalty shoot-out ābuddy systemā will not necessarily help players and could hamper their character-building, a sports psychologist has claimed.
The Three Lions used a ābuddy systemā during their spot-kick triumph over Switzerland in the quarter-finals, wherebyĀ a player would walk the previous taker back to the team on the half-way line.Ā
The idea is for the ābuddyā to ease the pressure on a mortified player goes wrong, acting as a comfort blanket on an otherwise lonely walk. On the surface, it seems a good idea.Ā
But Paul McVeigh, a former Premier League star turned sports psychologist, told Mail Sport it will not benefit players ahead of Englandās semi-final clash with the Netherlands.Ā
āWhen you hit penalties, itās so individual. Whether someone comes back and greets you after youāve missed a penalty or the penalty has been saved, I donāt think that will have much impact on you being able to feel any better any time soon,ā McVeigh said.Ā
Englandās penalty shoot-out ābuddy systemā āwill not have much impactā on making players feel better, a sports psychologist has explainedĀ

Gareth Southgate assigned buddies to greet kick takers and walk them back to the team during the victory over Switzerland
āLots of players struggle to move on from those things (missing a penalty). Itās very easy to get caught up in it and for it to hang around you for a while.ā
Obviously, having a shoulder to cry on is no bad thing. But McVeigh, who has worked with Crystal Palace and Norwich City as a sports psychologist, explained that fronting up to setbacks as an individual, rather than trying to find ways to quickly move on, can be better for players in the long run.Ā Ā
āYou also see someone like (Bukayo) Saka ā it happened to him and itās almost been the making of him, maturing and developing because of the amount of abuse he went through and thatās such a low point in his career,ā he said.Ā
āThatās the resilience that he has shown because of the challenges he has gone through. I think itās easier to say players can get over it just by moving on but actually itās harder to do.ā
Saka spoke of his journey from the heartache of 2021 at the weekend ā though he did not face his burden alone in a broader sense. āI have faith in God. To come back from something like thatās really difficult. Today I took the chance,ā he said.Ā
Cole Palmer, Jude Bellingham, Bukayo Saka, Ivan Toney and Trent Alexander-Arnold all took impeccable penalties against Switzerland to help England advance.Ā
The ābuddy systemā was originally explained by football psychlogist Geir Jordet after Englandās win over Switzerland.
Gareth Southgate took time to speak with Declan Rice, Luke Shaw, Kyle Walker and John Stones during his team talk ahead of the nerve-wracking climax to the quarter-final.Ā

Luke Shaw was assigned as Jude Bellinghamās buddy and would have been taksed with consoling him had he missedĀ

Declan Rice was given the role of supporting Ivan Toney no matter the outcome of his effort
Walker was assigned to Palmer,Ā Shaw to Bellingham, Stones to Saka, and Toney had Rice as a buddy.Ā
They met their taker on the walk back to the half-way line and would have been charged with consoling them, but luckily there was only delight for England.Ā
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Jordet said: āTheyāve invented a way to approach this individual event as a collective, team event.
āThey have a structure for preventing the players from going at this alone. A support structure takes down the pressure just a little bit.ā
England have a chequered history when it comes to penalty showdowns on the grand stages of football.
You do not need a long memory to recall Englandās heartbreak at Euro 2020 after losing in the final against Italy, while they have also come a cropper at the semi-final stages at the 1990 World Cup and 1996 Euros.Ā
All in all the Three Lions have only won four of their 11 shoot-outs at major tournaments and Gareth Southgate has been eager to sharpen their penalty skills.Ā