World Cup Science: The Science Behind Penalty Shootouts
Released on 06/30/2026
[Narrator] Can a goalkeeper really stop a penalty
or is it all just luck?
Because when the ball is struck from 11 meters away,
everything happens in less than a second.
Today we explain what happens during a penalty kick
in The Ccience Behind: Soccer.
A typical penalty travels over 60 miles per hour.
That means the ball reaches the goal
in around 400 milliseconds,
but the average human reaction time
is between 200 and 250 milliseconds,
and that's just to begin moving.
In other words, by the time the goalkeeper reacts,
the ball is already halfway there.
That's why most goalkeepers don't react, they guess.
They analyze the shooter's body language,
the position of the foot, and shooting patterns
because yes, players tend to repeat tendencies.
That's why teams analyze hundreds
of penalties before a match to find probabilities.
In the end, a penalty is not just about power or position,
it's a mix of psychology, statistics, and milliseconds.
So next time you watch a penalty,
remember that the goalkeeper isn't just diving,
he's making a scientific decision.
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