
Matt
Le Tissier has analysed Eden Hazard's penalty-taking technique after the
Chelsea playmaker was once again successful from 12 yards in the Capital One
Cup semi-final at Liverpool on Tuesday night.
And the former Southampton and England star - who himself converted 47 out
of 48 penalties in his career - says that you need "a lot of bottle" to be
able to take spot-kicks in the manner that Hazard does.
"It is a very cool technique," Le Tissier told Sky Sports News HQ. "You need
to be a very confident boy to do this and Eden Hazard is certainly that.
"He basically stands and waits for the goalkeeper to move. It is a really
clever way of doing things. He is just so confident as he steps up, he
watches the goalkeeper as he is striking the ball and does not watch the
ball at all.
"And that takes a lot of bottle to do that."
However, that technique can sometimes go wrong, as Hazard found to his cost
in a UEFA Champions League tie at Maribor earlier this season when the
little Belgium international saw his spot-kick saved by Jasmin Handanovic.
"The goalkeeper just stood a long time and did not make his move and as
Hazard goes to strike it, the keeper still had not made his move yet," Le
Tissier explained.
"And that is the only way that you can put a bit of doubt in your mind,
because you are waiting for the goalkeeper to move and all of a sudden he
does not move and you have a split second to choose which way to go.
"And he did not get it anywhere near the corner."
All of which begs the question: why do goalkeepers not study Hazard’s method
more and stand up and wait to see which way he places the ball before
diving?
"If you have looked and studied that technique, then you would be brave and
stand up for as long as you possibly can and wait for him to make the move,"
added Le Tissier.
"Because it is a game of cat and mouse with penalties and it is whoever
blinks first really. A lot of goalkeepers think that the only way they can
save a penalty is to actually anticipate it a little bit before and not save
it after the ball has been struck, because of the power you can get behind
the ball.
"What goalkeepers do not want to do is stand there and wait and him not do
that and stroke it in the corner and they are just stood there in the middle
of the goal waiting.
"And then the questions come: 'What is the goalkeeper doing? Why is he not
moving for it?!' And I think that is the gamble they take."
But with Hazard having found the back of the net with 18 penalties in a row
since 2010-11, before failing from the spot in Slovenia last November, it
seems the 24-year-old has a near-perfect way of taking spot kicks that
goalkeepers cannot read.