Why is Donnarumma so good at saving penalties?

Gianluigi Donnarumma joined Paris St-Germain in 2021
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Published
It is the life of a goalkeeper.
One day you are the villain. The next, you are the hero.
Gianluigi Donnarumma was blamed by some for Paris St-Germainâs defeat by Liverpool last week, allowing Harvey Elliotâs 88th-minute effort â the Redsâ only shot on target â to slip in.
At the other end, the Italianâs opposite number Alisson produced the âperformance of his careerâ as he single-handedly kept the French side at bay in Paris.
On Tuesday night, the tables turned.
Italyâs Donnarumma was the hero, saving two of Liverpoolâs three penalties in a shootout to send his side through to the Champions League quarter-finals.
âThe first game belonged to Alisson, the second game belonged to Donnarumma,â said PSG boss Luis Enrique.
Donnarummaâs penalty record
Donnarumma has now won six of the seven penalty shootouts he has taken part in for club and country.
Since making his debut aged 16 for boyhood club AC Milan, Donnarumma has faced 60 penalties across his club and international career.
He has saved 14 of those, giving him a save percentage of 23.3%.
Remarkably, the Italianâs penalty shootout record is identical.
Donnarumma has saved 10 of the 43 spot-kicks he has faced during shootouts â a save percentage of 23.3%.
Donnarumma, who was player of the tournament after Italyâs 2021 Euros triumph, saved penalties from Bukayo Saka and Jadon Sancho in the final against England at Wembley.
His full record for penalties faced during matches and in shootouts is 24 saves from 103 penalties.
Donnarumma missed Enriqueâs pre-shootout team talk as he headed down the tunnel, choosing instead to retrieve some pre-prepared notes from the dressing room about Liverpoolâs spot-kicks.
âI had prepared something with my trainer, it was right to take something back to try to save some penalties,â said Donnarumma.
âI see a lot of criticism from journalists without knowing what the goalkeeperâs job is.
âIn the first leg we conceded a shot and a goal, it seemed like it was my fault but I always think about smiling, giving my best and working for the team.â
âImposingâ Donnarumma âputs doubts in their mindsâ
At 6ft 5in, Donnarumma cuts an imposing figure.
But unlike many of his peers, he has a slightly different tactic for penalties.
Many goalkeepers use the moments before a penalty is taken to attempt to âget into the headâ of the taker â slowing down the taking of the penalty, retrieving the ball for the taker or moving along their line.
Donnarumma is different.
Laidback and calm, the Italian barely moves until the player puts the ball on the spot.
Just as they are readying their run-up, he expands his arms to make the goal look as small as possible.
âThe idea behind that is to stand as slim as you can to start with,â former Liverpool defender Stephen Warnock told Football Daily.
âThe ball goes on the spot, now youâre putting doubt in their mind, you spread yourself, make yourself big and awkward, making the goal look smaller.
âYou donât do that when theyâre walking forward. You do it when the ball is on the spot to put doubt in their mind in the last seconds.â
Donnarumma remained level-headed after both of his penalty saves, barely celebrating as he prepared for the next.
âIâm sat here watching Donnarumma and thinking, âWow, look at the size of him!'â Warnock added.
âHow imposing is he in that goal? If he dives the right way he stands a great chance of getting it. The guyâs a monster.â
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Published26 July 2022
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