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What being a goalkeeper taught me about performing under pressure

9th Jul 2026 | 06:00am

I’m a goalkeeper, and it’s the best job in football. At least I don’t have to spend 90 minutes running up and down the pitch at full intensity.

But I play under constant psychological pressure. I am the last line. I have to be switched on every single second, and the cost of my mistake can be the team’s defeat.

Over years in professional football, I’ve developed five rules that help me stay mentally present when my body is already at its limit. They work on the pitch but, as I’ve gradually come to realize, they work far beyond it too.

1. Everyone notices your mistakes; accept it

When a striker doesn’t score, it’s forgotten by the next attack, but when a goalkeeper lets one in, it stays for a long time: in replays, in stats, in supporters’ memories.

I resisted it internally for a long time. Then I understood: There’s nothing to resist; these are simply the conditions of the job. That’s how human attention works. It registers failure, not the norm. And this isn’t unique to football—in business or in public life, mistakes are always more visible than good decisions.

The first step toward mental resilience is to accept it as fact and strip it of its emotional weight.

2. Analyzing is useful, obsessing is destructive

After a difficult match, it’s easy to get stuck, to replay an episode over and over, to search for the exact moment everything went wrong.

I know this from the inside, and I know how thin the line is between analysis and a loop.

So I set myself a clear rule—a mistake must be examined: what happened, why, what to do differently. And then the page turns for good.

Victories aren’t possible without mistakes, but the mistakes you dwell on don’t teach you anything, they only drain the energy you need for the next step.

3. Think about what’s next

The next minute of the match. The next game. The next training session. The next day.

The past is a resource, not a prison—you take the lesson from it and move on. There’s no point lingering there. You can’t rewind the match, you can’t take back the goal. But the next moment is yours, and that’s where your attention should belong.

For me, this isn’t just a psychological technique, it’s a way of being present where I can actually change something.

4. Make it automatic

In the moment of a shot, I’m not thinking. If I am thinking, it’s already too late.

The ball travels faster than conscious analysis can keep up. Everything that happens in those fractions of a second encompasses thousands of hours of training, written into the body.

The real purpose of preparation is to make the right decision automatic, so that at the moment of maximum pressure, you don’t need to pause and think.

That is professionalism: acting precisely when there’s no time to deliberate. And this is what genuine self-confidence actually comes from.

5. Be ready to recognize your moment

In January of this year, I scored against Real Madrid in the Champions League playoffs. A header from a corner in the final minutes and the goal that took us through. We had lost a few matches before that, but we still had a chance to qualify—we just needed that one single goal.

Let’s be honest, scoring goals is not exactly a usual situation for a goalkeeper. But life rarely announces its best opportunities. They appear sideways, in unlikely shapes, at strange times. The only question is whether you’re the kind of person who sees them and moves.