Internationals The finals of nine
FIFA 11-a-side tournaments, including three men's World Cups, have gone to penalty shoot-outs. Some of the notable matches are as follows. • The
1991 FIFA World Youth Championship final between
Portugal and
Brazil in
Lisbon was decided on a penalty shoot-out which the Portuguese won 4–2, with the last shot coming from
Rui Costa. • In the
1994 FIFA World Cup final at the
Rose Bowl in
Pasadena, California, the match between
Brazil and
Italy ended goalless after extra time. Brazil went on to win the shoot-out 3–2. • In the
1999 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, also held at the Rose Bowl, the match between hosts the
United States and
China ended goalless after extra time as well. The United States went on to win the shoot-out 5–4, becoming the first host country to win the tournament. • The
2006 FIFA World Cup final between France and Italy also went to a penalty shoot-out (after a 1–1 draw followed by a scoreless 30 minutes of extra time) and was won by
Italy 5–3 against
France in
Berlin's
Olympic Stadium, winning their fourth world title. • In the
2011 FIFA Women's World Cup final, held at
Waldstadion in
Frankfurt, the match between the United States and
Japan ended 2–2 after extra time. This time, the United States ended up on the losing side. Japan won the shoot-out 3–1, thus becoming the first Asian country to win the senior—either men's or women's—World Cup. • The
2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup final in
Istanbul went to a penalty shoot-out after a 0–0 draw after extra time.
France won 4–1 over
Uruguay. It was their first U-20 World Cup title, thus became the first nation to win all five FIFA 11-a-side men's titles (FIFA World Cup, FIFA Confederations Cup, FIFA U-20 World Cup, FIFA U-17 World Cup, and the Olympic football tournament). • The
2022 FIFA World Cup final between France and Argentina went to penalty shoot-out after the extra time ended with a 3–3 draw.
Argentina won 4–2 against France in shoot-out to lift the World Cup trophy for the first time since 1986. The first penalty shoot-out in a
World Cup match was in the dramatic
West Germany vs France semi-final match in 1982. After the penalty shoot-out ended equal, it went into
sudden death. Goalkeepers have been known to win shoot-outs by their kicking. For example, in a
UEFA Euro 2004 quarter-final match,
Portugal goalkeeper
Ricardo saved a kick (without gloves) from
England's
Darius Vassell and then scored the winning shot. Another example is
Vélez Sársfield's
José Luis Chilavert in the
1994 Copa Libertadores Finals. (Chilavert had a reputation as a dead-ball specialist and scored 41 goals during his club career.). More recently, in the
2023 African Cup of Nations,
DR Congo's
Lionel Mpasi shot the ball into the top right-hand corner against
Mohamed Gabaski, who had been a penalty-saving specialist in Egypt's run to the final in Cameroon two years prior.
Antonín Panenka (
Czechoslovakia) decided the penalty shoot-out at the
UEFA Euro 1976 Final against
West Germany with a
famous chip to the middle of the goal. The England national team has lost seven (out of ten) penalty shoot-outs in major tournament finals, including losses to Germany in the semi-finals of the
1990 FIFA World Cup and
UEFA Euro 1996 (the latter following a win over Spain by the same method in the previous round). After Euro 1996, England lost four more shoot-outs in a row in major tournament finals, losing to Argentina at the 1998 World Cup, Portugal at Euro 2004 and the 2006 World Cup and Italy at Euro 2012, before finally breaking their losing streak at the
2018 World Cup against Colombia; this shoot-out also allowed England to progress into the quarter-finals for the first time in twelve years. England again lost a penalty shoot-out to Italy in the
UEFA Euro 2020 Final. They won their following penalty shootout against Switzerland in the UEFA Euro 2024 Quarter Finals. The Netherlands, meanwhile, lost four consecutive shoot-outs: against Denmark in Euro 1992, France in Euro 1996, Brazil in the 1998 World Cup, and Italy in Euro 2000, before finally winning one against Sweden in Euro 2004. In
Euro 2000, the Netherlands had two penalty kicks during the match and four attempts in the shoot-out but only managed to convert one kick against Italian keeper
Francesco Toldo.
Frank de Boer had both a penalty kick and shoot-out kick saved by Toldo, who also saved from
Paul Bosvelt to give Italy a 3–1 shoot-out victory. The Netherlands' fortunes seemed to improve during the
2014 World Cup, when they defeated Costa Rica on penalty kicks in their quarter-final match, only to lose their semi-final match against Argentina on penalties. The
2022 World Cup saw their losing a shoot-out against Argentina once again, but this time in the quarter-finals. The Italians have lost six shoot-outs in major championships, including three consecutive World Cups (1990–1998, including the 1994 final), the Euro 2008 quarter-finals, and the Euro 2016 quarter-finals. However, they have also won five shoot-outs, including the Euro 2000 semi-final against the Netherlands, the Euro 2012 quarter-final against England, the 2006 World Cup final against France, the Euro 2020 semi-final against Spain, and the Euro 2020 final against England. On 16 November 2005, a place in the World Cup was directly determined by a penalty shoot-out for the first time. The
2006 FIFA World Cup qualifying playoff between
Australia and
Uruguay ended 1–1 on aggregate; Uruguay won the first leg 1–0
at home, and Australia won the second leg at
home by the same score. A scoreless 30 minutes of extra time were followed by a shoot-out, which Australia won 4–2. This occurred again twice in qualifying matches for the
2022 FIFA World Cup, first on 29 March 2022 in the
CAF third round between
Egypt and
Senegal, which Senegal won 3–1 on penalties after the two legs ended 1–1 on aggregate, and on 13 June 2022 in the
AFC-CONMEBOL qualifying playoff between Australia and
Peru, which Australia won 5–4 on penalties after the only fixture in the playoff went to a 0–0 draw. Delays due to the
COVID-19 pandemic caused only one match to be played in neutral Qatar, rather than the traditional home-and-away playoff fixture. During the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany,
Switzerland set an unwanted new record in the round of 16 shoot-out against
Ukraine by failing to convert any of their penalties, losing 3–0. The goalkeeper
Oleksandr Shovkovskyi (
Ukraine) became the first not to concede a single goal in the penalty shoot-out, saving two of the Swiss attempts, with another shot hitting the crossbar. The result meant that Switzerland became the first nation to be eliminated from the World Cup without conceding any goals (and, moreover, the only nation to participate in a World Cup finals tournament without conceding a goal). Despite this loss, Switzerland beat France 5–4 on penalties in the
Euro 2020 round of 16. The same competition featured a shoot-out between Germany and Argentina, the two most successful teams up to that point in terms of World Cup finals penalty shoot-outs: Each team had competed in three shoot-outs and won all of them. Germany won the shoot-out, leaving Germany alone with a 4–0 record in World Cup finals. On 20 June 2007, a new UEFA record was established. The semi-final of the
European Under-21 Championships in
Heerenveen between the
Netherlands and
England team finished 1–1, and thirty-two penalties were taken before the tie was broken. The Netherlands eventually won the shoot-out 13–12.
Domestic cups In the
FA Cup, penalty kicks were used in the 1972 edition of the short-lived
third-place playoff. They were introduced more generally in the
1991–92 season to decide matches still level after one replay and extra time. Previously there was no limit on the number of replays, which led to fixture disruption, especially disliked by the top clubs. Replays were often two or three days after the drawn match, which conflicted with the increased planning required after the
Football Spectators Act 1989. The first team eliminated from the FA Cup on penalties was
Scunthorpe United, beaten on 26 October 1991 by
Rotherham United after a first-round replay. A shoot-out was first used in the
FA Cup Final in 2005, when
Arsenal beat
Manchester United 5–4. The
following year,
Liverpool beat
West Ham United in the FA Cup Final's second ever penalty shoot-out. On 31 August 2005, a new English record was established when a shoot-out between
Tunbridge Wells and
Littlehampton Town in an FA Cup replay involved 40 kicks being taken, with Tunbridge Wells winning 16–15. Shoot-outs have been used to settle six
Football League Cup finals to date. The first was in
2001 when
Liverpool beat
Birmingham City 5–4 on penalties after a 1–1 draw after extra time in the match. The second was the
2009 final between
Manchester United and
Tottenham Hotspur ended goalless and was won 4–1 on penalties by Manchester United. Then the
2012 final between
Liverpool and
Cardiff City finished 2–2 after extra time, Liverpool winning 3–2 on penalties. The
2016 final was won by
Manchester City beating Liverpool 3–1 on penalties, after a 1–1 draw. Manchester City also won the
2019 final 4–3 on penalties after a 0–0 draw with
Chelsea. Chelsea then went on to lose the
2022 final 11–10 on penalties to Liverpool. Penalty shoot-outs have been used for many years to settle drawn games in the earlier rounds of the
Football League Cup, the earliest example being August 1976 when
Doncaster Rovers beat
Lincoln City 3–2 on penalties after three drawn games in a row (1–1, 1–1, 2–2) in a first round match. Shoot-outs tend to be quite rare in the semi-finals due to the
away goals rule applying after extra time. However, a shoot-out was used in the
2013–14 semi-final between
Sunderland and Manchester United after both teams finished level over two legs; Sunderland won the shoot-out 2–1. The
Community Shield is also settled using penalties, following the normal 90 minutes of play, but no extra time.
Manchester United have won the shield three times via a shoot-out, beating
Arsenal in
2003,
Chelsea in
2007, and
Portsmouth in
2008. Manchester United lost the
2009 match on penalties to Chelsea. In 2008, the
Turkish Cup Final featured two clubs outside of Istanbul's Top Three for the first time in two decades, but penalty kicks decided the winner between
Gençlerbirliği and
Kayserispor, the latter having reached the final for the first time ever. After a scoreless 120 minutes, 28 penalty kicks were needed to decide the outcome, and Kayserispor, thanks to the goal scoring and goal saving heroics of
Dimitar Ivankov, won its first
Turkish Cup 11–10. In the
2008–09 Greek Cup final AEK took a 3–2 lead at 89' with a goal by
Scocco; however
Olympiacos came back from the dead at the dying seconds of stoppage time (90'+6) with a goal by
Derbyshire, to force an overtime. While Olympiacos took a 4–3 lead in overtime with a goal by
Galletti, the scorer was sent off with a second yellow card for taking his shirt off while celebrating. Later on,
Avraam Papadopoulos also got a second yellow leaving Olympiacos with 9 players. AEK managed to tie the game at 4–4 forcing a penalty shoot out. AEK was shooting first. Both AEK and Olympiacos scored in the first 4 penalties.
Majstorovic of AEK hit the horizontal crossbar in the 5th penalty giving the chance to
Djordjevic (for whom it was the closing game of his career) to seal the victory for Olympiacos. However, his shot was blocked by AEK's Argentinian goalkeeper
Saja. Hence, the shooting continued. Both teams scored their 6th and 7th penalties. Center-back
Antzas was slotted to hit the 8th penalty for Olympiacos, but keeper
Nikopolidis took the initiative and took the penalty instead tying the score to 7–7. Nikopolidis blocked the subsequent (9th) penalty by
Georgeas for AEK but Antzas missed the penalty for Olympiacos (saved by Saha) and failed to finish the shoot-out. Since Olympiacos had only 9 players in the field, the shooters had to rotate, going back to those that shoot the very first penalties. All 7 subsequent penalty takers for both teams scored, leading to a penalty shoot out that was at 14–14 with 32 penalty shots having been taken. However,
Pelletieri of AEK had a bad penalty shot that was easily deflected by Nikopolidis, who then took the 34th penalty shot against the other goalkeeper, Saja, scoring, and ending this saga with a 15–14 win for Olympiacos in penalty shoot out and an overall score of 19–18. (
2008–09 Greek Cup).
UEFA club competitions The first penalty shoot-out in a European Cup final occurred in the
1984 European Cup Final as
Liverpool defeated
Roma. The match is best known for the antics of Liverpool keeper
Bruce Grobbelaar. As Roma's
Bruno Conti prepared to take his kick, Grobbelaar walked towards the goal smiling confidently at the cameras lined-up behind, then proceeded to bite the back of the net, in imitation of eating spaghetti. Conti sent his spot kick over the bar. Grobbelaar then produced a similar performance before
Francesco Graziani took his kick, famously wobbling his legs in mock terror. Graziani duly missed and Liverpool went on to win the shootout 4–2. In the
1986 European Cup Final between
Steaua București and
Barcelona, Steaua keeper
Helmut Duckadam saved all four of Barca's penalties, for which he was dubbed "the hero of
Seville". Steaua also missed two, but still prevailed 2–0 in the shoot-out to become the only Romanian club side to win the title. In the
2003 UEFA Champions League Final the penalty-shoot out has caused controversy among many fans as replays showed that
Milan goalkeeper
Dida was off his goal line when saving penalties from
Trezeguet,
Zalayeta and
Montero.
Juventus keeper
Buffon was also off his goal line when saving penalties from
Seedorf and
Kaladze. In the
2005 UEFA Champions League Final between Milan and Liverpool, Liverpool keeper
Jerzy Dudek used tactics similar to
Bruce Grobbelaar in 1984 (known as the "Dudek dance" in 2005) to distract the Milan shootout takers which resulted in a victory for his team. The
2008 UEFA Champions League Final between
Manchester United and
Chelsea went to penalties, when
John Terry missed a penalty which would have won Chelsea the match (and the Champions League). His standing leg slipped as he took his kick, and the ball hit the post. Chelsea lost the shoot-out 6–5, to which Terry reacted by breaking down in tears. Terry was not originally the penalty taker, however, striker
Didier Drogba had been sent off shortly before extra time ended. In the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League between
Real Madrid and
Bayern Munich,
Iker Casillas and
Manuel Neuer each saved two spot kicks. Neuer kept out penalties from
Cristiano Ronaldo (£80 million) and
Kaká (£56 million), then the most expensive footballers in history from their transfer fees. On 19 May 2012, Chelsea defeated Bayern Munich 4–3 on penalties in the
2012 UEFA Champions League Final. Chelsea had never previously won a shoot-out in the competition, and had lost the 2008 final and 2007 semi-final on penalties. Bayern had never lost a shoot-out in Europe; their wins included the
2001 final against Valencia and the 2012 semi-final against Real Madrid.
Didier Drogba dispatched the winning penalty, having been unable to take the fifth kick (missed by Terry) in the 2008 final due to a red card in extra time. The following day, many British newspapers made reference to the fact that an English team had finally beaten a German team on penalties. On 26 May 2021,
Villarreal defeated Manchester United 11–10 on penalties in the
2021 UEFA Europa League Final, after the game ended 1–1 after extra time. Every player on the pitch took penalties – Manchester United goalkeeper
David De Gea was the only one to miss, with his shot being saved by
Gerónimo Rulli to hand Villarreal its first major title. The 21 penalties converted was a record for a shoot-out in a major UEFA tournament match.
Records The world record for the longest penalty shoot-out, and the highest score, in a first class match is 56 penalties during the 2023–24 Liga Alef (Israel's third tier) promotion play-offs when
F.C. Dimona beat
Shimshon Tel Aviv 23–22. The world record for the most penalties scored consecutively in a shoot out stands at 31, in a
Vertu Trophy Round of 32 game between
Blackpool and
Aston Villa U21s on 17 December 2024, in which the 32nd penalty was saved, enabling Aston Villa to win 18-17. In major international tournaments, the most penalties came in the
2006 African Cup of Nations, where Ivory Coast and Cameroon needed 24 penalties to decide who would advance to the semi-finals. The Ivory Coast advanced by winning 12–11 after
Samuel Eto'o missed his second attempt, as his was the only miss of the penalty shootout. Ivory Coast also participated in the longest shootout in a final, in the
1992 African Cup of Nations, where they beat Ghana 11-10. This penalty shootout was significant in that it was the first in the final of a major international tournament that every player on the pitch took a penalty. The longest FIFA World Cup penalty shoot-out, male or female, occurred in the
2023 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage match between
Australia and
France; the shoot-out saw 20 penalties taken, with Australia ultimately prevailing 7–6. On 11 December 2012,
Bradford City set the record for most consecutive penalty shootout wins. They won 9 penalty shootouts since 2009 and that included wins against Arsenal and local rivals
Huddersfield Town. The shortest possible penalty shootout consists of three kicks by each team, with one team scoring all its kicks and the other team failing to score any. An example of this occurred in the
semi-final of the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup, with Chile beating Portugal 3–0, or the UEFA Euro 2024 where Portugal beat Slovenia with the same result in the shootout. In March 2026,
Midtjylland lost to
Nottingham Forest in the
Europa League by missing all of their penalties, with Forest scoring all of theirs. ==Statistical record==