Footballers are rational people who calculate the trajectory of shots, analyze their opponents, and monitor their pulse. But as soon as they step onto the field, an ancient mechanism is activated: omens, rituals, amulets, strange habits. Superstitions in football are as enduring as grass on the pitch. World stars spend hours on rituals that, from a rational standpoint, have no impact on the game. But they affect their heads. And the head is the main tool of a footballer. Why do footballers have superstitions Psychologists call this "ritual control." In a game where chance (the ball's bounce, the referee's decision) plays a huge role, people need the illusion of control over chaos. Putting on the right boot first, then the left, or crossing oneself before a shot creates a false sense that you can influence fate. Moreover, rituals reduce anxiety: familiar actions soothe the mind, distract from the fear of losing. Superstitions are passed from player to player like a virus. Seeing their idol wear lucky shorts, a young footballer repeats the act. The most bizarre rituals of top players Cristiano Ronaldo always enters the field first. Before the game, he jumps, pulls his socks, and tucks in his shorts. His signature ritual is getting his legs shaved a day before the match (never on the day). The legendary Barcelona goalkeeper Victor Valdes would touch the grass with both hands before taking his place in the goal. Lionel Messi kneels down and prays before stepping onto the field (he is a Catholic). But his main superstition is that he never steps onto the field with a crumpled coin in his pocket, and if someone passes him the ball, he always kicks it back with his foot, not his hand. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, an atheist, still touches the club emblem with his right hand before stepping out of the tunnel. English striker Peter Crouch jumps 10 times in place and whispers a spell he created himself before every match. Taboos and prohibitions Superstitious footballers avo ...
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