RT Journal Article T1 Attentional Focus and Practice Autonomy Enhance Penalty Kick Accuracy in Soccer A1 Niźnikowski, Tomasz A1 Jerzy, Sadowski A1 Mastalerz, Andrzej A1 Porter, Jared A1 Makaruk, Hubert A1 Fernández-Rodríguez, Emilio A1 Starzak, Marcin A1 Romero-Ramos, Óscar A1 Zielinski, Janusz A1 Bodasinska, Anna A1 Chaliburda, Agata A1 Rozanski, Paweł K1 Fútbol K1 Entrenamiento deportivo - Aspectos psicológicos AB This study investigated the immediate and cumulative effects of attentional focus (externalvs. internal), practice autonomy, and their combination on soccer penalty kick performance.Methods: Ninety physically active male university students (average age 22.8 ± 1.5 years)were selected from a pool of 330 students who completed a 60 h university soccer course.Participants were randomly divided into six groups: external focus with target choice(EF-TC), external focus without target choice (EF-NTC), internal focus with target choice(IF-TC), internal focus without target choice (IF-NTC), autonomy support (AS), and acontrol group (C). Results: The EF-TC group demonstrated significantly higher accuracythan the IF-TC, IF-NTC, and C groups while performing comparably to the EF-NTC andAS groups in between-group analyses. Notably, the EF-NTC group showed the largestwithin-group improvement from pre-test to acquisition. Conclusions: The findings indicatethat combining attentional focus with practice autonomy enhances the accuracy of penaltykicks, emphasizing the potential of tailored training methods for improving penalty kickperformance in soccer. AB These findings contribute to the growing literature on the mechanisms underlying effective motor learning and highlight the need for nuanced interpretation of both attentional and motivational factors. In particular, the results underscore the importance of attentional focus as a performance-enhancing strategy. Both internal and external focus conditions improved penalty kick accuracy in the short term, but only external focus demonstrated superior retention effects. Thus, adopting some form of attentional focus is advantageous, with external focus emerging as the more effective strategy for sustaining accuracy over time. However, given the variability in effects across tasks and populations, autonomy support may provide additional benefits under specific conditions and should be considered with regard to context, athlete characteristics, and training goals. From an applied perspective, coaches and practitioners may consider incorporating externally focused instructions during motor skill acquisition. While granting athletes autonomy may offer motivational benefits, its influence on learning appears to depend on factors such as task complexity and athlete experience. Future research should identify the most effective forms of external focus and autonomy support for complex motor tasks across different skill levels and sport-specific contexts. In addition, future research should examine younger populations, particularly adolescent athletes, to assess whether the benefits observed in university students generalize to earlier stages of skill acquisition. PB MDPI YR 2025 FD 2025-10 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10630/41350 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10630/41350 LA eng NO Ni´znikowski, T.; Sadowski, J.; Mastalerz, A.; Porter, J.; Makaruk, H.; Fernández-Rodríguez, E.; Starzak, M.; Romero-Ramos, O.; Zieli ´ nski, J.; Bodasi ´ nska, A.; et al. Attentional Focus and Practice Autonomy Enhance Penalty Kick Accuracy in Soccer. Sports 2025, 13, 332. https:// doi.org/10.3390/sports13100332 DS RIUMA. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Málaga RD 26 ene 2026