Liverpool goalkeeper Bruce Grobbelaar celebrates with the European Cup after helping his side to victory on penalties against Roma in the 1984 final
Grobbelaar celebrates with the European Cup(Image credit: Alamy)

Liverpool hero Bruce Grobbelaar has defended his actions from the penalty shootout of the 1984 European Cup, in which he performed his famous 'spaghetti legs'.

With the 1984 final 1-1 after extra-time between Liverpool and Roma, Grobbelaar knew that he needed to step up for his team if they were to complete a treble that season, having already won the league title and League Cup.

The Zimbabwean goalkeeper's task became all the more difficult when his team-mate, Steve Nicol, stepped up first in the shootout and missed. With the Reds at a disadvantage, Grobbelaar recalls what manager Joe Fagan said to him before the penalties started.

Liverpool helped out by Bruce Grobbelaar and his 'spaghetti legs'

[Assistant] Ronnie Morans words to me were, Do not change yourself as a person, never emulate anybody else as a goalkeeper. Be yourself. We really should have won that European Cup final in extra time, but couldnt take our chances," Grobbelaar tells FourFourTwo.

"Just before the penalties, [boss] Joe Fagan said, Listen, we shouldnt be in this position, nobody will blame you. As I walked away, he told me to try to put them off. I picked out two players Italy stars Bruno Conti and Francesco Graziani.

"People said it was unsporting, but my logic was if an international player cant hit the target from 12 yards, its not my fault.

Both Conti and Graziani missed in the shootout, with Grobbelaar's 'spaghetti legs' putting the Italian duo off. After Nicol had missed first, the Reds now had the advantage, with fith taker Alan Kennedy knowing that a goal would hand Liverpool their fourth European Cup.

The left-back duly dispatched his spot kick, helping Liverpool beat Roma in their own stadium.

But while Grobbelar faced some accusations of unsporting behaviour after his antics in the shootout, FourFourTwo believes that he had every right to do what he did and put off his opponents.

Staff writer

Ryan is a staff writer for FourFourTwo, joining the team full-time in October 2022. He first joined Future in December 2020, working across FourFourTwo, Golf Monthly, Rugby World and Advnture's websites, before eventually earning himself a position with FourFourTwo permanently. After graduating from Cardiff University with a degree in Journalism and Communications, Ryan earned a NCTJ qualification to further develop as a writer while a Trainee News Writer at Future.

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Publisher: FourFourTwo

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