A hat-trick occurs in association football when a player scores three goals
in a single game. In common with other official record-keeping rules, goals
in a penalty shootout are excluded from the tally.[10] In Germany the extra
time in a league tournament match may also be calculated towards a player's
potential hat-trick. Players achieving hat-tricks are usually rewarded by
being given the match ball to keep. The fastest time to score a hat-trick is
70 seconds, a record set by Alex Torr in a Sunday league game in 2013.[11]
The previous record was held by Tommy Ross playing for Ross County against
Nairn County on 28 November 1964.
In the FIFA World Cup the first recorded hat-trick was performed by American
player Bert Patenaude against Paraguay, coincidentally in the first ever
edition. Only one hat-trick has been scored in a final: by Geoff Hurst for
England in the 1966 final, after extra time against West Germany.[13]
Football has also extended the term to include the phrase perfect hat-trick,
achieved when a player scores one right footed goal, one left footed goal and
one headed goal within one match. In the Netherlands a player is awarded
a hat-trick when all three goals are scored in the same half with no goal of
the opponent in between.
帽子戏法源自于英文 hat-trick...