03/06/2025
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SCAN ME
SCAN ME
TUESDAY | JUNE 3, 2025
Malaysian Paper
PSG’s players and staff pose during a ceremony to present the Champions League trophy. – AFPPIC
Arc of triumph Champions League win just the start for PSG’s new breed of winners
Ű BY RICHARD JOLLY
In one respect, they helped remedy a historical imbalance: this was just a second European Cup win for a French club. In another, they are a global club who have ruined the competitiveness of Ligue 1. It is the fifth domestic league in Europe, but a distant fifth. With its diminishing television rights, and broadcasters struggling to make it pay, other clubs can be financially challenged, often forced to sell. And yet the initial French surge in the Champions League this season came from the relatively impoverished. PSG underachieved in the group stages. The rest overachieved. Lille defeated Real and Atletico Madrid, Monaco beat Barcelona and Aston Villa. Brest took more points than Juventus and City. But they were beaten 10-0 on aggregate by PSG when the force from the capital gelled in the playoffs to reach the knockout phase. Then PSG took aim across the English Channel, eliminating Liverpool, Villa and Arsenal. The Italian challengers from Inter were then vanquished, PSG’s arc of triumph complete. – The Independent
is that PSG are young enough. They will have the resources. What may be pertinent is that they seem to have turned a deficiency – the ease with which they win Ligue 1 – into an advantage. For years, the theory was that it did not properly prepare them for Champions League summit clashes. Yet time on the training ground with Luis Enrique and the physicality to blitz opponents can do that. PSG should see a future in their magnificent midfield. It is frightening how good Doue is even before his 20th birthday. If they can conjure more goals from the compelling Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, he will seem unstoppable. It helps, too, that PSG no longer overlook the cradles of talent that are Paris or Ligue 1. Doue was bought from Rennes, Bradley Barcola from Lyon. It proved a better business model than raiding the Nou Camp, beyond getting the transformative manager who is a Barcelona alumnus and who became the seventh manager to win the competition with two different clubs. He altered the ethos. PSG stopped copying and found their own way.
last season’s 4-1 battering at Newcastle, and their semifinal defeat to Borussia Dortmund, when they hit the woodwork so often it needed a concussion test, but did not find the net. This year felt more of the same. Some 50 minutes into their seventh group game, PSG were – somehow – 2-0 down to Manchester City, outside the top 24, facing the ignominy of their worst European campaign under Qatari ownership. It instead became the best. PSG’s modern Champions League history has been an extended exercise in schadenfreude . In Germany, home of the concept, the startlingly brilliant display of Desire Doue could not camouflage who was missing: Kylian Mbappe. It is no coincidence PSG finally won the Champions League without Lionel Messi, Neymar and Mbappe. There wasn’t a superstar shortcut to glory. It is instructive, if there will be an annual procession to it now. It is easy to predict so after a final, yet such forecasts often do not stand the test of time. What can be said without fear of contradiction
I N the afterglow of victory, Luis Enrique exchanged his trademark black top for a T shirt bearing the message “Champions of Europe”. So did many another. The temptation is to wonder if Paris Saint Germain got them printed in 2011, when Qatar Sports Investments bought the club, and had them stored in a cupboard in the Parc des Princes ever since. An ambition was finally realised in Munich; impressively so. It transpired that Arne Slot was ahead of the curve in calling PSG the best team in Europe. Over the subsequent months, many others reached that conclusion, too. The club who used to choke at the business end of the Champions League peaked when it mattered most; in itself, that is proof of the transformative impact of Luis Enrique. His cultural revolution has entailed ending the search for proven winners and building a young side who instead won. But it can be difficult to shed a club’s identity. There was something quintessentially PSG about
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