PSG wary of wounded Liverpool ahead of European showdown
Toulouse's French forward Yann Gboho (L) and Paris Saint-Germain's Portuguese midfielder Vitinha fight for the ball during the French L1 football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and Toulouse FC at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris on April 3, 2026. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP)
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Paris Saint-Germain star Vitinha insisted his side remain
very wary of the threat posed by Champions League quarter-final opponents
Liverpool despite the Anfield club coming into the heavyweight tie in poor
form.
"Liverpool are Liverpool, even if they are not in ideal
form. They are still a great team," Vitinha told reporters on Tuesday, the
eve of the first leg between the sides at the Parc des Princes.
"It will be a great match here, and at Anfield, and
tomorrow we will need to be at 100 percent. It will still be a very, very
difficult game," he added, with the return leg set for next Tuesday.
The tie is a repeat of the Champions League last-16
encounter between the clubs a year ago, when Liverpool won 1-0 in Paris only
for Luis Enrique's side to claim victory by the same score at Anfield and then
go through on penalties.
They went on to become European champions for the first time
in their history, while Liverpool won the Premier League.
However, Arne Slot's side have struggled to rediscover their
best form this season, and come into Wednesday's showdown off the back of a 4-0
hammering by Manchester City in the FA Cup quarter-finals last weekend.
They have won just one of their last five matches in all
competitions and sit fifth in the Premier League, meaning a place in next
season's Champions League is far from assured.
"It was an incredible tie," Vitinha said about
last year's meeting of the sides.
"There was a bit of frustration in the first match. I
don't remember Liverpool having a chance apart from the goal they scored at the
end.
"We played well and yet we still lost. I remember
saying that by playing like that we could go to Liverpool and win.
"Fortunately we did that, but that was last year. This
is a different year, there have been changes in the two teams. Lots of things
happen in football in a year, and it will be a different game for sure."
One new face in the Liverpool team this time will be Hugo
Ekitike, the France striker who returns to Paris to face the club where he
struggled to make an impact during an 18-month spell between 2022 and 2024.
Ekitike is Liverpool's top scorer this season with 17 goals
and recent performances make him a genuine contender to start for France at the
World Cup.
"Hugo is a fantastic guy. I enjoyed the year I spent
with him. You could see the quality he had even if it wasn't the right context
for him. I wish him all the best except for these two matches," Vitinha
said of the forward.
PSG coach Luis Enrique indicated that his side will go into
the game without two key players, with Spain midfielder Fabian Ruiz still not
ready to return from the knee injury which has kept him on the sidelines since
January.
Winger Bradley Barcola, among the goals in the 8-2 aggregate
demolition of Chelsea in the last round, is also expected to miss out despite
returning to training.
"We are trying to find the best conditions for the
player and he needs to tell us when he is ready," the coach said of
Barcola.
Of Ruiz, he added: "Fabian has not yet trained with the
squad, so how can he play? He has improved a lot and we are very happy. That
shows he is on the right road but he still has some way to go."
Asked about his team's status as favourites, the former Barcelona boss pointed out: "It is impossible to say one team is the favourite. Last year everyone said Liverpool were the favourites, and the team that went through was Paris Saint-Germain."

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