PSG's Georgian magician Kvaratskhelia ready for another big European night
- Ligue 1 - RC Lens v Paris St Germain - Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens, France - May 13, 2026 Paris St Germain's Khvicha Kvaratskhelia celebrates scoring their first goal REUTERS/Benoit Tessier
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Paris St Germain’s road to the Champions League
final has been fuelled by collective brilliance, but few players capture the
chaos and beauty of Luis Enrique’s side better than Khvicha Kvaratskhelia.
As PSG prepare for another showdown,
against Arsenal at the Puskas Arena in Budapest, the Georgian has become one of
the symbols of Luis Enrique’s exhilarating side,
adding improvisation and menace to a team already overflowing with attacking
talent.
When the Serie A club signed the then little-known
Georgian from Dinamo Batumi in 2022 for around 10 million euros, supporters
barely knew how to pronounce his name. Videos have
popped up on YouTube and TikTok to guide them.
Even before his first official appearance, expectations
had spiralled into mythology. During his initiation ceremony, Kvaratskhelia
sang Opus’s
“Live Is Life”, the song forever
associated in Naples with Diego Maradona’s famous pre-match warm-up against
Bayern Munich in 1989.
“I know Maradona means
everything to Naples,”
Kvaratskhelia said at the time. “It’s a huge responsibility to be mentioned in
the same sentence.”
What followed was one
of the most explosive breakthroughs in European football.
Operating from the left wing in Luciano Spalletti’s
thrilling Napoli side, Kvaratskhelia shredded Serie A defences with a dizzying
repertoire of feints, body swerves and sudden changes of pace.
By January 2023, he already had six goals and seven
assists in
14 league games and was tearing through Champions League opponents with the
same carefree brutality.
Spalletti quickly recognised what made him
different.
“His unpredictability allows him to transform the
ordinary into the extraordinary,” the Italian coach said.
That unpredictability remains central to his game
today. Kvaratskhelia
is not
merely a dribbler hunting highlights.
Nearly ambidextrous, he can attack outside or drift
inside onto either foot, combine in tight spaces or accelerate directly at
defenders. He stretches defensive lines through positioning and movement,
forcing opponents to retreat even before he touches the ball.
Luis Enrique has refined his game further, demanding
relentless pressing and defensive commitment to complement the attacking
freedom.
In Paris, Kvaratskhelia
has become part of a collective machine
rather than its sole inspiration, flourishing
alongside Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembele, Vitinha and Joao Neves in a
younger, more balanced PSG side.
Born in Tbilisi and coached
early on by his father Badri, a former footballer, Kvaratskhelia developed in
Georgia before moving to Russia with
Rubin Kazan. Following Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine, FIFA rules allowed foreign players to suspend their
contracts, enabling him to return briefly to Dinamo Batumi before Napoli
secured him.
Former Georgia coach Willy Sagnol said he had tried unsuccessfully to convince French clubs to sign him. Some executives considered recruiting a Georgian too risky or insufficiently glamorous.

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