Prolific PSG appear a formidable prospect ahead of Liverpool showdown

Paris Saint-Germain's French forward Ousmane Dembele (C) celebrates scoring PSG's first goal with Paris Saint-Germain's Slovak defender Milan Skriniar (R) and Paris Saint-Germain's Moroccan defender Achraf Hakimi (L) during the French L1 football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and Stade Brestois 29 (Brest) at The Parc des Princes Stadium, in Paris, on September 14, 2024. (Photo by GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP)
The doubts about Paris Saint-Germain's ability to remain a
force in the Champions League following the departure of Kylian Mbappe have
faded amid a stunning run of form which sets the French club up perfectly for
their mouthwatering last-16 showdown with Liverpool.
"We will need to replace him with the team as a whole,
and with maybe four, five or six new signings," was the response of coach
Luis Enrique at the end of last season when he looked ahead to life without
Real Madrid-bound Mbappe.
The Qatar-owned club had just won a French league and cup
double and reached the Champions League semi-finals in Luis Enrique's first
season in charge, with Mbappe smashing in 44 goals.
With the France captain gone, PSG spent significant money on
four new signings in the summer, with Joao Neves, Desire Doue, Willian Pacho and
Matvey Safonov all arriving.
However, the decision not to recruit a proven goal-scorer
looked to be backfiring as they struggled in Europe while Randal Kolo Muani
fell out of favour.
PSG found the net just three times in their first five
Champions League games this season, as defeats against Arsenal, Atletico Madrid
and Bayern Munich left them in danger of elimination before the knockout phase.
Yet their form in the last three months has been sensational,
with the statistics speaking for themselves.
Since the 1-0 loss to Bayern on November 26, PSG are
undefeated in 22 games in all competitions.
They have won their last five Champions League matches,
scoring 21 goals in the process, including 10 over two legs against Brest in
the play-off round.
A 4-1 win at home to Lille on Saturday was their 10th
straight victory in all competitions and kept them unbeaten domestically this
season.
"Absolutely ruthless, at times magnificent," was
how sports daily L'Equipe described that display against France's other
remaining Champions League representatives.
Paris were outstanding in the first half of that game in
particular, and those who have followed the club's progress over the years
since the transformative Qatari takeover of 2011 are now pondering whether the
current PSG team is the best they have ever seen.
That would be quite a claim, given the players who have
turned out for the club in that time, from Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Mbappe to
Lionel Messi and Neymar.
"We are in great form, it's all systems go," said
captain Marquinhos, at the club since 2013.
"We really rely on the collective. It has taken a long
time. We have progressed step by step. But there are still things we need to
improve."
Ousmane Dembele is now the leader of the PSG attack, having
been transformed from a thrilling winger but wayward finisher, into one of the
most clinical forwards around.
He has scored 26 goals this season, including 21 in 16
appearances since mid-December while playing mainly through the middle.
Last season, when supporting Mbappe, he contributed just six
goals. Bradley Barcola, meanwhile, has gone from five goals in total last
season to 17 so far this.
The only doubt in a settled side, and a fully-fit squad, is
who will complete the front three at kick-off in Wednesday's first leg at the
Parc des Princes.
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia is still settling in after arriving in
January from Napoli, so Doue may get the nod.
The 19-year-old winger, who can also play in midfield, has a
touch of Neymar about him and has scored or set up a total of 16 goals since
mid-December.
"The team is having a good spell," said Luis
Enrique, but he is as wary as anyone else of Liverpool, who represent a significant
step up from any team PSG have faced in recent months.
PSG have often choked in big Champions League games over the
last decade, but might this time, against the team who finished first in the
league phase, be different?
"We are going to be playing against the best team in
Europe, who qualified brilliantly, but it is not in our mentality to speculate,
to try to protect ourselves, to be defensive," Luis Enrique insisted.
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