With Champions League final, PSG see end in sight in quest for holy grail
Paris Saint-Germain's Spanish head coach Luis Enrique (C) boots a ball during a training session at the Emirates Stadium in London, on April 28, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match against Arsenal. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP)
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It has taken
almost 15 years of huge spending by their Qatari owners and an overdue shift
away from signing glamorous superstars, but Paris Saint-Germain go into
Saturday's Champions League final against Inter Milan as favourites to finally
win the coveted trophy for the first time.
A club that for years made a habit of collapsing in spectacular fashion in big Champions League games has been transformed this season as a thrilling young team, brilliantly coached by Luis Enrique, has taken the continent by storm.
Once they might
have been ridiculed by football fans around Europe who dismiss their domestic
dominance due to the huge financial advantage they enjoy -- PSG have just won
their 11th Ligue 1 title in 13 years and eighth French Cup in a decade.
Now, however,
they draw admiration from rivals -- "This is the most complete team we
have faced," said Arne Slot, whose Liverpool team lost to PSG in the last
16 in March.
The Parisian bid
to dominate Europe began in 2011, when Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) bought a
club in dire straits.
Their investment
immediately catapulted PSG into the top-10 wealthiest clubs in Europe and the rise
has been vertiginous since.
More than two
billion euros ($2.28 billion) has been spent on transfers, and by last year,
PSG's annual revenue of over 800 million euros had made them the third-richest
club in the world according to analysts Deloitte, behind only Real Madrid and
Manchester City.
Those two clubs
are the last two winners of the Champions League, while PSG's only previous appearance
in the final came in 2020, when they lost to Bayern Munich behind closed doors
in Lisbon during the Covid pandemic.
PSG's Qatari
president Nasser al-Khelaifi had initially said the plan was to win the
Champions League within five years of buying the club.
That did not
happen, while signing both Neymar, for a world-record 222 million euros, and
Kylian Mbappe in the same summer in 2017 was also not enough to deliver
Europe's biggest prize.
Indeed PSG even
went backwards after signing Lionel Messi in 2021.
"It is a
trophy the club have been waiting a long time for, but it is very difficult to
win," insisted Pedro Miguel Pauleta, a star PSG striker in the first
decade of this century.
The genesis of
their current success goes back to 2023, when the chronically-unfit Neymar and
the ageing and unmotivated Messi departed.
That was the
summer Luis Enrique arrived, replacing Christophe Galtier to become the eighth
coach of the Qatar era.
With their
all-time record scorer Mbappe spearheading the attack, PSG got to last season's
Champions League semi-finals, losing to Borussia Dortmund.
By then Mbappe
had made it clear he would be leaving, yet Luis Enrique kept insisting his team
would be better without the France superstar.
"Last
season we were also a proper team. I said we were going to improve the side.
Players came in and all the stats say we are a better team now," the Spaniard
said last week.
The former
Barcelona boss needed a young, energetic and hungry squad to make a success of
his preferred style of football and they have recruited some of the world's
most exciting young players.
Centre-back
Willian Pacho, midfielder Joao Neves, and wingers Bradley Barcola and Desire
Doue have been outstanding additions.
Ousmane Dembele
has been turned by Luis Enrique into a clinical finisher who has 33 goals this
season.
Khvicha
Kvaratskhelia joined from Napoli in January for good measure, and the oldest
player in the squad now is Marquinhos, at 31.
"We have
the players to win the Champions League this year, next year or in eight years.
We have the base on which to build a great team for the future," Khelaifi
said in a recent interview with German media.
"The new
star at Paris Saint-Germain is the team and I am really proud of the way in
which we have transformed the philosophy of the club in such a short space of
time."
In fact it could
be said the new star is the coach, so it is over to him to deliver in Munich.
"We began
preparing for this when we started pre-season training. It was in the minds of
everyone at the club from then," he said last weekend.
"It is a
game we have had marked in the calendar. We are coming into it in very good
shape, full of confidence, and we are determined to go down in the history of
the club."


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