Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Paris Saint-Germain need a major upturn to win Champions League and keep Neymar after Real Madrid loss - after spending £900m, they are more like Celtic than Chelsea in Europe

PSG, like Celtic, are the best team in their league by a distance. They largely have the picking of all the best players at the other sides around them. They have a super stadiumand an ardent fanbase. And every season, theyfail to meet their expectations in Europe, oftengetting picked off by a bigger bully in a different playground away from the comfort of their own division.

The money PSG have can even put Chelsea in the shade. When Kylian Mbappe's loan from Monaco becomes permanent for £166million in the summer, the Qatari Sports Investment company that own the club will have spent over €1billion (£896m) on players. That simplydemands a better return than the quarter-final.Of course, an element of luck is involved here.

PSG scored 25 goals (12 against Celtic) on their way to winning Group B - the most in thetournament at that stage. They did all they could to ensure a favourable last-16 draw and could have landed Porto or Shakhtar Donetsk.But Madrid are as fallible as they have looked in years and this was a big chance for PSG to claim a scalp.

Zinedine Zidane's men are currently 15 points behind Barcelona in La Liga and are widely expected to overhaul theirsquad in the summer, so poor have they been in Spain. They still beat PSG 5-2 across two legs, though.

Neymar would have a made a difference, yes, but notthedifference. He has repeatedly been linked with a move to Madrid and while PSG fans will feel appeased at him commending his team-mates on social media after Tuesday's loss, he will not stick around for too much longer if they keep exiting the competition in March.

The Brazil star's eyes for the Ballon d'Or runs parallel with his club's desire for the Champions League. But as Pep Guardiola said only in February: 'You have to be there in the latter stages. Without the latter stages you willnot be nominated. Everyone knows to be there(in contention for the Ballon d'Or) you have to win titles, and titles and titles. Especially one.'

Manager Unai Emery will almost certainly depart at the end of the season and was arguably lucky to remain in his job last year after the club's four-season league winning streak was ended by Monaco. But that was when Monaco had Mbappe.

Whoever replaces the Spaniard may find the strength of the French league could play a part in their European struggle.'It’s all well and good putting eight goals past Dijon, but it’s in matches like this that you have to stand up and be counted,' midfielder Adrien Rabiot said after the 3-1 first-leg loss inMadrid.

While English clubs have far from thrived in Europe themselves recently, the Premier League is a fair example of how regular competition can keep a side ticking over in thebusiness end of the season.

BT Sport pundits Owen Hargreaves and Michael Owen both pointed to this after Liverpool reached the last eight in Tuesday's other Champions League tie, while ManchesterCity midfielder Ilkay Gundigan recently underlined how winning the Premier League too early could be a hindrance.

'I don't know if it would be good to win the league that early,' he said. 'You need rhythm, and to always play seriously. You should always try to play in a serious way. If you are able to win the league quite early, you can maybe lose that seriousness for the Champions League.'Both City and PSG will be runaway league winners this season. But unlike City, the French side are much more assured of success at the start of the campaign.They will likely complete a clean sweep of domestic trophies - they play Monaco in the French League Cup final on March 31 and afterbeating Marseille last week in the French Cup, play Caen in the semi-final.

The problem, however, is that Neymar isn't in France to win any of those medals and neitheris Al-Khelaifi. And for all the millions spent and players PSG have, the wait for the one onethey crave looks set to be a lot longer than what Abramovich endured.

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