logo
PSG will handle pressure in Champions League final, says skipper Marquinhos

PSG will handle pressure in Champions League final, says skipper Marquinhos

The Sun2 days ago

PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN captain Marquinhos is confident the French side will cope with the pressure in Saturday's Champions League final against Inter Milan and put years of disappointment in the competition behind them by finally winning the trophy.
'The club has learnt as time has gone on about how to deal with games like these, what it needs to do,' the Brazilian defender told reporters in Munich on the eve of the game.
'A lot of things have changed at PSG since I arrived. There have been great times, difficult times, but tomorrow (Saturday) we have a glorious opportunity to do something remarkable and historic for this club.
'It will be my second final and I don't want to let the opportunity pass us by.'
PSG's second Champions League final comes five years after a narrow defeat at the hands of Bayern Munich behind closed doors in Lisbon during the pandemic.
Marquinhos, who is the elder statesman in the current PSG side at 31, is one of only two players who featured in the 2020 final and are still at the club -- the other is fellow centre-back Presnel Kimpembe, now a peripheral figure.
At PSG since 2013, Marquinhos has also been involved in some humiliating Champions League defeats, not least the infamous collapse against Barcelona in 2017, when they won 4-0 at home in the first leg only to lose 6-1 in the return.
Luis Enrique was the Barcelona coach then, and is now on the PSG bench, in charge of a vibrant young side.
'We have a coach who is exceptional and has prepared us really well. Even if we are a very young team you can see how ready we are for these games,' Marquinhos added.
'I think there is a whole mix of things which have come together to bring us here in the best condition possible -- the club has grown, the incredible coach we have, the quality players who have come in. I think that is why we are here today.'
PSG lost in the semis last season before seeing Kylian Mbappe depart for Real Madrid, but without him they have won a domestic league and cup double while also knocking out three Premier League teams -- Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal -- to get to the final.
' Opportunity to make history'
'Now is the time to get the trophy and bring it home,' added Marquinhos.
Alongside him was Ousmane Dembele, who has been converted this season from a winger into a lethal striker with 33 goals in all competitions. That has made him a candidate to win the Ballon d'Or.
'I am really proud to be here in the final. We have worked so hard,' said Dembele, who was sent off when PSG lost 1-0 to Bayern in Munich in the league phase in November.
At that point there was a real danger PSG would be eliminated before the knockout stage, but the improvement since has been spectacular.
'It wasn't easy at the start of the campaign but we have changed the dynamic in the second half of the season and it is exceptional to be here in Munich for the final. We feel lots of joy even though we are going to take the game very seriously.'
Coach Luis Enrique has the chance to win his second Champions League title, 10 years after getting his hands on the trophy with Barcelona.
Then, as now, he came up against an Italian team in Germany, with Barca defeating Juventus in Berlin.
'Now I have 10 years more experience and I will just try to transmit to the players how great an opportunity it is for us to play a Champions League final,' said the Spaniard.
'We have the opportunity to make history, to do something nobody else has ever done for this club before, but at the same time we also have to manage our emotions so they don't become too much for us.
'I think we are prepared, Inter too no doubt, so I think it will be a really great final and of course the aim is to win it.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tennis-Swiatek digs herself out of deep hole to reach French Open last eight
Tennis-Swiatek digs herself out of deep hole to reach French Open last eight

The Star

time25 minutes ago

  • The Star

Tennis-Swiatek digs herself out of deep hole to reach French Open last eight

Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros, Paris, France - June 1, 2025 Poland's Iga Swiatek serves during her fourth round match against Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina REUTERS/Denis Balibouse PARIS (Reuters) -Four-times champion Iga Swiatek clawed her way back from the brink to qualify for the French Open quarter-finals as she beat her clay court nemesis Elena Rybakina after a high-octane decider on Sunday. The fifth-seeded Pole looked out of sorts as she trailed 6-1 2-0 on Court Philippe Chatrier, leaving the crowd stunned, but Swiatek found her groove and some grit to prevail 1-6 6-3 7-5. Her final opponent from last year, Jasmine Paolini, was on the wrong end of another dramatic last-16 clash against 13th seed Elina Svitolina of Ukraine as the Italian wasted three match points in a 4-6 7-6(6) 6-1 defeat. Svitolina will provide the next test for Swiatek, who continues her quest to become the first female player since tennis turned professional to claim the singles' title four times in a row at Roland Garros. The only women to win the singles at Roland Garros in four straight years were Jeanne Matthey from 1909-12 and Suzanne Lenglen from 1920-23 when only French players competed. Since tennis turned professional in 1968, Swiatek is one of three women with Monica Seles and Justine Henin to enjoy three consecutive triumphs in Paris and on Sunday it looked like her quest for a fourth straight was going to crash to a halt. The 12th-seeded Rybakina made a bullet start, putting Swiatek on the back foot with some powerful baseline play and racing to a 5-0 lead, threatening to inflict on the former world number one her first bagel at a Grand Slam. "It was as if I was playing (men's world number one and heavy hitter) Jannik Sinner," Swiatek joked. DOUBLE FAULTS If there was any sign that Swiatek was rattled, it was her three double faults at 2-2 in the second set. The fifth seed still held though and it proved to be a turning point as she went on to break to love and move 4-2 up, bagging 10 consecutive points in the process to send the clash into a decider. At 4-4, with Rybakina serving at 15-40, the Kazakh appeared to have double-faulted on break point. Both players were walking towards their benches when chair umpire Kader Nouni's deep voice overruled the line judge's call. The reversal – met with murmurs from the crowd – offered Rybakina an unexpected lifeline as the air filled with electricity. Swiatek later saved a game point with a blistering forehand winner, but it was Rybakina who ultimately secured the crucial hold, shifting the weight of expectation squarely onto her opponent's shoulders. Swiatek cooled down and held, then broke and finished it off on the second match point before unleashing a huge scream and bumping her chest in a mix of released anger and relief. "In the first set, with her playing like that I felt I did not have a single chance," said Swiatek, who had lost to Rybakina in their two previous encounters on clay. "Using the top spin was the plan from the beginning but I did not feel she gave me the space to do that. But I'm happy that I was patient enough to stay in the game and use any opportunity that came to me." Elsewhere in the top half of the draw, Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen battled on, the Chinese eighth seed overcoming Russia's Liudmila Samsonova 7-6(5) 1-6 6-3, with a potential clash against world number one Aryna Sabalenka looming. In the men's draw, world number 12 Tommy Paul blitzed Australian Alexei Popyrin 6-3 6-3 6-3 to become the first American male player to reach the French Open quarter-finals in 22 years. Paul matched Andre Agassi's run from 2003 after Americans on Saturday equalled a 40-year-old record with five women and three men reaching round four of the clay court Grand Slam. (Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Ken Ferris)

Soccer-PSG's Dembele and Doue named Champions League players of the season
Soccer-PSG's Dembele and Doue named Champions League players of the season

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Soccer-PSG's Dembele and Doue named Champions League players of the season

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - Champions League - Final - Paris St Germain v Inter Milan - Allianz Arena, Munich, Germany - May 31, 2025 Paris St Germain's Desire Doue celebrates scoring their third goal with Ousmane Dembele and Nuno Mendes REUTERS/Stephanie Lecocq/File Photo MUNICH, Germany (Reuters) -Paris St Germain striker Ousmane Dembele was named Champions League Player of the Season by UEFA on Sunday after his turnaround season ended with him playing a big role in his side winning the competition for the first time. Dembele's teenage teammate Desire Doue was named Champions League young player of the season by European soccer's governing body. Dembele struggled early in the campaign, dropped by coach Luis Enrique for a league phase game with Arsenal for disciplinary reasons, but the 28-year-old went on to score eight Champions League goals after his switch to a more central role. While Dembele failed to find the net in PSG's 5-0 thrashing of Inter Milan in Saturday's final in Munich, he was singled out by the manager for his performance. "I would give the Ballon d'Or to Mr. Ousmane Dembele," Luis Enrique said. "The way he defended tonight, just that alone could be worth the Ballon d'Or. That's how you lead a team. Goals, trophies, leadership, defence, his pressing." The 19-year-old Doue wrapped up his extremely impressive campaign by creating the opening goal in the final for Achraf Hakimi before scoring twice himself. PSG had seven players named in the competition's team of the season while humbled finalists Inter had just one included. Team of the season: Goalkeeper: Gianluigi Donnarumma (PSG) Defenders: Achraf Hakimi (PSG), Marquinhos (PSG), Alessandro Bastoni (Inter), Nuno Mendes (PSG) Midfielders: Vitinha (PSG), Declan Rice (Arsenal) Forwards: Lamine Yamal (Barcelona), Desire Doue (PSG), Ousmane Dembele (PSG), Raphinha (Barcelona) (Reporting by Trevor Stynes; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

European champions PSG land back in Paris ahead of victory parade
European champions PSG land back in Paris ahead of victory parade

New Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • New Straits Times

European champions PSG land back in Paris ahead of victory parade

PARIS: Paris Saint-Germain's players and staff landed back in the French capital on Sunday ahead of a victory parade on the Champs-Elysees to celebrate with their fans after emphatically ending their long wait to win the Champions League. Coach Luis Enrique and his team including Desire Doue, the 19-year-old who lit up the final in Munich on Saturday by scoring twice in the stunning 5-0 win against Inter Milan, will also be hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron. More than 100,000 people are expected to watch their heroes in the parade on Paris' showpiece avenue after the team won the biggest prize in European club football for the first time in their history. An estimated 11.8 million viewers watched the game on French television which sparked a long night of wild celebrations. Fans thronged the streets of the capital, letting off flares and fireworks as decades of pent-up frustration were released. Police made nearly 600 arrests across France, the interior ministry said, after more than 200 cars were torched and police clashed with youths. In the southwest town of Dax, a 17-year-old boy died after being stabbed in the chest. A 23-year-old man riding a scooter in central Paris was also killed after being hit by a vehicle. A policeman was put in an induced coma after being injured by a firework. PSG condemned the violence "in the strongest possible terms" on social media on Sunday, adding that winning the title "should be a moment of collective joy, not of unrest and disorder." "These isolated acts are contrary to the club's values and in no way represent the vast majority of our supporters, whose exemplary behaviour throughout the season deserves to be commended," they said. The club called on the public "to show responsibility and respect" during the parade on the Champs-Elysees, which will be closed to traffic and surrounded by tight security, and the party at home ground Parc des Princes which will close the celebrations. A victory parade by Liverpool Football Club's players in the English city last Monday ended in horrific scenes after a car ploughed into the crowd, leaving 79 people injured. In a message on X, formerly Twitter, Macron hailed a "day of glory for PSG." "Bravo, we are all proud," he wrote. "Paris is the capital of Europe tonight." The margin of victory was the greatest in a final in the history of the Champions League or the European Cup that preceded it. Many of the stars of the team, one of the youngest in the competition, are drawn from the huge football talent pool in the Paris suburbs after PSG's Qatari owners turned their back on their former policy of signing star players like Neymar and Lionel Messi. While Doue cemented his status as a rising star in world football, Senny Mayulu, another 19-year-old, came on as a substitute towards the end of the match and scored the fifth goal. Mayulu said afterwards that the achievement would take time to sink in. "I still can't believe it, I think it will only seem real tomorrow. In the dressing room, everyone broke down in their own way, you could see it in their eyes, people were filled with joy and pride." Lifting the trophy on Saturday after losing in their only other appearance in the final five years ago was the result of hundreds of millions of euros pumped into PSG since Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) bought an ailing club in 2011. "The objective now is to win again. It has taken 14 years of hard work but we are building something for the future," PSG president Nasser al-Khelaifi said.--AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store