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Luis Enrique secures status as one of the all-time greats with PSG triumph
Luis Enrique secures status as one of the all-time greats with PSG triumph

The Guardian

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • The Guardian

Luis Enrique secures status as one of the all-time greats with PSG triumph

At what point did Luis Enrique know it was going to work out, that his Paris Saint‑Germain team would beat Inter at the Allianz Arena to win the club's first Champions League title? The manager had certainly cut a cool and confident figure when he emerged on to the pitch about 90 minutes before kick-off for a quick temperature check with his coaches. The PSG ultras were already behind one of the goals, bobbing up and down en masse. They would be a forceful presence throughout. Luis Enrique was aware that an omen was on his side. Every time Munich had hosted a final in Europe's elite competition, a new champion had emerged. Nottingham Forest, 1979. Marseille, 1993. Borussia Dortmund, 1997. And Chelsea, 2012. Inter had arrived as three-time winners. Luis Enrique is a spiritual person, so maybe that fed into things. What absolutely did was the shining light he had in the sky. 'You will be the star that guides our family,' he wrote in tribute to his daughter Xana in 2019 after she died from bone cancer at the age of nine. Luis Enrique carries more than the unimaginable pain. He feels enriched by the time he was able to spend with her. When the game got under way, everything quickly felt just right for PSG. Luis Enrique had declared his side knew 'how to unpick teams like Inter, how to get that tight-knit defence to unravel'. He believed in his approach, how his players would pass and move, especially the bit about the movement – the positional fluidity, the unusual overloads, the aggression in the press, as well. A 2-0 lead after 20 minutes was fortifying. The way Luis Enrique would tell it, even at 3-0 midway through the second half he wanted a fourth because the game 'could still open up' for Inter. So Khvicha Kvaratskhelia's goal for 4-0 on 73 minutes was probably the moment for the Spanish coach, although he seemed to really let it all out when Senny Mayulu made it five just before the end. The 19-year-old substitute, who had been on for only two minutes, was giddy with joy; disbelief even. For Luis Enrique, it was an example of his Midas touch on the night but also a symbol of something wider in terms of what he has built. An unheralded youngster ought not to be able to do this in club football's biggest game. It is gloriously possible within Luis Enrique's collective. Something felt crystal clear as the PSG captain, Marquinhos, emerged through the golden confetti – detonated a little early – to hoist the trophy; Luis Enrique must now be considered among the all-time greats of his profession. For him, the glory of Munich added up to a second 'classic' treble of his career – league, Champions League, principle domestic cup – having achieved the feat at Barcelona in 2014-15. Only one other manager has done this: his former Barcelona and Spain teammate Pep Guardiola, who pulled it off with Barcelona in 2008‑09 and Manchester City in 2022-23. But it has been as much about how Luis Enrique has succeeded at PSG. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion It has sometimes been possible to detect a bit of sniffiness about his exploits at Barcelona. You know, he inherited Lionel Messi and Neymar, with Luis Suárez added for him. Sergio Busquets, Andrés Iniesta and Xavi were already there, too. It has been different at PSG. With the help of Luís Campos, the recruitment chief, Luis Enrique has created a team – and one in the truest sense. Willian Pacho, João Neves and Désiré Doué were brought in last summer, with Kvaratskhelia, the final piece of the puzzle, joining in January. PSG have spent heavily; it was £200m on that quartet alone. Everything continues to stem from the wealth of the club's Qatari owners. Yet Luis Enrique has proved his genius by assembling a largely unstarry group who play for the badge rather than themselves; a break, frankly, from previous PSG vintages. And one that is capable of hitting such beautifully sweet high notes, which has a defined and likable identity. Ousmane Dembélé, who signed in the summer of 2023, which was when Luis Enrique arrived, has scored 33 goals this season. He did not add to the tally against Inter, although he did contribute two assists and was his usual threat. But it was his work without the ball, especially the energy with which he led the press, that had Luis Enrique purring. 'Everyone is talking about the Ballon d'Or … I would give it to Dembélé just for his defensive work against Inter,' the manager said. 'He showed what he was made of. He was a leader, he was humble.' Luis Enrique had noted a few weeks back: 'The first year at a club is generally not perfect but in the second you grow more in terms of football and confidence.' He called it, he has felt it, the click coming in January when PSG stormed back from 2-0 down to win 4-2 against Guardiola's City at the Parc des Princes in the penultimate Champions League group phase game. Since then, they have ridden the wave past everybody, including Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal, all the way to the crowning moment against Inter. And when it was over, there was the tifo from the PSG ultras. It depicted Luis Enrique and Xana in PSG colours planting a flag in the turf, just as they had done with Barcelona after the 2015 Champions League final victory against Juventus. It was overwhelmingly emotional. Xana can be very proud of her dad.

I was in the heart of PSG's celebrations in Paris – it was a war zone with yobs throwing bottles and launching fireworks
I was in the heart of PSG's celebrations in Paris – it was a war zone with yobs throwing bottles and launching fireworks

The Sun

time3 days ago

  • General
  • The Sun

I was in the heart of PSG's celebrations in Paris – it was a war zone with yobs throwing bottles and launching fireworks

OUTSIDE the Parc des Princes last night, it was carnage. Absolute carnage. No sooner had the final whistle blown in Munich – as Paris Saint-Germain sealed a record-breaking 5-0 Champions League Final win over Inter Milan – the French capital erupted in celebration. 6 6 6 6 Those who live within a few-mile radius of the club's home ground had prepared for the worst, sensibly boarding up their shops and cafes in anticipation of mass trouble, and it proved to be a wise decision. Tens of thousands of people, mostly young men wearing PSG shirts, sprinted away from the club's football ground and once they were outside of the wide police security perimeter, chaos ensued. Motorists had to take evasive action coming off the motorway slip-roads as people dangerously spilled into the street, throwing flares into their path. Soon, the traffic was completely stopped around Porte d'Auteuil as supporters started celebrating in the street – and even jumped on stationary cars. Coaches were blocked from moving forward and it was a surprise nobody was run over in the bedlam and disorder. One large truck did try to drive its way through the mayhem but dozens of blokes simply hitched a ride on the back. The air around the ground filled with the sound of air horns and revving motorbikes. Red and white flares were lit by bare-chested fans who either had scarves around their faces or dodgy cigarettes in their mouths. Smoke bombs were let off and some PSG Ultras brought along firework GUNS, shooting the pyrotechnics high into the Parisian sky at a frequent rate. Though generally it was a mood of celebration and jubilation – it was the club's first Champions League success after all – there were some inevitable casualties. HISTORIC scenes as PSG demolish Inter Milan in record-breaking Champions League final I saw one woman hurt and needing attention from friends while others cowered for cover as fans rushed forward. Ambulances were called to the area and so, too, were fire trucks. And your SunSport correspondent had to sprint away for safety at one point when some of the remnants of the fireworks landed too close for his comfort. The streets around the Parc des Princes, not far from where the Roland Garros tennis takes place, are in a well-heeled area, an influential region similar to Kensington and Chelsea in West London. Yet anyone living in nearby expensive flats, who had been hoping to get to sleep early, would have soon realised their misgivings as the partying went on for hours, and long after 1am. Those who were walking back to the Metro station after watching Novak Djokovic 's win on Court Philippe-Chatrier must have thought they were walking in a war zone. Most of the yobs would not have lived in the local area themselves but they saw this European success as an excuse to break the law and cause disruption. Some reckless parents even brought along their small children when really they should have all been at home. What was surprising was the lack of a police presence to control the lawless situation. There were reports of problems on the Champs-Élysées but in the well-to-do 16th arrondissement there was no police management or control. Almost as if they thought, well we have our perimeter, that is all we are doing, but away from that, you are on your own, lads… Local businesses are used to large numbers of people whenever PSG play at home but this was different – this was on a scale that locals had never seen before. 6 6 In any other situation, these scenes of unlawfulness would not be acceptable but because it is football, the authorities tend to shrug it off as what fans do to celebrate. As someone who has reported on football matches for more than 23 years – and was a season-ticket holder at West Ham back in the 1990s – I'm not easily intimidated by these situations or by rowdy football crowds. Yet you had to keep your wits about you as fireworks constantly went off and fans gathered in large numbers, smoking weed and sitting on bus stops. I had sympathy for those families trapped in their cars as they were surrounded by groups of young men. It could have all easily and quickly turned very nasty – imagine what it would have been like had Inter had won the final? One or two individuals did throw bottles at the odd police van trying to drive through the streets. Shards of glass were scattered all over the pavements. And inevitably, some poor souls will be the ones clearing up all the mess this morning left by the hooligans.

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