Back in late November, Paris Saint-Germain travelled to Bavaria for a meeting with Bayern Munich that looked, from the French club’s lowly perspective in the Uefa Champions League table, genuinely perilous. They were sitting 25th in the 36-team hierarchy, stuck in the basement of the competition’s new format with just four points from as many fixtures.
At Bayern they added no points to that tally, losing 1-0 on an evening peppered with conspicuous individual errors. They played the last 33 minutes with 10 men, Ousmane Dembele, the senior striker, having received two yellow cards. By the time of his departure, PSG had long been trailing, the goalkeeper, Matvey Safonov, promoted to the starting XI ahead of Gianluigi Donnarumma, having fumbled at a Bayern corner, inviting Kim Min-jae to head Bayern in front. PSG head coach Luis Enrique returned to Paris to read, in some French media, fevered speculation that he might very soon be sacked.
That all seems a long time ago. Since then, Luis Enrique had been elevated to a peerless status, the only coach ever to have guided PSG to a European Cup, the most prestigious trophy in club football, and something that in over a decade of costly striving, via a long line of coaches with proven expertise in European competitions, the club had never managed to find the right formula for.
Carlo Ancelotti, Thomas Tuchel and Unai Emery all came and left Paris without the big prize that the club’s backers, the deep-pocketed Qatar Sports Investment group who took majority ownership of PSG in 2011, have targeted above any other. When, last month in Munich, they achieved it with the widest margin of victory in a final – 5-0 against Internazionale – in all the European Cup’s 70 years of existence, Luis Enrique stepped into sporting immortality.
Hindsight suggests the exasperating defeat to Bayern in late autumn had been a turning point, the impulse for corrections that would transform Luis Enrique’s PSG from the old caricature of a team who are domestic bullies – they have won 11 of the last 13 French titles – but always brittle against Europe’s elite, into confident, swaggering masters of their continent. Or maybe even the world, if they can overcome Bayern in Atalanta in the quarter-final of the Club World Cup on Saturday, and put themselves in prospect of a semi-final against Real Madrid or Borussia Dortmund.
Since that trip to Bayern, PSG have lost only five matches of 45. None of those defeats were consequential: They had already wrapped up the Ligue 1 title when they lost twice, late on the French season; the narrow losses in single legs against Liverpool and Aston Villa in the Uefa Champions League were both part of aggregate wins in knockout ties. Botafogo beat them in the group stage of the Club World Cup last month, but PSG won both other pool-phase games to secure progress.
And among the heroes of this momentum are, very prominently, Donnarumma, whose No 1 status was put into doubt back in November, and Dembele, who since his red card in Munich, has been smartly polishing his candidacy for the 2025 Ballon d’Or. He is the leading goalscorer for a goal-rich team.
Dembele has 33 PSG goals from his 50 club matches so far, and 25 of those have been scored in the period, since the turn of the year, that the positive momentum truly gathered. It’s a fine tally for a player sometimes deemed as erratic, and asked to shoulder big responsibilities in a squad that last July waved goodbye to the prolific Kylian Mbappe.
Dembele has not been short of allies, either. Bradley Barcola has 21 goals across competitions, Goncalo Ramos 18 and Desire Doue, the 20-year-old who has been rapidly overtaking Barcola and Ramos in the hierarchy of forwards, has scored 15 times. Achraf Hakimi, the tireless marauder from right-back, has reached double figures for club goals in 2024/25. “In this team, everyone can score and set up goals,” observes Dembele.
The appetite for more goals is not easily stated, either. In the calendar year so far, PSG have dealt out a series of pummellings. Poor Brest conceded 15 in the space of three games against PSG in February – one in Ligue 1, and across two legs of a Champions League last-16 tie – but if results like a 6-1 away win at Saint-Etienne and 4-1 against Monaco are not so exceptional in PSG’s domination of their own league, the thumping scorelines against foreign clubs do catch the eye. The 4-0 victory over Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami last weekend that earned PSG’s place in the Club World Cup’s last eight was the 15th time since January 1 they have scored at least four goals in a single fixture.
The juggernaut has rolled over some high-class opponents, too. Along this highway into history Manchester City, Liverpool, Villa and Arsenal were all beaten on the way to the routing of Inter. The Club World Cup campaign began with a 4-0 thrashing of Atletico Madrid.
Yet if PSG have, over the last six months, put a heavy dent in their enduring, past reputation for regularly failing against the heavyweights of Europe, Bayern still have an ominous aura for the French champions.
There was the loss in November. There was a deeply dispiriting elimination in the knockout phase of the Uefa Champions League two seasons ago, a 3-0 aggregate defeat that left Mbappe coldly reflecting of PSG “this is our maximum” and resolving that his personal future would look better served at Real Madrid. Back in 2020, it was Bayern who crushed PSG’s European Cup dream most cruelly. That season, PSG reached the first of their two finals in the competition. Bayern won it 1-0.
But in Atlanta, PSG take on Bayern with, marginally, the status of favourites. “When you have won the Uefa Champions League, you’re automatically one of the favourites for this competition,” said Dembele. “But this is about the 90 minutes. We saw that [in PSG’s loss] against Botafogo in the group phase. What’s vital is that we stay focussed.”
Auron Mein Kahan Dum Tha
Starring: Ajay Devgn, Tabu, Shantanu Maheshwari, Jimmy Shergill, Saiee Manjrekar
Director: Neeraj Pandey
Rating: 2.5/5
The bio
Favourite book: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
Favourite travel destination: Maldives and south of France
Favourite pastime: Family and friends, meditation, discovering new cuisines
Favourite Movie: Joker (2019). I didn’t like it while I was watching it but then afterwards I loved it. I loved the psychology behind it.
Favourite Author: My father for sure
Favourite Artist: Damien Hurst
While you're here
Dates for the diary
To mark Bodytree’s 10th anniversary, the coming season will be filled with celebratory activities:
September 21 Anyone interested in becoming a certified yoga instructor can sign up for a 250-hour course in Yoga Teacher Training with Jacquelene Sadek. It begins on September 21 and will take place over the course of six weekends.
October 18 to 21 International yoga instructor, Yogi Nora, will be visiting Bodytree and offering classes.
October 26 to November 4 International pilates instructor Courtney Miller will be on hand at the studio, offering classes.
November 9 Bodytree is hosting a party to celebrate turning 10, and everyone is invited. Expect a day full of free classes on the grounds of the studio.
December 11 Yogeswari, an advanced certified Jivamukti teacher, will be visiting the studio.
February 2, 2018 Bodytree will host its 4th annual yoga market.
More from Firas Maksad
TCL INFO
Teams:
Punjabi Legends Owners: Inzamam-ul-Haq and Intizar-ul-Haq; Key player: Misbah-ul-Haq
Pakhtoons Owners: Habib Khan and Tajuddin Khan; Key player: Shahid Afridi
Maratha Arabians Owners: Sohail Khan, Ali Tumbi, Parvez Khan; Key player: Virender Sehwag
Bangla Tigers Owners: Shirajuddin Alam, Yasin Choudhary, Neelesh Bhatnager, Anis and Rizwan Sajan; Key player: TBC
Colombo Lions Owners: Sri Lanka Cricket; Key player: TBC
Kerala Kings Owners: Hussain Adam Ali and Shafi Ul Mulk; Key player: Eoin Morgan
Venue Sharjah Cricket Stadium
Format 10 overs per side, matches last for 90 minutes
When December 14-17
Killing of Qassem Suleimani
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more from Janine di Giovanni
FA Cup quarter-final draw
The matches will be played across the weekend of 21 and 22 March
Sheffield United v Arsenal
Newcastle v Manchester City
Norwich v Derby/Manchester United
Leicester City v Chelsea
Key facilities
Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
Premier League-standard football pitch
400m Olympic running track
NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
600-seat auditorium
Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
Specialist robotics and science laboratories
AR and VR-enabled learning centres
Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
Labour dispute
The insured employee may still file an ILOE claim even if a labour dispute is ongoing post termination, but the insurer may suspend or reject payment, until the courts resolve the dispute, especially if the reason for termination is contested. The outcome of the labour court proceedings can directly affect eligibility.
- Abdullah Ishnaneh, Partner, BSA Law
On Women's Day
BIGGEST CYBER SECURITY INCIDENTS IN RECENT TIMES
SolarWinds supply chain attack: Came to light in December 2020 but had taken root for several months, compromising major tech companies, governments and its entities
Microsoft Exchange server exploitation: March 2021; attackers used a vulnerability to steal emails
Kaseya attack: July 2021; ransomware hit perpetrated REvil, resulting in severe downtime for more than 1,000 companies
Log4j breach: December 2021; attackers exploited the Java-written code to inflitrate businesses and governments