Tuesday, 3 June 2025

Jadon Sancho Potential Destinations: Five Clubs That Could Sign Man Utd Winger


 

Jadon Sancho’s long-term future doesn’t reside in west London, it turns out.

There were times during his loan spell when Sancho and Chelsea appeared a natural fit. He purred early on, building on the momentum regained at Signal Iduna Park during the back-end of 2023–24, and there didn’t seem to be any doubt that the Blues would opt to sign the winger permanently.

But then the second half of the season happened.

While Sancho played a leading role in the club’s Conference League success, his Premier League form throughout 2025 was indifferent at best. His contrasting fortunes in the two competitions left Chelsea with a dilemma, and a dispute over personal terms will ultimately lead to Sancho returning to Manchester United.

So, who will be there to pick up the pieces? With United unlikely to entertain a revival, Sancho is bound to seek an alternative route for potential rejuvenation.

Here are five clubs that could sign the 25-year-old this summer.

Borussia Dortmund

Sancho offered signs of life on loan at BVB last season. / IMAGO/Revierfoto

Ah, Dortmund. There’s always Dortmund.

Sancho earned his major break in the Ruhr region, with his dazzling form eventually evolving him into a £73 million asset. However, Erik ten Hag failed to set up his shiny new toy for success at Old Trafford and the player himself struggled to deal with the absence of space supplied by the Premier League.

Sancho’s first two-and-a-half years at United were bereft of memorable moments, and Dortmund offered the winger an olive branch midway through the 2023–24 season by agreeing to sign him on loan for the remaining months of the campaign.

While it was clear that he’d lost a step, Sancho showed during Dortmund’s run to the Champions League final that he could still hang with the very best. He was lauded for his performance in the semifinal against Paris Saint-Germain before his team were beaten by Real Madrid at Wembley.

Despite his on-field upsurge, Dortmund opted against signing him due to the finances involved and his reported off-field mishaps, including poor training performances. Now that he’s available again, the German club will inevitably be linked. However, Sancho’s second stint with the club may have cost him another opportunity to shine at Signal Iduna Park.

Bayer Leverkusen

Erik ten Hag has succeeded Xabi Alonso in Leverkusen. / IMAGO/PA Images

Okay, so a third Dortmund stint may be off the cards for Sancho, but might the man who oversaw his Manchester United arrival be willing to team up with him again?

There have been reports of Bayer Leverkusen, now led by Erik ten Hag, making a move, but surely the Dutchman’s presence has reduced the chances of the German club making a play for the Englishman?

While Sancho was signed under Ten Hag’s watch at Old Trafford, the pair later had a very public feud at the start of the 2023–24 season which led to the winger’s Dortmund loan in January. Sancho returned to United for preseason last summer and their relationship may have improved before he left for Chelsea, but the pair won’t be writing to one another at Christmas.

At the start of a new job, Ten Hag is unlikely to sign someone who will constantly remind him of a bleaker time. Sancho, meanwhile, surely won’t want to play for a manager who’s already failed to get anything close to the best out of him.

Juventus were linked when Thiago Motta was in charge. / IMAGO/IPA Sport

Plenty has changed in Turin since Juventus were linked with a move for Sancho last summer. The Old Lady was set to embark on an exciting new dawn with Thiago Motta at the helm, but the Italian failed to last his debut campaign.

Juve cut ties with Motta long before the season drew to a close, and they turned to the underrated Igor Tudor to put out a few fires. Their search for a long-term Motta successor has been pretty humiliating so far, and there’s every chance Tudor remains in charge.

If three-at-the-back advocate Tudor remains, Juventus won’t be going near Sancho. You can imagine those two butting heads.

There’s scope for Sancho, who struggles to burst beyond players but remains a technically sound winger capable of creating a yard of separation with a subtle move, to thrive in Italy, but which clubs would take him? His lofty wage demands are one issue, but Sancho’s not exactly a player the likes of Antonio Conte and Max Allegri will be chomping at the bit to work with.

Newcastle United

Newcastle are in the market for a winger. / IMAGO/IPA Sport

Sancho wasn’t bad during his loan spell at Chelsea, but much of 2024–25 seemingly drifted him by. His stock didn’t take much of a hit, and there will be some clubs who will continue to be tempted based on what he often produced at Dortmund.

While a move abroad seems likely, Sancho‘s Premier League career isn’t dead yet. There may be a couple of clubs, if they can negotiate an amicable deal financially, willing to take a punt on the Englishman.

One of those is Newcastle United, who have seemingly missed out on Bryan Mbeumo to the Red Devils and are certainly in the market for another winger despite Jacob Murphy’s career year. If there’s a manager you’d fancy to get a tune out of Sancho, it’s Eddie Howe.

If he can get Murphy looking like a competent footballer and some, he’ll surely be able to work some magic with the gifted Sancho.

Saudi Pro League

Al Hilal and Al Ahli are two clubs backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. / IMAGO/Ali Issa

This looks like where Sancho could be heading. While exact figures haven’t been disclosed, you have to think the winger was demanding flat-out silly money from Chelsea to sign permanently this summer.

The 25-year-old signed a contract with Man Utd worth a reported £250,000-a-week in 2021.

Sancho’s body of work over the past four years means no clubs in Europe would be willing to offer him that sort of money, and If he doesn’t lessen his wage demands, Saudi Arabia seems like the only option for the Englishman.

The four PIF-backed Saudi Pro League clubs have cash to burn, and they’re desperate to land a big name or two this summer. Interest is surely bound to arrive from the Middle East, but does Sancho, at 25, want to take such a step at this stage of his career? It may be his only choice.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/jadon-sancho-potential-destinations-five-clubs-that-could-sign-man-utd-winger-41201335

Jadon Sancho: Chelsea to pay £5m penalty fee after transfer decision on Manchester United winger



The winger impressed in flashes but the Blues were unwilling to match his wages

Future uncertain: Jadon Sancho will not stay on at Chelsea

Jadon Sancho will return to Manchester United after Chelsea failed to agree terms to sign the Englishman on a permanent deal.

Sancho spent this season on loan with the Blues, who had an obligation to buy him for £25million if they finished in the top 14 of the Premier League table.

Because Chelsea finished fourth, that clause came into effect.


However, they could not agree personal terms with Sancho. Chelsea were unwilling to inherit his inflated wages at United, and a salary that fit within the Blues’ incentive-driven wage structure could not be agreed upon.

He will leave on June 30 upon the expiry of his loan contract. Chelsea will pay United a penalty fee of £5m for failing to adhere to their obligation to buy.

Sancho scored five goals and contributed 10 assists in 41 appearances for Chelsea, including finding the net in the Conference League final last month when they beat Real Betis 4-1 in Wroclaw to win their first silverware since February 2022.

Ending on a high: Sancho’s goal in the conference league final was his last action in a Chelsea shirt

Chelsea FC via Getty Images

The Blues did not pay an up-front loan fee to sign Sancho from United last summer.

He will be allowed to assess his options this month, with his future at United still uncertain.

Sancho will not play at the Club World Cup, and Chelsea are hoping to sign a right-footed left winger before beginning their campaign in the United States later this month.

Standard Sport reported on Monday that Borussia Dortmund’s Jamie Gittens is a player of interest and they are weighing up submitting a bid following talks. They also have United’s Alejandro Garnacho and the Athletic Bilbao winger Nico Williams on their list.

The Blues are set to announce the signing of Ipswich striker Liam Delap, having triggered his relegation release clause of £30m.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/jadon-sancho-chelsea-to-pay-5m-penalty-fee-after-transfer-decision-on-manchester-united-winger-41198537

Monday, 2 June 2025

Inter coach Simone Inzaghi still undecided about future several hours before key meeting with Nerazzurri



 As the Nerazzurri board are several hours away from meeting with the former Lazio coach to discuss his future as only one year remains on his contract following the investigating 5-0 defeat in the Champions League final, Simone Inzaghi still remains undecided regarding his future at Inter.

Sky Sports’ Gianluca Di Marzio reports that despite the humiliating result and performance portrayed in Munich in which Luis Enrique tactically out-classed the Italian tactician, the board still hold firm on their position to be willing to continue with Inzaghi heading into next season.

However, Simone finds himself indecisive on whether he will part ways with the Milanese club following the meeting and put an end to his four-year era at Inter.

Whilst many clubs are monitoring the situation very carefully, Saudi Arabian giants Al Hilal seem to have made the most concrete contacts in recent weeks, as a two year contract with a salary of €25m per-season is on the table for  49-year-old coach.

With plenty of uncertainty surrounding Inzaghi’s future at Inter, the board have begun exploring alternative options, having made contact with Cesc Fabregas of Como and Roberto De Zerbi of Marseille to take over at the helm in the event Inzaghi heads out the door.

Julian Faustini Ι GIFN


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/inter-coach-simone-inzaghi-still-undecided-about-future-several-hours-before-key-meeting-with-nerazzurri-41197183

Manchester City and Wolves close to Ait-Nouri agreement


 

Manchester City and Wolves expect to reach an agreement for the transfer of Rayan Ait-Nouri.

The Algerian has emerged as Manchester City’s top target to strengthen at left-back with negotiations ongoing between the Premier League sides. Ait-Nouri has just 12 months to run on his contract and Wolves will reluctantly sanction his sale this summer.

The 23-year-old has made 157 appearances for Wolves since joining the club on an initial loan deal from Angers in 2020.

Last season, he scored four goals and provided seven assists in the Premier League for Vitor Pereira’s team. No defender was directly involved in more Premier League goals. Ait-Nouri has featured predominantly at wing-back for Wolves, but has experience as a more orthodox full-back and on the left side of a back three.

Manchester City have prioritised the signing of a new left-back with Josko Gvardiol earmarked for a more central role next season. Nico O’Reilly deputised over the run-in but Guardiola has insisted the academy graduate’s long-term future is in midfield.

The Citizens hope to wrap up the transfer of Ait-Nouri before beginning their Club World Cup campaign. City start the tournament against Morocco’s Wydad AC on June 18th. The Athletic are reporting that both City and Wolves expect an agreement to be reached, following productive talks.

Ait-Nouri is set to become Wolves’ second high-profile sale of the summer. On Sunday, it was announced that Manchester United had signed Matheus Cunha from Wolves in a deal worth £62.5m, subject to visa and registration.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/manchester-city-and-wolves-close-to-ait-nouri-agreement-41193852

Sunday, 1 June 2025

Monday’s briefing: Matheus Cunha and Caoimhin Kelleher set for transfers



 Manchester United started their summer business by reaching an agreement with Wolves to sign Matheus Cunha.

The Brazilian forward will be Ruben Amorim’s first summer signing after a disappointing campaign saw the Red Devils finish 15th in the Premier League and lose to Tottenham in the Europa League final.

From Molineux to Old Trafford

Brazil forward Cunha has been in Manchester over the weekend to put the finishing touches to his move to Old Trafford, which is subject to a visa and registration.

The 26-year-old, who has won 13 senior caps for Brazil, scored 18 goals in all competitions last season.

A United statement read: “Manchester United has reached agreement with Wolverhampton Wanderers for the signing of Matheus Cunha.

“The Brazilian forward’s signing is subject to visa and registration. Everyone at Manchester United looks forward to welcoming Matheus to Old Trafford.”

England squad enjoy F1 before qualifier

England took time out of their preparations for the World Cup qualifier against Andorra by enjoying a day at the Spanish Grand Prix.

Captain Harry Kane and his men watched on as Oscar Piastri pipped Lando Norris in Barcelona.

Meanwhile, despite not being named in the squad, Manchester City defender John Stones has also linked up with Thomas Tuchel’s group to continue his rehabilitation following a spell on the sidelines and was pictured alongside Kane at the circuit.

Oldham secure promotion

There were 52,115 in attendance at Wembley as Oldham scored twice in two minutes in extra time to beat Southend 3-2 in the National League play-off final and secure promotion to League Two.

Manny Monthe’s early own goal was cancelled out by Joe Garner’s penalty before Southend went ahead through Leon Chambers-Parillon’s 91st-minute goal.

But James Norwood and Kian Harratt struck to help Oldham follow Barnet into the English Football League.

Brentford look to Kelleher

With Mark Flekken set to move to Bayer Leverkusen, Brentford have turned to Kelleher.

A reported initial fee of £12.5m for the second-choice Liverpool goalkeeper can rise to £18m if performance-related requirements are met.

Republic of Ireland international Kelleher, who has a year left on his contract at Anfield, played over a quarter of the champions’ Premier League matches this season when first-choice Alisson Becker was injured.

What’s on today?

Australia’s Matildas host Argentina in an international friendly in Canberra, with South Korea and Colombia also facing off.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/mondays-briefing-matheus-cunha-and-caoimhin-kelleher-set-for-transfers-41192785

Two dead and hundreds arrested as PSG fans celebrate historic Champions League win with flares and fireworks



 Two people have died and more than 500 have been arrested after disorder broke out during Champions League final celebrations in France following Paris St Germain’s win, the French interior ministry has said.

Wild celebrations erupted across the French capital and beyond after PSG crushed Italian opponents Inter Milan to win the Champions League for the first time.

However, skirmishes with police following the win spoilt the party.

The interior ministry said 192 people were injured and there were 692 fires, including 264 involving vehicles.

As of Sunday morning, 559 people had been arrested, including 491 in Paris, which led to 320 people being placed in police custody, 254 of them in Paris, the ministry added.

Some 22 members of the security forces and seven firefighters were harmed.

Flares and fireworks lit up the city, car horns blared, and the Eiffel Tower was illuminated in blue and red.

The final in Munich was widely watched across Paris, including inside PSG's Parc des Princes stadium, where the match was broadcast on a giant screen.

However, the 5-0 victory over Inter Milan also led to some unrest, with flashpoints and arrests occurring even during the game.

Outside the stadium, a brief clash erupted during the first half between celebrating PSG fans letting off flares and riot police, who responded with tear gas to disperse the crowd.

At the top of the Champs-Élysées avenue, a water cannon was deployed to protect the Place de l’Étoile, near the Arc de Triomphe. Police reported that a large crowd, not watching the match, attempted to breach a barrier to confront the police.

Paris Saint-Germain fans celebrate the team's victory on the Champs-Elysees avenue after the Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan (AP)

Mindful of any celebrations getting out of hand, as has often been the case in Paris during high-profile soccer matches, PSG forward Ousmane Dembélé urged fans after the final to show restraint amid their euphoria.

“Let’s celebrate but without breaking everything in Paris," he told broadcaster Canal Plus.

It was hoped PSG's rout of seasoned campaigner Inter — a three-time Champions League winner — would grab the headlines.

“I don’t have words," said 19-year-old PSG forward Désiré Doué, who scored twice and set up one goal in a mesmerising performance. "But what I can say is ‘Thank you Paris,’ we did it.”

At the Place de la Bastille, there were joyous scenes as fans climbed onto the base of the famous column, singing, dancing and letting off flares, while those around joined in.

At one point, motorbikes loudly revved their engines and the crowd cheered as they did laps around the column. There were no police nearby and, by 1am, the atmosphere was upbeat with no tensions and plenty of singing.

Security was tightened up in anticipation of potential post-match violence and 5,400 police officers were deployed on the Champs-Élysées, other key parts of Paris, and its nearby suburbs

Cars are set on fire in Paris following PSG's Champions League victory (Reuters)

Two hours before the 9pm kickoff, the Champs-Élysées was already teeming with fans singing and letting off flares, while the 49,000-capacity Parc des Princes had a heavy police presence outside.

At around 11:30 pm police said they were expecting a mass arrival of fans onto the the Champs-Élysées.

There were outbreaks of violence around three weeks ago after PSG eliminated Arsenal to reach the final. One car rammed into supporters and was later set on fire, while shop windows were smashed. Riot police were still dispersing rowdy fans at 3am and there were more than 40 arrests in the city.

Five years ago, disgruntled fans clashed with riot police on the avenue after their team lost to Bayern Munich in the Champions League final in Lisbon.

When PSG won the French title in 2013 — ending a wait of 19 years — celebrations were cut short on Monday following violent scenes in which fans fought with riot police for several hours, leaving 30 people injured.

There were also incidents on the Champs-Élysées following Algeria's African Cup of Nations win in 2019, and in 2021 following a match between Morocco and Algeria in the Arab Cup, and in 2022 after France and Morocco both qualified for the World Cup semifinals on the same day.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/two-dead-and-hundreds-arrested-as-psg-fans-celebrate-historic-champions-league-win-with-flares-and-fireworks-41189947

Every record PSG broke or equalled in historic Champions League final



 PSG won the Uefa Champions League for the first time ever in historic fashion as they hammered Inter Milan in Munich.

It wasn’t just a beating, it was a non-stop, merciless battering of their opponents, leaving no doubt as to who were the deserving winners of this season’s tournament.

After Marseille in 1993, they are the second French outfit to win the Champions League and, unsurprisingly, set a few records while doing so, so we’ve picked them all out for you here.

Every record PSG broke or equalled in 2025 Champions League final

The 5-0 win was the biggest margin of victory in the final in the history of the competition. Four teams had won by four goals since the inception of the European Cup, but never by five before now.

PSG went two up after 19 minutes, the first time a team had scored two goals inside the first 20 minutes of a Champions League final. By half-time they had attempted 13 shots with five on target, compared to Inter’s two shots with zero on target. There had never been as many as five shots on target difference at the break of a final before.

Désiré Doué is the first player to be involved in three or more goals in a Champions League final. The Frenchman is also the sixth different player to both score and assist in a final, while at 19 years and 362 days, he’s the youngest to do so. He’s just the third teenager to score in a final.

Doué is also the youngest player score twice in a final, as well as the youngest to provide an assist, surpassing Jude Bellingham’s record with Real Madrid against Borussia Dortmund from last year’s final (20 years and 338 days). He set Achraf Hakimi for the opener, the Morocco international’s ninth goal involvement (4G, 5A) this season, the joint-most by a defender in a single Champions League campaign. They other player? Ian Harte, for Leeds United in 2000/01.

Luis Enrique is only the second manager to win a treble with a European club on two different occasions, previously doing so in 2014-15 with Barcelona, along with Pep Guardiola (Barcelona in 2008-09 and Manchester City in 2022-23).

The average age of PSG’s starting lineup (25 years, 96 days) is five years and 146 days younger than Inter’s (30 years, 242 days), the biggest ever age gap between two starting XIs in a Champions League final. The Parisians also fielded the youngest starting lineup in a UCL final this century, while Inter are the first team to ever start as many as three players at least 35 years of age in a decider (Yann Sommer, Francesco Acerbi and Henrikh Mkhitaryan).

PSG played 167 times in the European Cup and Champions League before Saturday, the most games played by a side before winning their first trophy. Arsenal (211) hold the record for most games played without winning it.

Ousmane Dembele provided two assists on the night, taking his goal involvements in the Champions League this season to 14, the most ever by a PSG player in one campaign.

And lastly, Munich has now born witness to a new winner of the trophy in each of the five finals it has hosted. I guess it was just meant to be.

All statistics in this article were provided by Opta.


Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/every-record-psg-broke-or-equalled-in-historic-champions-league-final-41189230

Saturday, 31 May 2025

Three questions ahead of the Champions League final



All eyes are on Munich on Saturday night where the Champions League final will be decided between Inter and PSG.

We look at the big questions that will be answered at the Allianz Arena.

It may be a surprise to many but this fixture actually represents the first ever meeting between these giants of the game.


Interestingly though, it is the second ever French-Italian final in this competition in any guise. On that occasion, Marseille defeated Milan 1-0 (the only time a French side has won it) - and that final also took place in Munich.

It will be Inter's seventh final appearance (winning three of their previous clashes) and is just the second for PSG, having lost to Bayern Munich in 2020.

They have been the outstanding sides in this year's competition, along with Barcelona, and are fitting finalists in a game that is very much poised on a knife edge.

The tactical battle pitting Simone Inzaghi's tried and trusted defensive trio flanked by his always dangerous wing-backs going up against Luis Enrique's fearless youthful forward line promises plenty of excitement.

Between the posts, both coaches can be confident too. Ex-Milan man Gianluigi Donnarumma has excelled throughout the knockout phase, while Yann Sommer has prevented more goals than any other keeper in the competition this season (-5.9) based on the xG quality of effort faced.

We can't call it. Are you brave enough to do so? Let us know in the comments.

Source: https://onefootball.com/en/news/three-questions-ahead-of-the-champions-league-final-41185753

FEATURE | How PSG finally became a likable team on their way to the Champions League final

 


Since PSG’s 2011 takeover by Qatar Sports Investments – a subsidiary of Qatar Investment Authority, the country’s sovereign wealth fund – Les Parisiens had an unflattering reputation in Europe. Not so long ago, PSG were seen as a feckless, directionless, careless assembly of overpaid and overpriced football players whose presence in the Champions League was virtually guaranteed given their domination in Ligue 1.

As for their feats in Europe’s premier club competition, PSG mostly underperformed and even earned a reputation as big-time bottlers. The 2017 Remontada against Barcelona and the 2022 second-half collapse at Santiago-Bernabéu were the prime examples of the latter. Such disappointments made PSG the laughing stock of Europe. In 2023, PSG cut Christophe Galtier loose to appoint Luis Enrique, whose first decision was to tell Neymar Jr. and Marco Verratti, two landmarks of the QSI era, to find pastures new. From then on, PSG finally became a likable team on their way to Saturday’s Champions League final. Here’s how.


Luis Enrique, the energetic boss with an iron fist

Over the years, PSG had appointed high-level coaches such as Carlo Ancelotti, Thomas Tuchel or Mauricio Pochettino. Yet none of them has had a bigger impact than the former Spain manager. Luis Enrique transformed an underachieving squad into a cohesive unit to be reckoned with. The former Barcelona head coach very much created a team in his own image: confident in their strength, energetic, disciplined and clever.

The sense of camaraderie Luis Enrique instilled to PSG is obvious at the sight of forward players tracking back to help their mates, something that so rarely occurred when Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappé featured together. Luis Enrique also managed to bring the best out of players in their peak years, like Gianluigi Donnarumma, Achraf Hakimi and, most of all, Ousmane Dembélé, whose transition from gung-ho right winger to lethal centre-forward was completely unexpected.

The Spaniard’s style of play, his results, his commitment to learn French, his ability to reflect on his own previous mistakes and the grace with which he dealt with personal tragedy are worthy of respect.

A coherent sporting policy

One of the many criticisisms aimed at pre-2025 PSG was the clear mismatch between what the team needed and the players the club signed. The clearest example of this is the recruitment of then free agent Lionel Messi in 2021. Signing the Argentine legend made absolutely no sporting sense and his two-year spell can be considered a failure, both for him and for PSG. The same could be said of Sergio Ramos.

Fortunately, lessons have been learnt. Under the guidance of Sporting Director Luis Campos, PSG shifted from the bling-bling era to a youth-centric policy with an emphasis on French players, whose motivation to represent the country’s best team leaves no doubt. Such a revolution was not without its failures. Two years ago, PSG signed Randal Kolo Muani for €90m, Manuel Ugarte for €60m and lured free agents Milan Skriniar and Marco Asensio with high wages.

The previous transfer windows showed PSG’s ability to get back on their feet. They signed João Neves from Benfica for €60m, half the price of his release clause, and then sold Ugarte – whose tendency to commit fouls and sluggishness proved detrimental to Luis Enrique – for a similar amount. Neves proves an absolute hit, as does Désiré Doué.

PSG very much remain a state-owned club with near-unlimited funds, but at least, they are now seen as serious operators in the market. What’s more, the Ligue 1 champions do not hesitate to spend big if a market opportunity becomes too good to ignore, such as Napoli wantaway winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia.

A new work ethic

The Georgian winger settled seamlessly into the squad and embodies what PSG now stand for. Kvaratskhelia is simultaneously a throwback – with his lowered socks, his George Best-like look and elite dribbling quality – and a modern winger. The former Napoli man is a selfless and tireless player, as shown by his all-action display against Arsenal in the Champions League semi-finals. Kvaratskhelia set up Dembélé’s opener at the Emirates Stadium, recovered more balls than any players on the pitch and helped Nuno Mendes to nullify his opposite number, Bukayo Saka.

PSG players’ willingness to play together is also obvious when their front three permute their positions to become even less predictable. Liverpool skipper Virgil van Dijk – arguably the best centre-back in the world – recently spoke of how we was impressed by Les Parisiens‘ style of play and the effort they displayed when the two sides collided in the Champions League last-16.

A couple of years ago, PSG would have certainly lost in a high-stakes game in an atmosphere as hostile as Anfield’s. But this exuberant, tireless and young PSG are a different breed. And on Saturday night, they could become the second French side to win the greatest prize of all, the Champions League. And if they don’t, they’ll still have something they sorely lacked: likability and their peers’ respect.

GFFN | Bastien Cheval

Source : https://onefootball.com/en/news/feature-how-psg-finally-became-a-likable-team-on-their-way-to-the-champions-league-final-41186615