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PSG MAKE MBAPPE SECOND MOST EXPENSIVE PLAYER IN HISTORY

PSG make Mbappe the second most expensive player in history

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PARIS: French teen sensation Kylian Mbappe joined Paris St Germain from Monaco on a season-long loan in a deal that will make him the second most expensive footballer in history.

“Paris St Germain is delighted to announce the immediate arrival of Kylian Mbappe,” the club wrote on their website, just hours before the close of a record-breaking transfer window.

“The loan agreement also includes an option to buy which, when exercised, will bind the player to Paris St Germain until June 30, 2022.” According to media reports, the overall transfer€ fee could rise to 180mil (RM914mil) including add-ons, which would make Mbappe, 18, second only to new teammate Neymar on the all-time list of costliest transfers.

“It is with great joy and pride that I join Paris St Germain,” said Mbappe.

“For any young person from the Paris region, it is often a dream to wear the red and blue jersey and experience the unique atmosphere of the Parc des Princes.

“I really wanted to be a part of the club’s project, which is one of the most ambitious in Europe.

“Alongside my new teammates, I intend to continue my progressio­n while helping the team achieve the very big objectives it has set itself.”

Mbappe burst onto the scene in the second half of last season and scored 15 goals in 29 appearance­s in Monaco’s run to the French title. He netted 26 times in 44 matches in all competitio­ns.

Brought up in the northern suburbs of Paris, Mbappe was compared to a young Thierry Henry as he first broke into the Monaco side in December 2015, just before his 17th birthday.

He celebrated his PSG move by scoring his first goal for France in Thursday’s 4-0 rout of Holland in qualifying for the 2018 World Cup after coming on as a second-half substitute at Stade de France.

“It was essential for French football that we keep and help develop such a great talent in our championsh­ip,” said PSG president Nasser Al-Khelaifi.

“Among players of his age, he is without doubt the most promising in the world.

“Under our colours, in the midst of truly great players, Kylian will continue his progressio­n in a way that will also benefit the French national team in the months and years to come.”

Also targeted by Real Madrid this summer, Mbappe’s move to PSG will leave many wondering how the Qatar-owned club can avoid sanctions from European football’s governing body considerin­g the investment already made on Neymar.

The French club shattered the previous global transfer record earlier in August when they €splashed out a staggering 222mil (RM1.13bil) to prise the Brazilian superstar away from Barcelona.

Financial Fair Play (FFP) rules currently stipulate that clubs cannot post losses of more than€ 30mil (RM152mil) over the three-year period to 2018, although PSG are hoping the initial loan move will help prevent them from falling fall of the regulation­s.

Among the sanctions risked by PSG if they are found to have broken those rules is a ban from the Champions League.

PSG have already incurred sanctions for a pre-€vious violation and were slapped with a 60mil€ (RM305mil) fines, 40mil (RM203mil) of which suspended, in 2014, and saw their squads for the Champions League cut from 25 to 21 players.

And last week UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin reiterated his determinat­ion to clamp down on clubs caught flouting the rules.

“No country can buy a player ... It is of course the clubs who must buy them,” Ceferin told a group of reporters on the sidelines of the Champions League draw in Monaco.

“I am not talking only about Paris St Germain.”

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 ?? — Reuters ?? Precocious talent: Kylian Mbappe celebrates his goal against Holland in a World Cup qualifying match on Thursday.
— Reuters Precocious talent: Kylian Mbappe celebrates his goal against Holland in a World Cup qualifying match on Thursday.

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