The Star Malaysia

It’s Europe or bust

PSG coach Tuchel must deliver in Europe after domestic loss

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PARis: It looks like Paris St Germain coach Thomas Tuchel has no choice but to deliver Champions League success.

There’s one month to go before PSG face Manchester United in the last 16, which gives Tuchel some time to get his tactics right against Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s resurgent side.

Judging by the manner of Wednesday’s 2-1 defeat at home to strugglers Guingamp in the French League Cup quarter-finals, he will need to be wise and ruthless in his decision-making over the next few weeks.

Although it was only PSG’s second defeat of the season, it was as humiliatin­g as it was unexpected and, if he was watching on TV in chilly northwest England, Solskjaer may well have gone to sleep with a smile on his face.

Momentum is shifting back in United’s favour following a dismal start to the season under then-coach Jose Mourinho, while PSG are coming under some pressure after making a blistering start to their French League campaign.

Goals were flying in from everywhere, Kylian Mbappe and Neymar were scoring for fun, and Tuchel received high praise for man-managing his stars with a feel-good approach rather than a firmer and unpopular one employed by his predecesso­r Unai Emery.

Tuchel’s stock among fans and players, grew further after his side beat Liverpool 2-1 in the Champions League, effectivel­y preventing the possibilit­y of a group-stage exit.

The euphoria faded when PSG drew back-toback league games away to Bordeaux and Strasbourg. Neither of those sides have stars, but their coaches frustrated PSG by playing an intensive pressing game depriving them of space and forcing them into errors.

It’s a simple but effective formula when done right, as Guingamp also showed and Solskjaer will doubtless have noted. The sloppy defeat to Guingamp, with three penalties conceded in the second half, raised alarming questions about a lack of concentrat­ion.

With insufficie­nt protection from midfield, PSG’s defence was far too easily breached, prompting rash mistakes from defenders inside the penalty area. Thilo Kehrer, a promising young German defender, has given away four of the 10 penalties PSG have conceded this season.

There were no excuses at either end as a glittering forward line comprising of Mbappe, Neymar and Angel Di Maria – costing a combined €465mil (RM2.2bil) in transfer fees – fluffed their chances against the side last in the First Division.

Tuchel put it down to complacenc­y, a criticism often labeled at PSG’s players in the past.

“We were over-confident for nearly the whole game ... we thought nothing could happen to us and that we’d win, we’ll score and then it’s over,” he said. “It’s our challenge to accept and to improve. You learn a lot from a defeat, no one likes it, but it’s necessary in sport to grow.”

The accepted reasoning is that PSG’s lopsided domestic dominance leads to such over-confidence, which is then punished by equally big – or bigger clubs – in the Champions League. Real Madrid knocked out PSG last season, Barcelona the season before, and equally ambitious nouveau-riche club Manchester City did so in 2016.

But it is beginning to sound more like an excuse and has to stop immediatel­y.

If PSG want to be acknowledg­ed as a leading club, rather than an emerging one, they have to go far in Europe because, since cash-rich Qatari investors QSI took over in 2011, PSG have never reached the semi-finals.

Reaching the semis seems like the minimum Tuchel needs to prove he’s the right person to take the club forward. This season is therefore shaping up as make-or-break for PSG and for Tuchel given what happened to his predecesso­rs.

After two years in charge, Emery’s contract was not renewed despite leading PSG to an emphatic domestic treble last season.

Laurent Blanc was given a new contract in early 2016 and then abruptly sacked a few months later to make may for Emery.

Like Emery, Blanc won the domestic treble but ultimately paid the price for his side’s shortcomin­gs in Europe.

To exceed them, Tuchel has to deliver in Europe’s biggest club competitio­n.

 ?? — AFP ?? It’s high time: Paris St Germain coach Thomas Tuchel (right) celebratin­g with defender Thiago Silva (centre) and goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon after the Champions League Group C match against Liverpool at the Parc des Princes in Paris in November. PSG won 2-1.
— AFP It’s high time: Paris St Germain coach Thomas Tuchel (right) celebratin­g with defender Thiago Silva (centre) and goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon after the Champions League Group C match against Liverpool at the Parc des Princes in Paris in November. PSG won 2-1.

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