The Scotsman

‘Nouveau riche’ PSG now on an equal footing with Euro aristocrat­s Bayern

● Free-spending French giants incurred the wrath of Munich great Rummenigge

- By SAMUEL PETREQUIN

0 Edinson Cavani, left, and Neymar, right, in training. The pair clashed over who should take a penalty during a French league match, disrupting PSG’S preparatio­ns. Five years ago, playing Bayern Munich at home would have been a season highlight for most of Paris Saint-germain’s squad.

Now that PSG have transforme­d into a team of megastars, they go into tonight’s Champions League Group B game at the Parc des Princes as favourites. PSG midfielder Marco Verratti said: “We need to enjoy this game because this is one of the first times that I feel we are on an equal foot with Bayern Munich. It’s the result of five years of work.”

In many ways, the meeting between PSG and Bayern can be summed up as a clash between Europe’s latest nouveau riche and one of the most famous representa­tives of Europe’s football aristocrac­y.

PSG, who have been backed by the nearly unlimited funds of Qatar Sports Investment­s since 2011, crave to be regarded as equals by Europe’s biggest clubs. The French league side have thus made a priority of winning the Champions League in their quest for respectabi­lity, but have endured setbacks in the competitio­n so far, the latest one coming last season with a humiliatin­g exit in the round of 16 against Barcelona.

To improve their chances of success, PSG have splashed out €400 million to bring in Neymar and Kylian Mbappe, provoking the ire of rivals including Bayern. When the Brazil star joined from Barcelona in a world record €222m transfer, Bayern CEO Karlheinz Rummenigge said the German side would never spend so much on a player, and called for the introducti­on of a player’s salary cap.

According to PSG coach Unai Emery, Bayern’s criticism of PSG’S big signings is just the result of his team’s metamorpho­sis into a serious contender on the European stage.

“If people talk about PSG a lot, it’s because this is one of the best teams in Europe, and in the world,” said the former Sevilla coach.

“When I was in Spain, I watched the biggest teams in Europe... buy the best players. Then I came here, and we made a big step forward to be able to compete with the best. That’s why we have more enemies now. They can see that this team is serious, and that with the players we bought this year and, in the previous years, we have made a step forward to win the Champions League.”

Bayern and PSG both won their opening games in Group B and will be meeting for the first time in 17 years. Bayern have been quite unimpressi­ve in the German league so far, while PSG have been distracted by a dressing room clash between Edinson Cavani and Neymar after the pair argued over who should take a penalty during a French league match. Emery did not say which one of the two would take penalties if needed against Bayern.

The game will also mark the return to Paris of Carlo Ancelotti, who coached PSG between 2011 and 2013.

“Five years ago, things were different here,” Verratti said. “When Ibra [Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c] and Thiago Silva came here, he [Ancelotti] also played a role. He brought his experience to a club that did not have much.”

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