The Guardian (USA)

PSG are learning that star-studded system does not guarantee glittering prizes

- Jonathan Liew

Around 15 minutes into the Champions League final on Sunday night, Kylian Mbappé latched on to a delicious long ball from Leandro Paredes and cut in from the left channel. To his right, Ángel Di María spotted a pocket of space on the edge of the penalty area and made a sharp diagonal run towards it. With Di María totally unmarked 18 yards out and screaming for the ball, Mbappé’s low shot was blocked by Joshua Kimmich.

Around 17 minutes from the end, with Paris Saint-Germain desperate for an equaliser, Neymar gathered the ball about 25 yards from goal. Once again Di María spotted the space, peeled around the back of Alphonso Davies and drifted towards the back post, awaiting the sort of lofted dink from which Kingsley Coman had scored the only goal of the game. Instead, with stars in his eyes and glory in his gills, Neymar blazed a shot from distance that whistled safely into the banks of empty seats at the Estádio da Luz.

Is it unfair to cherrypick two isolated passages of play from a 90-minute game and hold them up as unshakeabl­e testimony? Well, yes and no. You could have pointed out countless occasions this season where Mbappé and Neymar have laid on chances for Di María. You could point, for example, to Neymar’s delightful flicked assist in the semi-final against RB Leipzig, an opportunit­y he could easily have taken on himself.

But equally: like Lee Harvey Oswald and Cat Bin Lady, sometimes you have to be judged by your one-offs. After all, football is not an endless process but a game of discrete beginnings and ends, of definite and binary outcomes. And when the ball lands at your feet in an evenly matched Champions League final, a game of few clear opportunit­ies, there is an extent to which the decision you make at that crucial moment partly defines you as a footballer.

Only Mbappé and Neymar can really know what was going through their minds. But the way they fixed their gaze on the goal as they received the ball suggests their focus was entirely singular. In a tight game where Bayern had more than 60% of possession, PSG dominated in just one major metric: attempted dribbles (13 to five). In the biggest game in the club’s history, when it came to the crunch, PSG’s philosophy with the ball was clear enough. Trust yourself.

And why not? Even in a curtailed campaign, PSG have sailed past the 100-goal mark in all competitio­ns for the eighth season in a row. In the three years they have been playing in tandem, Neymar and Mbappé have shared 160 goals between them. For as long as they have been at the club, they have learned that there will always be plenty of chances for everyone. Why bother passing sideways, then, when you can be the hero?

In many ways, this encapsulat­es the model to which PSG have wedded themselves since the Qatari takeover in 2011: throw enough gifted individual­s at your opponents, and ultimately class will win out. It has worked handsomely in Ligue 1. It may even have worked handsomely on Sunday night, had a couple of cards landed differentl­y. But in many ways it is a model that looks increasing­ly out of step with the prevailing direction of elite football, where a rigidly drilled collective with a defined

 ??  ?? Neymar and Kylian Mbappe both had chances to lay on a chance for Angel Di María but opted to shoot. Photograph: Michael Regan/ UEFA/Getty Images
Neymar and Kylian Mbappe both had chances to lay on a chance for Angel Di María but opted to shoot. Photograph: Michael Regan/ UEFA/Getty Images

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