The Star Malaysia

Can PSG and Real prevent all-English Champs League final?

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PARIS: A second all-English Champions League final in three seasons is in sight with Manchester City and Chelsea in strong positions heading into the second legs of their last-four ties against Paris St Germain and Real Madrid.

In 2019, as Liverpool beat Tottenham in Madrid to win the Champions League, Chelsea had just returned from defeating Arsenal in Baku in the Europa League final.

The talk then was of a new era of English dominance in Europe being ushered in.

Two years on, and despite the twin hits of Brexit and the pandemic, an identical scenario is a distinct possibilit­y.

Pep Guardiola’s City host PSG after winning 2-1 in France, leaving them on the brink of a first ever Champions League final.

The appointmen­t of Thomas Tuchel has transforme­d Chelsea and their 1-1 draw in Madrid makes them favourites to reach a first final since winning the trophy in 2012.

Meanwhile, Manchester United appear certain to reach the Europa League final after crushing AS Roma 6-2 at Old Trafford.

Arsenal could be their opponents in Gdansk later this month, if they can overturn a 2-1 deficit against Villarreal.

It is hard to draw definitive conclusion­s about the meaning of results in the knockout stages in Europe. Ties are often decided by small details.

But there is a pattern emerging, and the indication is some results in last year’s “Final 8” formats – with one-off quarter-finals and semi-finals played on neutral grounds – may end up looking slightly freakish.

Nine months after losing to Lyon in a quarter-final in Lisbon, City look ready to reach that elusive final following over a decade of huge investment from their Emirati owners. Chelsea’s own run is not just about Tuchel but also partly their decision to spend close to €250mil (RM1.2bil) on new signings last summer.

Clubs across Europe are facing serious financial difficulti­es caused by the impact of the pandemic, just as Madrid president Florentino Perez argued to justify the failed European Super League project of which he was the chief backer.

Real and PSG are themselves two of the world’s wealthiest clubs – indeed the Spanish giants were a close second to Barcelona in analysts Deloitte’s Football Money League for the clubs with the biggest revenues last season.

However, the Premier League’s huge domestic and internatio­nal broadcast contracts put its clubs in an enviable position.

“Domestical­ly, the Premier League TV rights deal dwarfs other leagues, worth €3.6bil (RM17.9bil) a year, well ahead of La Liga (€2bil (RM9.9bil)), Bundesliga (€1.4bil (RM6.9bil)), Serie A (€1.3bil (RM6.4bil)) and Ligue 1 (€800mil (RM4bil)),” wrote football business blogger Swiss Ramble last week.

“This helps explain why non-English clubs have been more enthusiast­ic about the Super League.”

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