A promising future for Mbappé but bad news for Qatari-owned PSG FC that is in tricky transition

A promising future for Mbappé but bad news for Qatari-owned PSG FC that is in tricky transition

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The future looks much brighter for Kylian Mbappé than it does for Paris Saint-Germain. With Mbappé leaving PSG at the end of the season, following former star teammates Neymar and Lionel Messi out of the door, the Qatari-owned club’s project to dominate European soccer has taken another severe blow.

For while Mbappé will have Europe’s biggest clubs chasing him – Real Madrid seems in pole position – PSG faces uncertainty. The cash-rich club’s next steps will be heavily scrutinised.

Who will replace the 25-year-old Mbappé? How will PSG cope without Mbappé given that his goals have helped paper over so many cracks? How does coach Luis Enrique prepare for the rest of this season and the next?

An exasperated Enrique tried his best not to answer at his pre-match news conference on Friday, on the eve of his team’s French league game at Nantes. He flatly delivered one-line responses such as “I won’t comment until the parties concerned have commented” and “No player is bigger than the club.”

When a reporter tried one last time in Spanish, he told her: “I don’t have any information to give you on this subject.”

Mbappe’s exit is also not good news for the French league as it negotiates the next set of TV rights with broadcasters up until 2029. His departure will close the chapter on a local boy who ended up at his hometown club and helped repair its battered image.

Mbappé was 12 years old, playing for his local club AS Bondy in the Paris suburbs, when Qatari owners QSI bought PSG in June 2011. The club was reeling from years of soccer violence, resulting in the death of two PSG fans in the streets around Parc des Princes Stadium, and results on the field were poor with no league title won since 1994.

After QSI’s arrival, the stadium’s hostile atmosphere gave way to cushioned seats and major celebrities like Jay-Z, Michael Jordan and Beyoncé. Nine more league titles followed, giving PSG a national record of 11.

Mbappé joined in 2017 along with Neymar for a combined 402 million euros ($433 million). They helped PSG become the biggest club in France. But QSI really craved a Champions League trophy and a raft of big-name players – including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Thiago Silva and Angel Di Maria – plus a carousel of coaching changes have not delivered it. The club’s motto “Dream Bigger” was splashed on the team bus but PSG reached only one final, losing 1-0 to Bayern Munich in the pandemic-shortened 2020 edition.

So if they couldn’t win the competition with all these stars over the years, what can PSG do without any now? Will Qatar’s ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, lose patience and pull the plug on the whole project? Will the disgruntled fans, already frustrated at leaving Parc des Princes in the future, have enough of the current leadership and turn on club president Nasser al-Khelaifi?

For the time being, matters remain under control and PSG has a Plan “B” in place. Perhaps anticipating Mbappé’s departure, PSG already started shifting focus somewhat by bringing in more French players like Randal Kolo Muani, Ousmane Dembélé and Bradley Barcola, while fast-tracking academy talents like 17-year-old Warren Zaïre-Emery. Mbappé’s younger brother, 17-year-old Ethan, has also broken into the squad.

This represents a considerable shift from chasing star names and gives local youth players more opportunities than before, but performances may get worse.

Mbappé’s goals – 41 last season, 31 already this campaign, a club-record 243 overall – have masked glaring deficiencies in midfield and defense. So many times, he has bailed his teammates out. A look at the statistics of the other forwards does not suggest the same will happen.

Kolo Muani’s season-best tally is 15 league goals, Dembélé’s is 12 and the 21-year-old Barcola is unproven. Striker Goncalo Ramos managed 19 goals for Benfica in Portugal last season but he is a backup forward.

Once again, PSG will likely have to import a leading striker to stay competitive.

  • An AP report
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