PSG fear impact of injuries as they put Champions League title on the line
PSG's players celebrate their victory at the end of the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and Arsenal at the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris, on May 7, 2025. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP)
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There is the sense that the new season gets up and running for real this week for Paris Saint-Germain as they begin their defence of the Champions League title amid doubts as to how much longer their squad can handle being pushed to the limit by a crowded calendar.
PSG host
Atalanta on Wednesday for their first game in Europe, three and a half months
after their stunning 5-0 destruction of Inter Milan in last season's final in
Munich.
Luis Enrique's
team will also entertain Bayern, Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United in the
league phase, with trips to Barcelona, Bayer Leverkusen, Athletic Bilbao and to
Lisbon to face Sporting on the horizon too.
Those are tough
games, although PSG's poor start in last season's Champions League has shown
that they might not need to be at their very best immediately.
The French
champions lost three of eight league phase games last season, but still won
Europe's elite club competition for the first time following a dazzling run of form
from the turn of the year.
The concern now,
however, is that last season's exertions could catch up with them and seriously
jeopardise their chances of retaining the trophy.
The Parisians
played 65 games during 2024/25, in a season spanning 11 months. That included
17 matches in the Champions League and seven in the Club World Cup, where their
marathon campaign concluded with a 3-0 loss to Chelsea in mid-July.
Three weeks
later they were back for pre-season training, and a week after that they
started the new campaign against Tottenham in the UEFA Super Cup.
Fast forward a
month and PSG - who won the Super Cup on penalties -have won their first four
games in Ligue 1 but it looks like the recent efforts are beginning to catch up
with them.
Ballon d'Or
favourite Ousmane Dembele and Desire Doue are out for several weeks with muscle
injuries suffered playing for France, while Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Lee Kang-in
and Lucas Beraldo came off hurt in Sunday's 2-0 victory over Lens.
"It happens
to everyone. It is a bit of a difficult time for us because we have a lot of
players injured," said Luis Enrique, the coach with his own arm in a sling
after fracturing a collarbone in a cycling accident.
"I am calm
about it and I hope we will manage to overcome it."
It is not solely
luck that PSG avoided serious injuries last season, owing much to the coach's
management of the squad.
Nineteen PSG
players played more than 1,000 minutes in 2024/25, the same number as Real Madrid
and Barcelona for example.
But the Club
World Cup, often played in searing heat and involving numerous long journeys
across the United States, had to take a toll.
PSG used 19
players in that competition, while Chelsea fielded 27 -- the French side looked
rinsed in the final and were torn apart.
If they do go to
the latter stages of the Champions League again, PSG are looking at playing at
least 55 games this season, including the FIFA Intercontinental Cup in
December.
And there is a
World Cup coming at the end of the season, where a large bulk of PSG's players
will be present.
The year is set
to be even more intense for Achraf Hakimi, who played more minutes than anyone
else for PSG last season -- he will also feature heavily for Morocco as they
host the Africa Cup of Nations in December and January.
Hakimi has no
natural understudy at right-back at PSG, who surprisingly opted not to add
significant depth to their squad in the transfer window, signing only one new
centre-back in Illia Zabarnyi, while Lucas Chevalier replaced Gianluigi
Donnarumma in goal.
"Injuries
to high-profile players are only one visible part of the workload crisis facing
professional football and are not surprising," said global players' union
FIFPro last week.
"The impact
is not felt just by the players but increasingly also by clubs, national teams,
fans and national competitions."
Yet despite the
concerns, there is huge excitement at PSG as they put their title on the line
in Europe.
"It is a
special moment. We know how difficult this competition is, but we are relaxed
about it and we are hoping to put in a good performance in our first
game," said Luis Enrique.


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