The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Defeat could spell end of road for PSG’s Ibra generation

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PARIS: Defeat by Manchester City in the Champions League could mean the exit of Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c and his exalted generation at Paris SaintGerma­in.

Qatar Sports Investment­s have spent heavily at the French club to win the Champions League. Under Laurent Blanc they have won four straight French titles but now have become the first team to lose in four straight Champions League quarter-finals.

“We are very disappoint­ed with the result,” said a visibly drained PSG president Nasser al-Khelaifi in a warning after the 1-0 defeat at Manchester on Tuesday which saw a 3-2 aggregate defeat.

“It’s the fourth time we reach the quarter-finals and are eliminated. Now we have to take a step back and analyse what has happened.”

Ibrahimovi­c, 34, is out of contract at the end of the season. The Swedish superstar, who has never won a Champions League, has already been linked to a move to the English Premier League.

Al-Khelaifi said last month he wants Ibrahimovi­c to stay. But a summer rebuilding exercise could prove a game changer.

Brazilian defender Maxwell is also 34 and with no deal after June. Dutch right-back Gregory van der Wiel is also coming to the end of his contract, while Brazilian-born Italian Thiago Motta is 33 and will be out of contract in 2017.

Paris have the means and the desire to sign a new superstar, with Barcelona’s Brazilian forward Neymar apparently on their wish-list. Al-Khelaifi will surely be tempted to add new faces while keeping the likes of Angel di Maria, Thiago Silva and Marco Verratti.

The other question mark surrounds Blanc, who has a contract until 2018 but has now been to four Champions League quarter-finals -- one with Bordeaux and three with PSG -and lost them all.

“The future? We have a season to finish. We have a French Cup semi-final to try to win and a League Cup final to win,” Blanc said.

“I know that doesn’t have the same flavour, the same excitement as the Champions League but we owe it to ourselves to win them for the club.

“We are very disappoint­ed but we will have to get over it.”

Blanc was in the firing line after abandoning his usual 4-33 formation to play with three central defenders for the first half against City.

It was a gamble that backfired and one that followed a disappoint­ing performanc­e in the first leg at the Parc des Princes.

“What a fiasco” screamed the front page headline on sports daily L’Equipe as the search for someone to blame began.

Former French internatio­nal David Ginola said on BT Sport television that PSG were “lazy” against City and he doubted whether Blanc would still be in charge for the 2016-17 season.

Blanc said “City are a very, very good team and we need to congratula­te them, but I think we can be disappoint­ed because we could and should have done better.”

“In the first half we played with a new system and what happened, happened,” said Ibrahimovi­c who saw City goalkeeper Joe Hart brilliantl­y save two of his free-kicks.

“If it had gone well, nobody would say anything, and now people will say we gave it away. The second half was better, when we reverted to our normal tactics, but we gave away two games.”

From a French viewpoint, the PSG performanc­e leaves a sense of deja vu.

Twelve times in the last 13 seasons a French side has appeared in the Champions League quarter-finals, and only twice have they gone further.

One was Monaco, runnersup in 2004, while the other was Lyon, semi-finalists in 2010. AFP

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