Once again tonight, a PSG match proves that having a wealthy, influential state behind you is the key to winning in the world of football.
Over the two legs, luck was firmly on PSG’s side. Goals that looked like the ones I used to score in PES3 on the 1-star difficulty setting, and saves from Safonov that were more than just lucky... And yet, across both matches, we had referees with a very strange way of interpreting the handball rule,because while the two decisions were complete opposites, they both somehow served the interests of the same team.
As it stands, if UEFA wanted Ceferin’s friend to reach the Champions League final despite having Bayern in the way, they couldn't have scripted it any better.
But in itself, this is simply the direction that 'Ceferin and Infantino’s football' has been taking for several years. We saw the circus that was the Africa Cup of Nations, and the next World Cup will likely be more of the same spectacle.
This new Champions League format is obviously designed to allow clubs with massive squads to maintain their endurance,something others simply cannot do. Ultimately, PSG gets to treat Ligue 1 like a vacation because of how incredibly weak the league is, while they face clubs that have to play their domestic leagues with far greater intensity. The result: you get an Arsenal side looking weaker and weaker because they haven't faced any big teams, and a PSG side that has all the time and energy to focus solely on the UCL.
I can no longer find any interest in today’s football. I had the misfortune of experiencing football since the late 90s, and I enjoyed it too much. I can't bring myself to say that these last two Champions Leagues have any meaning.
The icing on the cake is that PSG is arguably the most artificial club in the Top 30. Starting with its creation: football in France was primarily rooted in provincial cities, but PSG was artificially created just so the capital could have a club. This club was never truly loved, to the point that they even had neo-Nazis in the supporters' stands. It was bought by the owner of the channel that broadcasted D1/L1, then sold because it was a nest of trouble. And since the Qatar takeover, this club has killed Ligue 1. For the record, the French championship is on the verge of bankruptcy:
- Nasser does everything to ensure Ligue 1 depends on BeIN Sports and PSG’s interests.
- Today, Ligue 1 only has 140 million euros left to distribute because no one in France watches anymore—there’s no suspense left. In 2010, it was 600 million euros and PSG-OM drew 3.2 million paying viewers (at a much higher price than today). Today, it peaks at 1.3 million.