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6th March 2018
10:10pm GMT

PSG have invested heavily in the last seven years, but watching Tuesday evening's game one-sided showing at the Parc des Princes, one would be forgiven for wondering what it was all for. For all their expensive players, they remain a hugely limited team, and one which appears to experience an extreme inferiority complex when facing the sort of sides they aspire to be.
One area in which they are particularly lacking - especially when it comes to the Champions League against top class opposition - is game management. It was a flaw which was brutally exploited by Barcelona last year and equally so against Real Madrid this time around, if in less spectacular fashion.
They are desperate to succeed, as they should be, but it is a desperation which appears uncontrollable and so pronounced that any game plan they may have prepared gets tossed out the window after the first sign of adversity.
Compare this to Madrid's style of play in Europe, which they honed to what is essentially an art form in the last three years. They are a team in control of almost everything that they do; always ready, always patient, always better.
It is what allows them to sit deep and relax, to counter attack and rip teams apart. Crucially, it is what allows them to frustrate their opponents into silly mistakes and severe lapses in discipline.
It would be foolish to disregard the fact that they are also aided, in almost every tie they play, by a superior group of players.
But while this has not been enough to see them compete domestically this season to their lofty standards, their knowledge that they are at home in the Champions League and at home in its latter stages allows them to navigate these sorts of games with minimal fuss.
For all the money they've spent it is this mentality that their opponents lack. PSG may think they can win the Champions League. Real Madrid know they will.Explore more on these topics: