Luis Enrique’s Young PSG Side Blossoms With Identity And Unity As Champions League Dream Grows.
Paris Saint-Germain have long been associated with marquee names and individual brilliance, but under the guidance of Luis Enrique, the French champions are finally taking shape as a well-oiled unit with a clear identity — and the results are speaking for themselves.
Fresh from sealing the Ligue 1 title once again, PSG are now brimming with confidence as they prepare to face Aston Villa in the Champions League quarter-finals, chasing an elusive first European crown.
The transformation under Luis Enrique, now in his second season, has been profound. Last year, the Spaniard led the Qatar-backed club to a domestic double and a Champions League semi-final, with Kylian Mbappé scoring an astonishing 44 goals. Yet, even as speculation around Mbappé’s move to Real Madrid grew — and the forward found himself benched for spells — Enrique remained calm and focused on building for the future.
“All I know is that if everything goes well, next season we will have a much better team in every aspect,” he said last year. Those words now appear prophetic.
From Uncertainty to Unstoppable Form
The campaign did not begin smoothly. Losses to Arsenal, Atletico Madrid, and Bayern Munich in the Champions League group stage, coupled with Enrique’s insistence on playing without a traditional centre-forward — leaving big-money signing Randal Kolo Muani on the fringes — raised early concerns.
But a 3-0 win away to Salzburg in December marked a turning point. Since that night, PSG have gone on a remarkable run of 24 wins and two draws in 27 games, with their only defeat — a narrow 1-0 loss to Liverpool — overturned in the return leg.
Despite Mbappé’s departure, the goals have flowed freely. Ousmane Dembélé has emerged as a lethal forward with 32 goals across all competitions. The trio of Bradley Barcola, Gonçalo Ramos, and teenage sensation Désiré Doué have added 43 goals between them, while the team is just one goal shy of last season’s league total — with six games still to play.
A New Era of Youth and Energy
At the heart of PSG’s resurgence is youth. Five of the club’s 11 most-used players are aged 23 or under, including midfield dynamos Vitinha and João Neves, who drive a relentless high press with energy and intelligence.
Full-backs Achraf Hakimi and Nuno Mendes add width, pace, and quality in both attack and defence, providing a dynamic edge previously absent in the days of Lionel Messi and Neymar.
“Last year was really good. We won several trophies and got to the Champions League semi-finals. This season we are clearly a better team,” said Enrique after the 1-0 win over Angers that clinched the Ligue 1 title.
“The players have shown a level of maturity you don’t necessarily associate with such a young side,” added the 54-year-old coach, who recently extended his contract until 2027. “When I see the team attack and defend all together, it wasn’t a utopian dream.”
Chasing History
Beyond European ambitions, PSG are also eyeing an unprecedented unbeaten Ligue 1 season and will face Reims in the French Cup final. If they succeed, it would cap one of the most impressive domestic seasons in French football history.
“My happiness is not linked to trophies but to the implication of the players,” Enrique remarked. “The profile of the players we’ve signed allows us to build for the medium to long term. Everything is in place to do great things.”
The unity between coach and squad is evident. Defender Lucas Hernandez put it simply: “He is the boss, we follow his ideas and we try to apply them as best as we can. It already worked last season. We’re still following his philosophy this season. Let’s hope it continues.”
As PSG prepare for their Champions League clash with Unai Emery’s Aston Villa, all eyes will be on Enrique’s rejuvenated side. It will also serve as a nostalgic moment — a reunion of two managers who met in the iconic 2017 clash between Barcelona and PSG, when Enrique’s Barcelona famously overturned a 4-0 first-leg deficit with a stunning 6-1 home win.
This time, however, Enrique has built something new — a team, not just a collection of stars. And they are ready to dream big.