In an interview with Top Mercato, Samuel Umtiti paid a glowing tribute to Luis Enrique, the 55-year-old Paris Saint-Germain coach. The former French international defender highlighted the Spanish manager’s clear thinking, his high daily standards, and his ability to keep the entire squad engaged.
Umtiti: “I was also impressed by the way he instilled calm in his team.”
“He’s a coach who showed me a different vision of football, one that resonated with my own. Experiencing that every day allowed me to progress much faster. He focused a lot on the details, on analyzing the opposing team. I found him very, very good at that. I was also impressed by the way he instilled calm in his team, and by his management skills. He’s very tough, because you have to stick to his plan or you’ll be on the bench.
He has a very clear vision. He’s convinced that what he’s doing is the best way to win matches, and for me, a coach needs that certainty to succeed. He showed us in the Champions League that he knew what he was doing, even if the results in the league had been a little less impressive a few weeks earlier.”
Umtiti:”Managing a group that won the Champions League the previous season is very difficult.”
“Managing a group that won the Champions League the previous season is very difficult because you have to keep the team alive, you have to keep everyone involved. You realize that in Paris, even if you change players, those who come in feel involved and perform well. I think he manages his group perfectly.”
Samuel Umtiti doesn’t just paint a flattering portrait of Luis Enrique; he describes above all a coach whose strength lies in a clear vision. In his eyes, the Paris Saint-Germain coach imposes a strong, demanding, and confident vision, without ever giving the impression of improvising. Tactical discipline, analysis of the opponent, the importance of details, and human resource management emerge as the pillars of his method.
It is precisely this consistency that emerges in the former defender’s words: Luis Enrique knows where he’s going, and he leads his team in that direction with total conviction. Even when the results may be less than spectacular, Umtiti points out that the Spanish coach maintains a clear course, a certainty, and an authority that give meaning to his management.
This praise carries even more weight in the Parisian context. Managing a European champion squad, avoiding complacency, maintaining competition, and keeping substitutes engaged is no easy task. For Umtiti, Luis Enrique succeeds precisely where many might lose their way: fostering a cohesive team spirit, not just a starting eleven.
