In a press conference this Thursday, Pierre Sage, 46, the RC Lens coach, offered a measured assessment of Paris Saint-Germain’s current form. Drawing on PSG’s comeback victory in Monaco (3-2) on Tuesday in the Champions League, the manager emphasized one key point: despite the noise and criticism, their opponents are talking about a PSG that is world-class.
Sage: “Like all other European teams, we know that PSG is one of the best clubs in the world.”
“Regarding PSG, I want to add some nuance: even down 2-0, even after missing a penalty, they were able to win. The performance of turning a match around, coming back to 2-2 before halftime, is already a high-level achievement. Again, this is a team that takes control of its own game. Once they’re determined to win, they do everything necessary to achieve it.” “It’s a team we respect immensely. Like all other European teams, we know that PSG is one of the best clubs in the world.”
In a context where PSG is often dissected under a microscope, by the media as well as by some fans, Pierre Sage has chosen a more detached, and therefore more insightful, approach. For him, the Monaco match was anything but a “crazy game”: being down 2-0, missing a penalty, and still winning is a sign of mastery.
Sage emphasizes Paris’s ability to regain control when it “decides” to do so, as if the capital club itself dictates the intensity and outcome of its matches. It’s also a way of putting some overly definitive interpretations into perspective: those who face PSG don’t see a team in perpetual crisis, but an elite opponent that commands respect at the highest level.
This kind of discourse often says more than endless debates: criticism may be noisy, but the assessment of opponents generally remains more pragmatic… because it is based on what is really happening on the ground.
