logo
French monuments in trouble while PSG prepare for Champions League final

French monuments in trouble while PSG prepare for Champions League final

Yahoo09-05-2025

Saint-Etienne and Lyon, who are local rivals, are facing up to the end of the French season with trepidation (JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK)
While Paris Saint-Germain are looking forward to the Champions League final and have already wrapped up another Ligue 1 title, two of France's biggest clubs with proud European track records are facing the end of the season with trepidation.
PSG beat Arsenal in their semi-final on Wednesday to set up a final at the end of May in Munich against Inter Milan, the second in their history after a defeat by Bayern Munich in 2020.
Advertisement
It will be the eighth time that a French side has appeared in the final of Europe's elite club competition, with Marseille in 1993 still the only team from the country to have won the trophy.
Saint-Etienne were beaten finalists in 1976, when they lost 1-0 to Franz Beckenbauer's Bayern in Glasgow.
Almost half a century later, they stand on the brink of being relegated to Ligue 2, just a year after coming back up and then being bought by Canadian billionaire Larry Tanenbaum.
With two games of the season remaining they sit in the automatic relegation places, above only a Montpellier side who are already down.
Advertisement
Les Verts, whose tally of 10 French titles is bettered only by PSG on 13, are four points adrift of Le Havre in the relegation play-off spot and five away from outright safety.
That means a defeat away to Reims on Saturday will send them down, while a draw will effectively mean relegation too due to their poor goal difference.
However, a win will keep their hopes alive going into the last day, provided they also get some favours from elsewhere.
"The whole season has been a struggle and a fight for our lives. There is nothing new about that," said Saint-Etienne's Norwegian coach, Eirik Horneland.
Advertisement
"We cannot wait for others anymore. We have to help ourselves. We need two victories to stay in the league."
Saint-Etienne's great rivals Lyon are seventh with two games to play, their hopes of Champions League qualification were dealt a huge blow when they lost 2-1 to Lens last weekend.
Lyon appointed Paulo Fonseca as coach at the end of January in the belief that he could take the seven-time French champions back to Europe's top table.
However, they were three points off the top four then and they still are now, meaning it appears a first Champions League campaign since they got to the semi-finals in 2020 is probably beyond them.
Advertisement
Saturday's trip to third-placed Monaco is a game they simply must win, with the consequences of failing to reach the Champions League potentially disastrous for Lyon.
The club owned by the American John Textor's Eagle Football Group have huge debts and were warned earlier this season by the French footballing authorities that they would be relegated if drastic action was not taken to reduce their liabilities.
"We need to win our last two games and then see where that leaves us," Fonseca said this week.
"It is six years since the club qualified for the Champions League so this is important.
Advertisement
"I want to be the coach who takes OL (Lyon) back there. It will be hard but it is possible."
Player to watch: Andre Ayew
The 35-year-old Ghanaian is hoping to fire Le Havre to survival for the second season running.
On Saturday he will come up against Marseille, the club where he starred at the beginning of his career, making over 200 appearances. It is also the club where his father Abedi Pele played, winning the Champions League in 1993.
Ayew is in line to make the 500th league appearance of his career, spread across stints in England, Qatar and Turkey as well as in France.
Key stats
3 - PSG have lost their last two Ligue 1 games but have not suffered three consecutive league defeats since 2010
Advertisement
6 - Saint-Etienne are on the brink of being relegated for the sixth time in their history
2 - Just two points separate five teams, from Marseille in second to Strasbourg in sixth, in the fight for Champions League qualification
Fixtures on Saturday (kick-offs 1900 GMT)
Angers v Strasbourg, Auxerre v Nantes, Brest v Lille, Le Havre v Marseille, Monaco v Lyon, Montpellier v Paris Saint-Germain, Reims v Saint-Etienne, Rennes v Nice, Toulouse v Lens
as/nf

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

John Textor agrees to sell Crystal Palace stake to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson
John Textor agrees to sell Crystal Palace stake to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

John Textor agrees to sell Crystal Palace stake to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson

John Textor has agreed a deal to sell Eagle Football's 43 per cent stake in Crystal Palace to Woody Johnson, the owner of the New York Jets, according to a person familiar with the proposal. The sale will have to be ratified by the Premier League, with Johnson being the subject of the league's owners' and directors' test, a process which typically takes around two months. But with Johnson having owned the Jets NFL franchise for the past 25 years, it could be completed more quickly. Advertisement Johnson has owned the Jets since 2000 after purchasing the franchise in a deal worth $635million. He was also a contender to buy Chelsea in 2022 before the Premier League club, a London rival of Palace's, was instead bought by the Todd Boehly-Clearlake Capital consortium. The Premier League and the New York Jets have been approached for comment. Should Johnson's purchase be approved it will mark the end of Textor's four years as the fourth general partner at Palace, alongside chairman Steve Parish and fellow U.S. businessmen Josh Harris and David Blitzer. It has potentially positive implications for Palace's Europa League hopes, with UEFA deliberating over whether Eagle — via Textor — whose French side Lyon also qualified for the competition, have 'decisive influence' at Palace. There had been concerns over Palace's eligibility to compete in next season's competition despite qualifying as FA Cup winners, due to Eagle's ownership of Lyon, where it holds a majority stake, putting them potentially at odds with UEFA's rules around multi-club ownership. While the deadline for mitigations was March 1, UEFA may look favourably on the fact that Textor began the process of selling his shares in Palace last year, having hired Raine Group to find a suitable buyer. The deal, though, will not be completed before the governing body makes its decision. Textor initially bought a 40 per cent stake in August 2021, investing £87.5m into the club but has been left frustrated by the lack of collaboration over his multi-club project at Palace. He has disagreed with Parish over the direction of the club and failed to increase his shareholding to take a controlling stake. 'We've reached the point where we have a significant investment in a club we hold in the minority (in Palace),' he told The Athletic last year. 'We're having extreme success in Brazil and early on in France, (and) to not have that same level of integration with our partner in the UK… it just becomes more and more clear that that level of collaboration we want and need works.' Advertisement Eagle Football, which also holds controlling stakes in Brazilian top flight club Botafogo and Belgian side Daring Brussels, 'is simply not a perfect fit for Crystal Palace,' he added. He last year explored the possibility of buying fellow Premier League club Everton before their purchase by the Friedkin Group, while he now has his sights set on Championship sides in England, with the hope that he can secure a new club before he begins his initial public offering (IPO). Textor granted exclusivity to two groups in January, with a U.S. consortium of sport and entertainment executives originally backed by two Saudi brothers Haider and Mansoor Syed, having made an offer to buy Eagle's shares outright. Sportsbank, a sports investment group advised by the former Everton director and experienced football financier Keith Harris, was granted exclusivity to invest in Eagle. Both allowed their periods of exclusivity to lapse without concluding a deal. The U.S. group returned recently to hold talks with Textor with the intention of making an offer in excess of $200m with backing from an American group which has experience investing in soccer clubs. Other offers were received by Eagle, believed to be in excess of that offered by Johnson, but they came too late. Parish, Blitzer and Harris had the right of first offer to buy Eagle's stake in the south London soccer club and were approached by Textor, but according to sources familiar with the situation, their proposal fell short of being accepted. After several false starts, and months of switching between trying to sell and hoping to take control at Palace, Textor finally looks set to depart the club. (Photo by/)

Lyon to secure Manchester City signing after attempts to loan FOUR other of Pep Guardiola's stars
Lyon to secure Manchester City signing after attempts to loan FOUR other of Pep Guardiola's stars

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Lyon to secure Manchester City signing after attempts to loan FOUR other of Pep Guardiola's stars

Lyon to secure Manchester City signing after attempts to loan FOUR other of Pep Guardiola's stars Juma Bah is expected to make a decision on his next temporary club for the upcoming season following conversations with his entourage and Manchester City. When City officials forked out a €6 million fee to acquire the young defender from Spanish outfit Real Valladolid, they did so without a spot in their first-team squad for the 19-year-old, given the arrivals of Abdukodir Khusanov and Vitor Reis in the same winter transfer window. Advertisement Club bosses swiftly arranged a loan deal with RC Lens where Bah would go on to make 10 appearances including eight starts for the French side. However, as the Sierra Leonean youngster makes his way back to the Etihad Stadium, he will be sent back out on loan. There has been several weeks and months of uncertainty as to where the teenage prospect could shine during the forthcoming season, with some reports tipping a move back to Spain with Girona, or perhaps elsewhere in English football. However, now there is an understanding from some quarters that French giants Olympique Lyonnais – who sold Rayan Cherki to Manchester City this month – have emerged as the front runner for Juma Bah's next loan. As reported by French newspaper L'Equipe, a loan for the Sierra Leone international was something discussed between the two sides during the negotiations for Cherki, who departed the Groupama Stadium for the Etihad ahead of the FIFA Club World Cup. Advertisement Although, a move for the 19-year-old has seemingly only followed interest in a number of other names at Manchester City, with Lyon exploring the idea and possibility of securing the likes of James McAtee or Claudio Echeverri on temporary agreements. Furthermore, the report claims that such a duo was preceded by tentative interested in the likes of Oscar Bobb and Abdukodir Khusanov, with Manchester City not interested in allowing any of the quartet to depart. While Lyon appear to be in the lead for landing the Sierra Leonean defender from Manchester City, it has also been claimed that fellow French outfit OGC Nice are another candidate to land the 19-year-old, with a final decision expected in the coming days. It remains to be seen what other names could follow Juma Bah out of Manchester City in the coming weeks, with speculation growing over Kyle Walker and his future, as well as Ilkay Gundogan amid interest from Turkey.

Should the Boston Celtics take Joan Beringer in the 2025 NBA draft?
Should the Boston Celtics take Joan Beringer in the 2025 NBA draft?

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Should the Boston Celtics take Joan Beringer in the 2025 NBA draft?

Should the Boston Celtics take Joan Beringer in the 2025 NBA draft? At just 18 years old, Beringer is an intriguing prospect who stands at 6-foot-10 and weighs in at 230 lbs, playing the center position for Croatia's KK Cedevita Junior club last season. The Strasbourg, France native put up 5.4 points, 4.9 rebounds, and 1.4 blocks per game in that campaign while hitting 64.4% of his shots from the field overall, but just 56.6% from the free throw line. Those might not be eye-popping numbers, but European ball tends to be more of a team effort on both ends, and he accomplished it in just 18.8 minutes of playing time. The hosts of the CLNS Media "How Bout Them Celtics!" podcast, Jack Simone and Sam LaFrance, took some time on a recent episode of their show to talk over Beringer's fit in Boston. Check it out below to hear what they had to say. If you enjoy this pod, check out the "How Bout Them Celtics," "First to the Floor," and the many other New England sports podcasts available on the CLNS Media network:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store