Mauricio Pochettino replaced Thomas Tuchel as PSG manager in January, signing an 18-month contract; follow both legs of the Champions League quarter-final between Bayern Munich and PSG via our dedicated live blog across Sky Sports’ digital platforms.
By Richard Morgan & Tom Williams
Mauricio Pochettino may have only taken charge at Paris Saint-German in January, but the Champions League quarter-final with Bayern Munich already seems like a pivotal contest for the Argentine – so how has the former Tottenham boss fared so far at the Parc des Princes?
In many ways, Pochettino seemed the obvious candidate to replace Thomas Tuchel when the German was sacked by PSG with the Ligue 1 champions sitting third in the table just before Christmas.
Not only was the 49-year-old available having left Spurs in November 2019, but he was also a popular former player in the French capital, having represented the club between 2001 and 2003.
That popularity only increased when Pochettino almost immediately led PSG to a 2-1 victory over fierce rivals Marseille in the delayed 2020 Trophee des Champions – the French equivalent of the FA Community Shield – the first trophy of his 12-year managerial career.
Meanwhile, in February Pochettino masterminded one of PSG’s most memorable European displays, a stunning 4-1 win at Barcelona that helped set up Wednesday night’s Champions League last-eight showdown with Bayern again, the team that pipped Tuchel’s side to the trophy in August.
However, it has not all been plain sailing so far for the new man in Paris, with Pochettino having already overseen four defeats in his first 14 games at the helm, while Saturday’s 1-0 loss to leaders Lille was unthinkably PSG’s third in a row at home.
And as French football writer Tom Williams explains, the new manager is still to really make an impact on the side.
“His record so far has been a mixture of the very good (the first-leg win over Barcelona, an excellent 4-2 defeat of Lyon prior to the international break) and the very bad (a 3-2 loss at struggling Lorient and home defeats against Monaco, Nantes and Lille),” Williams says.
“The Champions League success against Barca – and particularly the manner of the first-leg victory at Camp Nou – earned him a lot of credit, but it doesn’t feel like he’s really made his mark on the team yet.
“PSG still look like a collection of talented individuals, rather than a proper team, and that was precisely their problem under Tuchel.”
As most new managers tend to do, Pochettino has made some tactical tweaks, ditching the 5-3-2 setup that Tuchel had settled on by the end of his tenure for a trademark 4-2-3-1 system, while there have also been some line-up changes.
The end results, says Williams, have not always been convincing though.
“During Neymar’s recent absence through injury, Pochettino experimented by moving Marco Verratti into the No 10 role and achieved some success, most notably in the 4-1 win over Barcelona,” he says.
“Skipper Marquinhos has been restored to his preferred centre-back role, having often played as a holding midfielder under Tuchel, and Abdou Diallo has come into the team at left-back.
“Pochettino has also helped Kylian Mbappe to rediscover his best form. But despite some bright moments, there’s still a lack of cohesion to the way that PSG play both with and without the ball, which was noticeable in Saturday’s defeat by Lille.”
Ultimately, however, it will be how Pochettino fares getting the best out of his two world-class forwards that will decide how successful he is back in Paris.
“One of Tuchel’s main failings as PSG coach was that he struggled to draw maximum implication from Neymar and Mbappe over a sustained period of time and that’s one of the principal challenges facing Pochettino,” Williams says.
“If he can get those two to run and press and harry opposition defenders in the way that Harry Kane, Dele Alli, Heung-min Son and Christian Eriksen did during the best years of his Spurs tenure, PSG will be a truly terrifying proposition.
“But Unai Emery and Tuchel both tried the same thing and both, ultimately, came up short.”
All of which makes this month’s two-legged Champions League quarter-final clash with Bayern – the first leg of which takes place at the Allianz Arena on Wednesday night – so pivotal for Pochettino.
Win it and not only will he have gained revenge for last season’s 1-0 loss to the Bavarians in the final, but he will also be one step closer to the Holy Grail as far as PSG’s Qatari admin-ajax.phps are concerned, getting their hands on Europe’s premier club competition.
Lose and all the questions about Pochettino having never won a (major) trophy will come flooding back again, and that is before we even start talking about their Ligue 1 title defence.
When the former Spurs boss took over at the turn of the year, PSG sat third in the table, and while they currently lie in second place, three points adrift of leaders Lille, they are now just two points ahead of fourth-placed Lyon with seven matches left to play in this campaign’s Championnat.
So there is little margin for error in the run-in as far as Pochettino is concerned and even though he was only appointed on an 18-month contract – with an option for an extra year – halfway through the season, failure to retain Ligue 1 would lead to serious questions being asked of the new head coach.
“In light of the amount of money the admin-ajax.phps have invested in the squad, it would be nothing short of a humiliation if PSG were to miss out on the Ligue 1 title.
“The competition is fierce, with Lille and Monaco in particularly good form, but PSG possess one of the most lavishly assembled squads in the history of the game.
“The expectation for PSG, every season, is that they will win the Ligue 1 title as an absolute minimum. They’ve only failed to do that twice in the QSI era – once in the first season after the Qataris arrived, when they lost out to Montpellier, and once in 2016-17, when they were pipped to the post by an extraordinary Monaco side.
“Pochettino has credit in the bank because of his prior associations with the club and the fact he only arrived in mid-season, but if he misses out on the title, it will only serve to fuel accusations that he has some kind of blind spot when it comes to leading teams to trophies.”
This being PSG, though, not even getting his hands on the big one will guarantee his survival in the job.
“Of course, if PSG end up winning the Champions League this season, all would be forgiven. But Tuchel was sacked just four months after leading PSG to their first-ever Champions League final, which shows that, where the club’s admin-ajax.phps are concerned, even continental achievements are no guarantee of immunity.”
View from France: PSG face Mbappe dilemma
Recent reports in France claimed Neymar has reached a pre-contract agreement with PSG until 2026, with the club now focused on securing a similar deal with Mbappe.
However, as Williams explains, while the Brazil forward looks set to stay at the Parc des Princes, his strike partner’s long-term future appears less secure.
“It seems likely that Neymar is going to commit his future to PSG in the near future,” he said. “Mbappe’s situation looks a little less clear cut.
“The France international admitted in January that he was “reflecting” on his future and with his contract due to expire in 2022, PSG may face a choice between losing him for free next year or cashing in – as best they can, in the current financial climate – this summer.”
Follow both legs of the Champions League quarter-final between Bayern Munich and PSG via our dedicated live blog across Sky Sports’ digital platforms