Mauricio
Pochettino has repeatedly said he needs time to put his mark on Paris
Saint-Germain and it was always going to be a case of getting through the first
few months unscathed.
The
Argentine was hired as the man to win the Champions League for the Qatar-owned
club after predecessor Thomas Tuchel took them to last season’s final only to
lose to Bayern Munich.
Three
months on from his appointment on an initial 18-month deal and he remains on
course to deliver European success, possibly at the cost of missing out on the
Ligue 1 title, something taken for granted in Paris.
The former
Tottenham Hotspur boss has overseen two stunning away wins in the Champions
League, 4-1 at Barcelona and 3-2 at Bayern last week in their quarter-final
first leg.
After
ousting the Catalans 5-2 on aggregate in the last 16, PSG are therefore well
placed to eliminate the holders and progress to the semi-finals when they host
Bayern in Tuesday’s return. Manchester City could lie in wait in the last four.
“It
was important to beat Barcelona but on Tuesday we will be playing the team that
I think is the best in the world,” Pochettino told Canal Plus on Saturday in a
way of stressing that the job is not done.
But what
kind of job has the 49-year-old done so far at PSG and is he justifying the
decision to sack Tuchel?
On
the one hand the away results in Europe have been stunning, on the other hand
they were fortunate not to be torn apart by Barcelona in the home leg.
Their
form in Ligue 1 has sometimes been poor given PSG’s resources, which go beyond
the simple fact of possessing the two most expensive players in the world in
Neymar and Kylian Mbappe.
Mbappe
delivers in big games
Four
defeats in 15 league games does not compare favourably to four losses in 17
under Tuchel earlier in the season.
They
are three points behind leaders Lille with six games remaining, and the
prospect of them failing to win the title for just the second time in nine
seasons is real.
A
PSG coach will ultimately be judged on results in Europe, if only because
domestic success is supposedly a given.
Then
again, the last time PSG changed coach midway through the season was in
2011-12, when Carlo Ancelotti replaced Antoine Kombouare and his team finished
second to Montpellier.
“It’s normal
that after three months we might have some inconsistency because consistency
comes over a whole season,” Pochettino said last week.
“Maybe
what I say can be considered an excuse but the reality is that any management
team needs time to work and get its ideas across and for us we haven’t had that
time yet.
“We
are trying to optimise what we have and get the best possible results until the
end of the season.”
PSG have
been devastating away from home, where they can best harvest the searing pace
of Mbappe on the break.
They
have won their last nine away games, scoring 26 goals in the process.
Mbappe
has scored stunning goals in big matches in Marseille and Lyon, bagged a
hat-trick in Barcelona and claimed a brace in Munich.
In
contrast the Parisians have lost their last three home league matches, their
worst run since 2007. Neymar, meanwhile, has often been injured, or suspended.
It
has not always been convincing, but if PSG can hold off Bayern then Pochettino
will be a step closer to delivering the trophy the Qataris really want less
than six months after arriving, and it might turn out he doesn’t need that time
after all.
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