Name
Paris SG

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Next Event
Newcastle vs Paris SG (04 Oct)

Head Coach

Luis Enrique

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Established
1970 (53 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Stadium/Home
Parc des Princes
(47,929 Capacity)

Jersey or Equipment Clearart


Location
Paris, France

Nicknames
Les Parisiens

League
French Ligue 1

Last Edit
Darth GL: 12/Aug/23
Site
Home / Sport / Soccer / French Ligue 1 / Paris SG (year 2011)


Upcoming Events
04 Oct 23 Newcastle   -  Paris SG
08 Oct 23 Rennes   -  Paris SG
21 Oct 23 Paris SG   -  Strasbourg
25 Oct 23 Paris SG   -  Milan
29 Oct 23 Brest   -  Paris SG

Latest Results
30 Sep 23 Clermont Foot  0 - 0  Paris SG
24 Sep 23 Paris SG  4 - 0  Marseille
19 Sep 23 Paris SG  2 - 0  Dortmund
15 Sep 23 Paris SG  2 - 3  Nice
03 Sep 23 Lyon  1 - 4  Paris SG

Description
Available in:

Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, commonly referred to as Paris Saint-Germain, Paris SG, or simply Paris or PSG, is a French professional football club based in Paris. Founded in 1970, the club has traditionally worn red, blue and white kits. PSG has played their home matches in the 47,929-capacity Parc des Princes, in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, since 1974. The club plays in the highest tier of French football, Ligue 1.

The Parisian club established itself as a major force in France, and one of the major forces of European football in the 2010s. PSG have won 40 titles, making it the most successful French club in history by this measure. PSG are also the club with most consecutive seasons playing in the top-flight (they have been in Ligue 1 for 46 seasons since 1974), one of only two French clubs to have won a major European title, the most popular football club in France, and one of the most widely supported teams in the world.

Domestically, the Parisians have won eight Ligue 1 titles, a record twelve Coupe de France, a record eight Coupe de la Ligue, and a record nine Trophée des Champions titles. In European football, they have won one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and one UEFA Intertoto Cup. The capital club has also won one Ligue 2, regarded as a minor official title. PSG have a long-standing rivalry with Olympique de Marseille. The duo contest French football's most notorious match, known as Le Classique.

The State of Qatar, through its shareholding organisation Qatar Sports Investments (QSI), has been the club's owner since 2011. The takeover made Paris Saint-Germain the richest club in France and one of the wealthiest in the world. As of the 2018–19 season, PSG have the fifth-highest revenue in the footballing world with an annual revenue of €636m according to Deloitte, and are the world's eleventh most valuable football club, worth €825m according to Forbes.

Team Members
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Blaise
Matuidi



Kevin
Gameiro
#9


Neeskens
Kebano



Salvatore
Sirigu



Zoumana
Camara



Nicolas
Douchez



Siaka
Tiene



Javier
Pastore



Milan
Bisevac



Christophe
Jallet
#13


Jean
Christophe #9


Mathieu
Bodmer
#24


Souleyman
Doumbia
#3


Presnel
Kimpembe
#3


Mike
Maignan
#16


Matteo
Guendouzi
#6


Alphonse
Areola
#23


Ferland
Mendy
#23


Moussa
Dembele
#9


Mevlut
Erding
#9


Cédric
Kipré
#4


Claude
Makélélé



Dan-Axel
Zagadou
#23



Nene
#10


Yacine
Qasmi
#14


Boubakary
Soumaré



Mamadou
Sakho
#75


Stephane
Sessegnon



Sékou
Mara
#18


Wilfried
Kanga
#18


Dylan
Batubinsika
#19


Diego
Lugano



Jeremy
Menez


= Contract years remaining

Stadium or Home

The Parc des Princes (literally "Park of the Princes" or "Princes' Park" in English) is an all-seater football stadium located in the southwest of Paris, France. The venue, with a seating capacity of 48,712 spectators, has been the home of French football club Paris Saint-Germain since 1973. The current Parc des Princes was inaugurated on 4 June 1972, endowed with very avant-garde architecture for the period. Comfort and visibility were the key words of project architects Roger Taillibert and Siavash Teimouri. PSG became the resident club of the new stadium in June 1973 and its image and history has since been associated to Le Parc. Named after the Monarch's hunting grounds that it sits on, it was initially opened as a multi-purpose venue on 18 July 1897.

The Parc des Princes is the fourth largest football stadium in France. Originally a velodrome, it was the finish line of the Tour de France from the first event in 1903 until General Charles de Gaulle ordered the track demolished in the late 1960s. He decided in 1967 that the Parc des Princes should be dedicated to football and rugby games with a capacity of under 60,000 seats. The Parc des Princes was the national stadium of the France football team and the France rugby union team until the construction of the Stade de France for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. The stadium and grounds are owned by the Paris city council and the Société d’Exploitation Sports-Evénements (SESE) holds the concession to the Parc des Princes since 1990.

Initially a multi-task sports venue at first, it has hosted many major sports events. Le Parc was an Olympic site in the 1900 Games of the II Olympiad and hosted games in two FIFA World Cups. The stadium has also been the venue for two Euro finals, three UEFA Champions League finals, two UEFA Cup finals, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup final, two Latin Cup finals, four USFSA championship finals, one Coupe Sheriff Dewar final, 33 French Cup finals, three League Cup finals, 30 Tournoi de Paris editions and 31 Top 14 finals. The ground has also hosted 128 football matches for the French national team, 59 Five Nations Championships games, one UCI Track Cycling World Championships and 54 Tour de France finishes. The stadium also witnessed the first live sports report in France and has even hosted boxing championships and music concerts. In recent times, the Parc des Princes has refocused on more medium-sized events as compared to the larger Stade de France.

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