MUNICH — Paris Saint-Germain are Champions League winners at last.
In a night of total dominance at Allianz Arena, the French champions demolished Inter Milan 5–0 to win their first-ever UEFA Champions League title — the biggest margin in a final in the competition’s 70-year history.
The long-awaited breakthrough came not from the era of Messi, Neymar, or Mbappe, but under coach Luis Enrique, who shifted PSG’s philosophy from star-driven spending to team-focused building. And it paid off in spectacular fashion.
The star of the night was 19-year-old French forward Désiré Doué, who scored twice, assisted once, and was named player of the match in a stunning individual display that symbolized PSG’s new generation.
“We are rewriting the history of this club and French football,” Doué said post-match.
Achraf Hakimi, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, and Senny Mayulu also found the net as PSG overwhelmed an Inter side that never found its footing.
“This is magical. The only trophy missing was the Champions League — we’ve ticked that box,” said Luis Enrique, who joined elite company by becoming only the seventh coach to win the tournament with two different clubs.
The Spaniard also completed a historic treble, having already claimed the Ligue 1 and French Cup titles.
For PSG fans, it was a night of release and redemption.
Many still remember the heartbreak of 2020, when they lost the final to Bayern Munich in a fan-less stadium.
This time, more than 60,000 supporters packed the venue in Munich, turning it into a sea of Parisian joy as fireworks and confetti filled the air when captain Marquinhos lifted the trophy.
“It’s coming home to Paris,” said the Brazilian captain. “Make the most of it, I love you all.”
The scoring opened just 12 minutes in, when Vitinha found Doué in the box, who unselfishly laid it off for Hakimi to tap into an empty net.
Minutes later, Doué’s shot deflected in off Inter’s Federico Dimarco for 2–0.
Doué added his second midway through the second half, slotting past Yann Sommer before Kvaratskhelia and substitute Mayulu completed the rout — both teenagers etching their names into history alongside Patrick Kluivert and Carlos Alberto as the only teens to score in a Champions League final.
Luis Enrique was thrown in the air by his players at the final whistle. “We are going to continue to conquer the football world,” he declared.
Since Qatar Sports Investments took over in 2011, PSG have spent billions chasing this moment — signing superstars like Ibrahimovic, Cavani, Neymar, Mbappe, and Messi.
But it was only after those stars left that PSG built a squad capable of delivering Europe’s top prize.
Still, the narrative of an organic rebuild belies the financial reality: PSG remain one of the world’s most expensively assembled teams.
For Inter, it was a night to forget. A team that once eyed a treble this season ended with nothing.
“We’re extremely disappointed,” said coach Simone Inzaghi. “But defeats make you stronger.”
For PSG, it’s a new chapter — one finally written in gold.