Paris Saint Germain delivered the clean, methodical 2-0 Luis Enrique demanded, gripping the first leg and keeping Liverpool at armâs length before the return at Anfield.
DĂ©sirĂ© DouĂ© scored in the 11th minute, finishing off a sequence that started with PSG funneling everything through their left side and catching A. Slotâs back three retreating. Liverpool never settled. Joe Gomezâs yellow card in the 28th minute and Alexis Mac Allisterâs booking at 31 signposted a side stuck chasing shadows rather than dictating the tempo.
Out of possession, Liverpoolâs 3-5-2 became a back five, but the midfield could not stop Vitinha and JoĂŁo Neves from recycling the ball. Vitinha posted 138 passes with 132 completed, constantly switching play and pinning Jeremie Frimpong deep. Neves had the screen under control and, when the chance appeared, he stepped forward decisively.
The second goal arrived in the 65th minute, K. Kvaratskhelia scoring after JoĂŁo Neves threaded the assist to the inside-left lane. It was the release PSG needed. A VAR check at the 71st minute wiped out a potential Warren ZaĂŻre-Emery penalty, yet Liverpool still required a quadruple change at 78 minutes. Cody Gakpo, Curtis Jones, Andrew Robertson and Alexander Isak all came on, but the structure remained passive. Luis Enrique replaced the outstanding DouĂ© with Lee Kang-In in the same minute, then sent on Lucas HernĂĄndez for Ousmane DembĂ©lĂ© in the 88th to lock down the flank. Trey Nyoniâs introduction for Frimpong at 90+1 said more about fresh legs than a tactical twist.
Key numbers: PSG owned 74 percent possession, out-shot Liverpool 18-3, and generated 2.20 xG against 0.18. Safonov did not face a shot on target. The contrast in passing volume, 744 to 253, underlined how often PSG played through pressure rather than around it.
Kvaratskheliaâs duel with Gomez tilted the tie; the Georgian drew four fouls and kept the right side honest, allowing DembĂ©lĂ© to receive wide and DouĂ© to attack the box. Liverpoolâs front line of Florian Wirtz and Hugo EkitikĂ© never threatened the channels, leaving Virgil van Dijk and Ibrahima KonatĂ© with the ball but no outlets. Slotâs choice to start without Mohamed Salah or Federico Chiesa reduced the counter threat, and once PSG led, the Premier League side lacked the vertical pass to break lines.
The return leg now demands a more daring Liverpool, while PSG travel confident that their midfield trio can repeat the control they had in Paris. Keep an eye on Tuesdayâs other quarter final too: Kompanyâs Bayern break BernabĂ©u: Neuer heroics stun Madrid in 2-1 first-leg twist shows how volatile this round can become.







