Picture this. You’ve just watched your team win back-to-back Champions League titles on penalties in Budapest the night before. You haven’t slept. The city is still buzzing. And now, under a blazing 33-degree Paris sun, you’re standing on the Champ de Mars with the Eiffel Tower towering behind a stage, waiting for your heroes to walk out.
That was the reality for up to 100,000 PSG supporters on Sunday afternoon — and honestly, it looked like one of the most spectacular sporting celebrations Europe has ever seen.
The Trophy, the Tower, the Moment

PSG’s plane touched down at Le Bourget airport in the early afternoon, the squad flying straight from Budapest after their dramatic 1-1 (4-3 on pens) victory over Arsenal in the Champions League final at the Puskas Arena. From the airport, the players boarded buses and headed straight for the Champ de Mars.

When captain Marquinhos appeared at the entrance of the Military School — perfectly framed on the axis of the Eiffel Tower, Champions League trophy in both hands — the crowd absolutely lost it. Behind him walked club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi and manager Luis Enrique, both soaking in every second. The players walked a 450-metre red, white and blue tricolour carpet to the main stage as the PSG club anthem echoed across the park.

Giant screens replayed the key moments of the final on loop — Kai Havertz’s early goal for Arsenal, Ousmane Dembélé’s equalising penalty, and then the shootout drama, ending when Gabriel blazed his kick over the bar to send Paris wild.
Marquinhos, Dembélé, and the Quote of the Day

On stage, the noise was deafening. Marquinhos — who had delivered a superb performance in Budapest — lifted the trophy to the sky and sent the crowd into delirium. The Brazilian also won hearts across Europe with a moment of extraordinary class after the final whistle in Hungary: before joining his celebrating teammates, he ran over to console the devastated Gabriel, whose missed penalty had ended Arsenal’s dream.
At the Champ de Mars he was eloquent: “Doing it once is history. Twice is legend.”

Dembélé — who scored the all-important equalizer in normal time and is fast becoming the heartbeat of this PSG side — was hoisted into the air by his teammates on stage, the Ballon d’Or winner beaming from ear to ear. His message to anyone who might face them next season? “We will be back next year for the third.”
Macron, The Élysée, and a Word on the Violence

After the Champ de Mars, the squad headed to the Élysée Palace for a reception hosted by President Emmanuel Macron, who called PSG an “immense pride” for France. The evening ended at a packed Parc des Princes, where 48,000 more fans crammed in for one last party.

It wasn’t all perfect. Overnight celebrations on Saturday had turned violent across France — hundreds of arrests were made, cars were set ablaze near the Eiffel Tower, and tragically, a teenager lost their life in southern France. Macron was unequivocal: “This is not soccer, this is not sport. We will be uncompromising.”

But by Sunday afternoon, with the Eiffel Tower glittering in the background and blue and red smoke billowing over the stage, Paris remembered how to celebrate the right way.

Back-to-back. Legends. See you next season. 🔵🔴












