PSG has created a culture of indulgence and selfishness. It's no way to run a football club

Special PSG has created a culture of indulgence and selfishness. It's no way to run a football club
Neymar has been given “privileges” at PSG and this has resulted in a lack of cohesion and teamwork. (AFP)
Updated 09 March 2018
Follow

PSG has created a culture of indulgence and selfishness. It's no way to run a football club

PSG has created a culture of indulgence and selfishness. It's no way to run a football club

LONDON: It was widely suggested after Paris St-Germain’s limp defeat to Real Madrid on Tuesday that they had missed Neymar, who will be out for the rest of the season with a broken metatarsal. That was probably true.
Neymar, for all the doubts raised about his professionalism, is a player who can turn a game in an instant: One moment of inspiration and the tenor of the match might have been changed. And yet it’s also probably true that PSG would have put up a more effective fight if Neymar had never signed for them.
This is not just a Neymar issue; it is a danger for any team that has one player who dominates or is otherwise notably better than the rest. When Thierry Henry left Arsenal for Barcelona in 2007, for instance, Cesc Fabregas observed that his passing had improved because he was looking to play the ball to the man in the best position rather than always wondering where Henry was.
Similarly the Argentina national side has suffered for years from a dependence on Lionel Messi, just as it once had an over-reliance on Diego Maradona. No Argentina manager is ever going to leave Messi out and nor should they, but equally the tendency to play always through Messi has made Argentina predictable.
A team with a front three of, say, Paulo Dybala, Gonzalo Higuain and Sergio Aguero, with Angel Di Maria, Javier Mascherano and Ever Banega behind them, should in itself be a threat at any major tournament, and yet somehow Messi’s presence (or even worse his absence) inhibits them. When he is there everything goes through him; on the odd occasion he is not there the sense of what he might add, the loss of the comfort that even if things are going badly he might do something, adds a terrible doubt.
A similar process could be seen with Neymar at the last World Cup.
Some combination of the Brazilian hype machine and Luiz Felipe Scolari’s archaic tactics had left Brazil entirely reliant on their biggest star. Their squad also included the likes of Oscar, Willian and Hernanes but everything was funnelled through Neymar. The other creative players were, at best, decoys. When Neymar was then injured, there was tactical and emotional collapse and the result was the 7-1 defeat to Germany in the semi-final.
What has been allowed to happen at PSG is startling, a triumph of celebrity and ego over any kind of team-building. This PSG is worse than the side that beat Chelsea in 2015-16 before being eliminated, worse than Manchester City in the quarter-final, worse than the side that troubled Barcelona in 2012-13. This was probably, in fact, PSG’s limpest exit from the Champions League since it failed to qualify six years ago. All that money and you are left with a side that is essentially a supporting cast for one man.
The team that succumbed so feebly on Tuesday was full of good players.
It should have been able at least to compete with Real Madrid, who are, after all, third in Spain, 15 points off the top of the table. It should not always have been looking for a star who was not there. But bad habits have become ingrained. This has gone far beyond the distorting effect of Henry at Arsenal or Messi with Argentina. This is a culture of indulgence and selfishness.
When the club lays on a three-day birthday party for a player and the manager is expected to turn up and cut the cake, what hope then for any sort of planning or discipline? Neymar has “privileges.” He is exempted from defensive duties. He is seemingly allowed to do what he wants on the pitch. That culture spreads. When Dani Alves laid in Kylian Mbappe late in the first half on Tuesday a ball rolled across goal would have left Edinson Cavani with a tap-in. Instead he shot from a narrow angle and the chance was lost. Selfishness has become endemic; everybody out for their own aggrandisement.
That is no way to run a football club. The coach, Unai Emery, will no doubt pay the price in the summer, but the real issue at PSG is that no top side can ever be beholden to one player, and especially not one so self-absorbed as Neymar.