Sports

PSG vs. Chelsea, Champions League: Preview, team news, how to watch


Almost exactly eight months ago, Chelsea stood on top of the football world. Laid before, and beneath, our feet were the proverbial corpses of our enemies, including a certain Parisian club who had won the Champions League just a couple months prior and were the odds-on favorites to crown themselves Champions of the World as well.

Cole “I Like Finals” Palmer had other ideas.

And it wasn’t just Palmer. Chelsea dominated PSG in all phases, on the pitch and on the scoreboard. Strange things can happen in single-elimination games and finals. But in this case, we didn’t need any celestial messaging or cosmic alignment. It wasn’t written in the stars; we wrote it there ourselves.

PSG’s frustrations boiled over at the final whistle that day, and they are now out for revenge. This game will likely not play out the same way as it did on that hot day in the mid-July sun in East Rutherford, New Jersey — not least of all because this is a two-legged affair. And as we’ve seen all season, while we can certainly be great in moments or in certain games, the ability to consistently do that continues to elude us.

So, the job for the first leg is not to lose the tie. We can’t win it this week, but we can certainly lose it (see: Spurs, Atalanta). So that’s job one. And job two. And three and four and all the rest.

Date / Time: Wednesday, March 11, 2026, 20.00 GMT; 4pm EDT; 1:30am IST (next day)
Venue: Parc des Prince, Paris, France
Referee: Alejandro Hernández (on pitch); Carlos del Cerro Grande (VAR)
Forecast: heavy rain during the day, but should stop by kick-off

On TV: TNT Sports 2 (UK); TUDN, UniMás (USA); none (India); SuperSport Premier League (NGA); elsewhere
Streaming: discovery+ (UK); Paramount+, Univision Now (USA); Sony LIV (India); DStv Now (NGA)

Paris Saint-Germain’s Spanish headcoach Luis Enrique (L) looks on from the technical area as Strasbourg’s British head coach Liam Rosenior (R) reacts during the French L1 football match between Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) and RC Strasbourg Alsace at the Parc des Princes Stadium in Paris on October 17, 2025. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP) (Photo by FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images)
AFP via Getty Images

PSG team news: The hangover from their historic campaign last season has extended beyond just the Club World Cup, and PSG find themselves in a rare title fight in Ligue 1, leading (Malang Sarr’s) RC Lens by just a single point with nine games to go. All told, they’ve lost a whopping five games in domestic competitions this season already, including a major upset at the hands of local rivals Paris FC in the early rounds of the French Cup.

And it’s been a bit of a struggle to get this far in the Champions League as well, finishing just 11th in the league phase and then barely edging past AS Monaco in the first knockout round, 5-4 on aggregate (with Monaco seeing red for significant periods of both legs). In fact, they did just lose to Monaco in the league on Friday, 3-1 at home. (Yes, the French league not only brought that match forward to Friday, but they’ve also agreed to postpone PSG’s game next weekend so that they can just rest up for the second leg. Thanks, Premier League!)

Injuries have been a factor all season of course, though Ousmane Dembélé, João Neves, and Senny Mayulu are all set to feature in at least limited capacity after making their returns recently. Fabián Ruiz does remain out. But it’s not like the rest of the team, including the likes of Bradley Barcola, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Désiré Doué, Vitinha, Warren Zaïre-Emery, Achraf Hakimi, Nuno Mendes, or summer signing Ilya Zabarnyi, are scrubs.

They may be underperforming, but they certainly won’t lack for motivation in this one.

METLIFE STADIUM, EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES - 2025/07/13: Joao Pedro of Chelsea FC poses with his medal during the award ceremony following the FIFA Club World Cup final football match between Chelsea FC and Paris Saint-Germain FC. Chelsea FC won 3-0 over Paris Saint-Germain FC. (Photo by Nicolò Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)

METLIFE STADIUM, EAST RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY, UNITED STATES – 2025/07/13: Joao Pedro of Chelsea FC poses with his medal during the award ceremony following the FIFA Club World Cup final football match between Chelsea FC and Paris Saint-Germain FC. Chelsea FC won 3-0 over Paris Saint-Germain FC. (Photo by Nicolò Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)
LightRocket via Getty Images

Chelsea team news: Twenty-three players made the short journey across the Channel, but unfortunately Estêvão was not one of them. The youngster remains out with a supposedly minor hamstring injury, now going on a month — proving once again that there is no such thing as a “minor” hamstring injury. The game comes too soon for Jamie Gittens as well, and though Levi Colwill has been spotted in training, he’s still a long ways away from playing competitively. Meanwhile, Dário Essugo misses out on account of not being registered for the knockout phase.

On the plus side, we not only avoided a Hollywood ending in our FA Cup match against Wrexham on Saturday, we managed to fully rest several key players, including Reece James, Moisés Caicedo, Enzo Fernández, and Cole Palmer. João Pedro did play extended minutes thanks to extra-time, but hopefully he’ll just keep his great form going. JP has nine goals and five assists across all competitions in the last two months, and the only games in which he hasn’t scored or assisted in that span were the three games against Arsenal (which are also our only three losses during that time).

Somewhat surprisingly, we don’t have any suspensions to deal with, though Enzo and Andrey Santos are both just one booking away from missing the second leg. That’s unlikely to factor too much into head coach Liam Rosenior’s thinking, who went 1-1-1 against PSG during his 18 months in France, including a 3-3 draw in this stadium back in October with RC Strasbourg. We’ll see how Rosenior might approach this game with Chelsea now; might he take inspiration from Enzo Maresca’s tactics in the summer? And who will be in goal for the Blues? Robert Sánchez got the FA Cup match after Filip Jörgensen got the surprise start against Aston Villa last Wednesday. It’s supposedly an open competition between those two now, and Rosenior certainly wasn’t giving any hints as to who might be winning it.

Previously: We’ve got plenty of fairly recent history, and not just from the summer, including the three-year spell between 2014 and 2016 of constantly running into them, like now, in the Champions League knockout phase. This will be our tenth meeting overall in the last twenty years: three wins, three draws, three defeats is the balance currently.



Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular

To Top