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SPORTS | 05-01-2021 00:00

Pochettino starts at PSG with no time to waste

Refreshed after a year out of the game, Argentine coach has resurfaced at a club where he was a popular player: Paris Saint-Germain.

Mauricio Pochettino got on well with Diego Maradona and Ronaldinho during his playing days and his relationship with another global footballing superstar in Neymar will be key to his chances of success at Paris Saint-Germain.

The Argentine this week begins his reign as coach of PSG, where his brief is to get the best out of Neymar and Kylian Mbappé and go one step further than his predecessor Thomas Tuchel.

Sacked with six months left on his contract, Tuchel is unlikely to be missed by supporters of the Parisian club despite leading them to the Champions League final for the first time in their history.

The German won the Ligue 1 title in each of his two full campaigns in charge and a domestic quadruple last season to go with the historic European run.

Pochettino, in contrast, has never won a trophy as a coach but his credentials are clear.

The 48-year-old is fondly remembered by fans of Tottenham Hotspur, who he steered to four straight top-four finishes in the Premier League and to the Champions League final in 2019.

From Ronaldinho to Neymar

Now, refreshed after a year out of the game, he has resurfaced at a club where he was a popular player.

Pochettino, who briefly played alongside Maradona at Newell's Old Boys and shared a room with the fellow Albiceleste legend on away trips, was a central defensive stalwart at the Parc des Princes between 2001 and 2003.

He helped them finish fourth in Ligue 1 in his first season, and captained them to a French Cup final in 2003, which they lost to Auxerre.

That team, with an attack led by Ronaldinho – "a great teammate" as Pochettino recalled in 2019 – underachieved and the new coach knows what is expected now.

"This club has always held a special place in my heart," said Pochettino following his appointment on a contract until the end of next season, with the option of a further year.

He spoke of the team's "fantastic potential" and he has no time to waste as he seeks to maximise that. His reputation depends on it.

After all the impressive work at Espanyol, Southampton and Spurs, now is the time for Pochettino to add silverware to his CV in Paris, where domestic success is taken for granted and progress in Europe matters most.

In the last eight years, Qatar-owned PSG have won seven Ligue 1 titles and five French Cups. They also won the now-defunct League Cup six times. Yet Tuchel left the team third in Ligue 1, a point behind Lyon and Lille.

Barcelona on the horizon

The last time PSG changed coach mid-season, in 2011/2012, Carlo Ancelotti came in and failed to win the title.

Pochettino, who arrives with his faithful assistant Miguel D'Agostino and a backroom team also including his son, Sebastiano, needs to hit the ground running.

Appointed on Saturday, his first game in charge is at Saint-Etienne on Wednesday and his first chance to win silverware comes next midweek, when PSG play Marseille in the Champions Trophy, the match which usually starts the French season.

"It is going to be a difficult start for him. Let's not judge him right away or expect to see 'his' team already," Luis Fernández, who coached the Argentine when he played for PSG, told AFP.

Pochettino will need to put his stamp on PSG in time for their Champions League last-16 tie against Barcelona, the first leg of which is in February.

Dele Alli and Christian Eriksen, who played under Pochettino at Spurs, have already been linked with January moves to Paris, but Neymar and Mbappé will be central for Pochettino. 

Monday's edition of sports daily L'Equipe carried a photo of Pochettino laughing with Mbappé, his shoulder around the France star.

Fernández has no doubts about the new coach.

"The players are going to like him. He has that human side, the approach that will allow the players to express themselves," he told France Football

"When you have a coach like Mauricio, you want to fight for him, do things for him."

by Andy Scott, AFP

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