Zapping Foot National Hugo Lloris: The big dates in blue
A response that was not expected. This Monday morning, L'Équipe published on the front page “Dream less big”, referring to Paris-Saint-Germain's less significant investments in recent years on the transfer market. Last year, the capital club sold 12.5% of the club's shares to the American investment fund Arctos Sports Partners. QSI, which bought the club in 2011 before obtaining its ticket to organize the World Cup in 2022, changed tactics by excluding the biggest stars of football. According to L'Équipe, Qatar would not absolutely want to sell PSG, although a substantial offer would push the Gulf country to think about it. “It's completely false, the same newspaper writes the same nonsense week after week. The shareholders have just spent €350 million on Poissy, major new extensions to the Campus have just been announced, and they are looking to invest hundreds of millions in a new stadium, while increasing our investments in football, sports and entertainment, but apparently we are looking to sell” a QSI spokesperson said in recent hours.
To summarize
A response that was not expected. This Monday morning, L'Équipe published on the front page “Dream less big”, referring to Paris-Saint-Germain's less significant investments in recent years on the transfer market. Last year, the capital club sold 12.5% of the club's shares to the American investment fund Arctos Sports Partners.