EPL Index
·26 de novembro de 2025
PSG vs Tottenham Hotspur: Champions League preview and latest team news

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·26 de novembro de 2025

Football rarely offers time for reflection, and Spurs are discovering this truth with uncomfortable immediacy. Days after a bruising collapse in the North London derby, they now face PSG in the Champions League, a fixture that feels less like an opportunity and more like a stern interrogation of their ambitions. The rhythms of European football can be unforgiving, particularly when confidence is drifting and the opposition carry a reputation for ruthlessness.

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The context is unsettling for Spurs. Their defeat to Arsenal removed much of the optimism that had followed the early weeks of Thomas Frank’s tenure. A strangely subdued attacking display prompted supporters to demand more imagination, more risk, more willingness to punch upward. And yet here Spurs stand, thrown back into the deep end, facing a side with both pedigree and expectation on their side.
PSG, for all their star power, enter the game with their own sorrows. Their 2-1 home loss to Bayern Munich in the previous matchday cracked open an air of invincibility that has tended to shield them in this competition. They have never lost consecutive home games in the Champions League. The history alone leans heavily against Spurs.
PSG vs Tottenham kicks off at 8pm GMT on Wednesday, November 26, 2025, hosted at Parc des Princes. For supporters tuning in from the UK, TNT Sports 3 begins its coverage at 7pm, while the Discovery+ app provides streaming access for subscribers.
Tonight’s setting feels particularly charged. Paris under the lights always promises spectacle, but this fixture layers in a kind of emotional dissonance. Spurs arrive wounded and wary. PSG arrive impatient and expectant. The Champions League has a habit of punishing hesitation, and neither side can afford drift.
PSG’s outlook improves with the possible return of Ousmane Dembele, absent for the past two games with a suspected calf issue. His availability would instantly alter the geometry of PSG’s attack. Yet they remain without Desire Doue through a hamstring injury, while Bradley Barcola and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia are declared fit and ready.

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The wider defensive picture also matters. Achraf Hakimi stays sidelined, which means Warren Zaire-Emery is likely to deputise again. Fabian Ruiz and Willian Pacho could form a spine that sets PSG’s tempo, establishing control through possession and midfield positioning.

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Spurs, meanwhile, remain unsettled. Brennan Johnson’s suspension removes one of their more direct outlets, although his place in the starting side was never assured. That could prompt Richarlison to shift wide on the left, a role that adds industry but not always incision.

Photo @SpursOfficial on X
Xavi Simons is expected to feature in midfield against his former club, a twist that adds intrigue, and Lucas Bergvall, now recovered from a concussion, pushes for inclusion. Much debate surrounds the defensive structure: whether Frank will persist with a back five, bringing Kevin Danso into the fold, or alter the shape entirely. Pape Sarr presents another option in midfield should Frank want greater physical presence.

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A notable subplot concerns their loanee striker. Randal Kolo Muani is permitted to play against his parent club, an unusual quirk of UEFA regulations that could reshape Spurs’ approach in transition.

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This fixture asks searching questions of Spurs. They fell apart against Arsenal with alarming ease, and the idea of responding by travelling to face the Champions League holders feels closer to a cruel joke than a natural progression. PSG will not be intimidated. In fact, they will likely be energised by the memory of how close they came to losing to Spurs in August’s UEFA Super Cup, when a last-gasp equaliser forced penalties and secured their trophy.
The patterns point squarely towards a home victory. PSG thrive in matches where opponents feel obliged to attack, and Spurs may find themselves caught between caution and desperation, unable to commit without opening themselves up. The French champions rarely show mercy in such situations.
These sides have met only once before, a reminder of how fresh and unpredictable this rivalry remains. That encounter came in August in the UEFA Super Cup, where Spurs led deep into stoppage time of the second half before PSG forced a penalty shootout. The French side held their nerve to lift the trophy.
The sample size is small, yet the psychological lesson is clear enough. Spurs know they can trouble PSG. PSG know they can bend without breaking. The Champions League often rewards self-awareness, and tonight provides the next chapter in a matchup that already feels strangely portentous.
Ao vivo


Ao vivo







































