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Dembele's metamorphosis key to PSG's Champions League quest
Ousmane Dembele is living up to his potential, and will the forward drive Paris Saint-Germain towards Champions League glory?
In the grand theatre of football reinvention, few metamorphoses have been quite as spectacular as Ousmane Dembele's transformation.
Dembele has gone from an enigma to a ruthless finisher for Paris Saint-Germain – a butterfly effect that began when his wings were temporarily clipped.
Once the poster boy for unfulfilled potential, the 27-year-old Frenchman has emerged as the unexpected protagonist in PSG's Champions League run to the final, in which they will face Inter on Saturday.
Dembele's scoring renaissance has led to a compelling new chapter in a career previously defined by tantalising glimpses of genius interrupted by frustrating inconsistency.
"The best thing I did was not play him in London [at Arsenal]," PSG coach Luis Enrique said in February, a confession that reads like a tough-love parent discussing a rebellious prodigy.
That brief omission from the squad at Emirates Stadium – a footballing time-out that could have fractured lesser spirits – instead was the catalyst for Dembele's metamorphosis from mercurial winger to central striking force.
The statistics tell a story of almost alchemical transformation: 32 goals in 40 appearances in all competitions, including 21 in Ligue 1, more than in his previous five seasons combined.
Dembele's numbers are even more revelatory.
Before his positional epiphany, Dembele converted a modest 13.5% of his shots. Post-reinvention, that figure has doubled to 26.7%.
"Playing as number brings me much closer to the goal," Dembele explained with characteristic understatement. "Once I get past a player, I'm right in front of goal, and I have the focus to finish."
This is Dembele 2.0, a footballer reborn through tactical alchemy. His versatility and pace makes him one of the most formidable attackers in the game.
Luis Enrique's tactical recalibration – shifting Dembele centrally within a high-pressing, possession-based framework – has transformed PSG from a collection of expensive soloists into a symphonic unit.
The approach has proven particularly disruptive in the Champions League, where opponents find themselves suffocated by PSG's relentless pressure before being pierced by Dembele's new-found precision.
The once-frustrating winger now leads the line for a club desperate to claim European football's holy grail on their second attempt at winning the final.
Dembele has been directly involved in 12 Champions League goals this season (eight goals, four assists); the most ever by a PSG player in one campaign, while only Zlatan Ibrahimovic in 2013-14 (10) has scored more.
Should PSG's Champions League dreams materialise, the Ballon d'Or conversation will inevitably include the man whose renaissance began with the humility of a benching and flowered into the confidence of a striker who now finds the net with a matter of inevitability.