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Paris Saint-Germain and Luis Enrique Make History With a Sextuple
PSG defeated Flamengo in the Intercontinental Cup final and completed a historic sextuple, joining an exclusive club reserved for football’s greatest giants.
PSG cap a perfect season with the sextuple
Paris Saint-Germain are no longer chasing history: they have written it. With their victory over Flamengo in the Intercontinental Cup final, the Parisian club completed the long-awaited sextuple, a feat reserved only for the most dominant teams of all time. Under the guidance of Luis Enrique, PSG closed an unforgettable season and joined an elite previously occupied only by FC Barcelona in 2009 and Bayern Munich in 2020.
This title is not just another trophy for the cabinet. It is the missing piece that turns a great campaign into a historic era. Paris has gone from being an ambitious project to becoming an absolute benchmark in world football.
Six titles, one winning identity
PSG’s sextuple was built on consistency, authority and a clear footballing philosophy. Over the course of the season, the French side lifted the Ligue 1, the Trophée des Champions, the Coupe de France, the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Super Cup and now the Intercontinental Cup, completing the set in emphatic fashion.
This achievement carries even greater weight due to the variety of challenges overcome. Domestic competitions, European finals and intercontinental clashes were all approached with the same mindset of winning.
Luis Enrique, the architect of a historic masterpiece
Behind this unstoppable PSG stands one defining figure: Luis Enrique. The Spanish coach accomplished something only a select few managers have achieved—taking a club to the absolute summit of world football with a recognizable and competitive identity. His PSG not only won, they convinced.
With leadership, the Parisian side found the perfect formula to dominate across different contexts. For Luis Enrique, this sextuple reinforces his place among the most influential coaches of the modern era, capable of building championship teams without relying solely on individual brilliance.
Flamengo, a worthy opponent on a historic stage
The final against Flamengo was no walk in the park. The South American champions posed a real challenge, with intensity, character, and international experience. Mengão pushed PSG to the limit, but in the penalty shootout, they demonstrated the effectiveness of Luis Enrique's leadership.
Beating Flamengo in this context gives the title even more weight. It wasn't just a final won, it was a global consecration. With this victory, PSG not only lifted the Intercontinental Cup: it sealed its definitive entry into football history, becoming the third club to achieve a sextuple and marking an era that will be remembered for generations.













