DEMOLITION IN MUNICH: PSG CRUSH INTER MILAN TO WIN FIRST UCL
Paris St. Germain waltzed to victory in a 5-0 rout of Inter Milan in Munich as lightning-quick attacks struck the Nerazzurri in the most humiliating loss in the Champions League.
In a season of the underdogs and first-timers, PSG routed Inter Milan in a commanding 5–0 win that saw their front line spearhead a historical massacre of the Italians.
Paris Saint-Germain didn’t just win the Champions League. They annihilated Inter Milan. They tore them limb from limb and rewrote history in the process.
In a final that will go down as the most brutal beatdown in Champions League history, PSG crushed Inter 5–0 at the Allianz Arena in Munich.
Yes, FIVE to NOTHING, and leading the charge was a teenage terror named Desire Doue, who scored twice and made the world take notice of his supreme talent.
From the moment the whistle blew, Inter looked like they showed up to a gunfight with toy guns. Before 20 minutes had passed, PSG had already bagged two goals, with former Inter player Hakimi and Doue blitzing the French side into comfort, the first time any team had done that in a Champions League final.
Doue was a man possessed as he first set up former Inter player Achraf Hakimi for the opener, then added a deflected goal himself that left Inter’s keeper, Yann Sommer, diving at ghosts.
But they weren’t done.
Luis Enrique’s men came out in the second half like wolves smelling blood. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, 18-year-old Senny Mayulu, and the unstoppable Doue added to the carnage as Inter completely capitulated.
This was more than a win; it was a footballing annihilation.
With this treble-winning season—Ligue 1, Coupe de France, and now the Champions League—Luis Enrique entered sacred territory, as only Pep Guardiola had pulled this off with two different clubs, but make no mistake: PSG didn’t just win a treble. They did it while rewriting the record books. Their 5–0 destruction of Inter surpassed AC Milan’s 4–0 win over Barcelona in 1994, making it the biggest margin of victory ever in a Champions League final. The win was also a relief for Enrique after the tragic loss of his daughter Xana six years ago, as the PSG ultras posted a banner in unison and consolation for the gaffer’s grief.
It was an electric night for Doue as he didn’t just score. He was electrifying from the first minute. His first assist was a laser-guided square ball to Hakimi after turning on a dime from a Vitinha through-ball, and his first goal took a cruel deflection, the kind that screams destiny. Then came the dagger: a calm, cold-blooded finish after a slick one-two between Vitinha and Dembele.
This finally made Doue the first player and teenager ever to be involved in three goals in a Champions League final.
Perhaps the most staggering stat of all: PSG had played 168 Champions League matches before finally lifting the trophy, the longest wait in history, and they did it finally, brutally, brilliantly, and beautifully.
It was also fulfillment for the Qatar Sports Investment as their 14-year dream came alive. Ever since Qatar Sports Investments took over PSG in 2011, they’ve chased one prize: European glory. They’ve had the stars like Zlatan, Beckham, Neymar, Messi, and Mbappe, and they’ve had the tacticians like Ancelotti, Tuchel, Emery, and Pochettino, but none of them could get the job done.
It took this younger, hungrier, faster, fearless squad built not on superstars but on synergy, energy, lightning-fast movement, and ferocity. Players like Joao Neves, Vitinha, and Fabian Ruiz ran Inter ragged in midfield. Dembele, Doue, Barcola, and Kvaratskhelia tore down the wings like they were being chased by fire.
And let’s not forget Senny Mayulu, just 18, putting the cherry on top with a thunderous finish off the near post in the dying minutes and becoming just the fourth teenager to score in a Champions League final.
While some analysts, fans, and neutrals have rightly criticized their spending methods, evidence abounds in Europe and the world that suggests money is not the sole determinant of footballing success, with PSG having had to spend billions plus a 14-year wait to glory while others have suffered a worse fate and a fall from grace.
For Inter Milan, this is an unfortunate collapse, as the Italian side had been one of the best teams in Europe and has now capitulated twice in the final. Inzaghi’s men have themselves to blame in this shambolic display after an electric 13-goal semifinal against Barcelona. They would rue this result that puts them on the wrong side of football history.
This wasn’t just a win. This was a statement. PSG didn’t just conquer Europe. They took the trophy, ripped the Italians and the UCL label off, and wrote their own name in all caps, but with history written, a new dynasty might just begin with the lightning French at it.