A year ago
Nasser Al-Khelaifi, the leader of Qatari-possessed Paris Holy person Germain, stated in a meeting distributed on Tuesday the club might be searching for another home subsequent to being caused to feel unwanted at the Parc des Sovereigns.
Al-Khelaifi told Spanish games everyday Marca that PSG was "feeling the squeeze" from the Paris district to stop the arena which has been their home starting around 1974 and the club was checking out "different other options", without determining what those choices are.
"We are at this point not wanted at the Parc des Rulers," said Al-Khelaifi, who last week told TALKSPORT the French goliaths are thinking about selling partakes in the club.
They are constraining us to leave. They are playing with us and we are worn out.
"I love the Parc des Sovereigns, it's our set of experiences and I regard it more than anything. Remaining has forever been our inclination. Yet, I don't think they need us.
"We've contributed 80 million euros ($83 million) in the arena. However, it isn't our own. Who might consent to do something like this?"
Last week, Al-Khelaifi whined in the press about City Lobby's refusal to sell the arena, which seats 48,000, to QSI (Qatar Sports Ventures), proprietor of the club.
The Paris district said that PSG had a 30-year rent however were presently attempting to pressure the city into selling the ground.
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"They (PSG) say: 'we will infuse 500 or 600 million (euros) of works provided that we are proprietors'," the region's metropolitan improvement supervisor Emmanuel Gregoire said the week before.
"It isn't our best option to sell them the Parc des Sovereigns. It is the legacy of the city, of Parisians."
The Parc des Sovereigns was initially implicit the south-west of the city, near the tennis courts of Roland Garros, in 1897 and was home for the public football and rugby crews until the Stade de France was worked for the 1998 football World Cup.
Gregoire conceded that the topic of selling the memorable ground had been raised.
"Conversations are in progress around the deal and we told them: 'before knowing whether we need to sell, we would need to settle on a cost'," he said.
"Today, we have not yet arrived at the finish of these conversations."
Since the Qatari venture store QSI purchased PSG in 2011, the club has brought home eight French titles and six French Cups, however neglected to overcome the Heroes Association, losing in the last in 2020.
Al-Khelaifi told Spanish games day to day Marca that PSG was "feeling the squeeze" from the Paris region to stop the arena which has been their home starting around 1974 and the club was checking out "different other options", without determining what those choices are.
"We are presently not wanted at the Parc des Rulers," said Al-Khelaifi, who last week told TALKSPORT the French goliaths are thinking about selling partakes in the club. "They are forcing us to leave. They are playing with us and we are drained. I love the Parc des Rulers, it's our set of experiences and I regard it more than anything. Remaining has forever been our inclination. In any case, I don't think they need us. We've put 80 million euros in the arena. In any case, it isn't our own. Who might consent to do something like this?"
Last week, Al-Khelaifi whined in the press about City Lobby's refusal to sell the arena, which seats 48,000, to QSI (Qatar Sports Speculations), proprietor of the club. The Paris district said that PSG had a 30-year rent however were presently attempting to pressure the city into selling the ground. "They (PSG) say: 'we will infuse 500 or 600 million (euros) of works provided that we are proprietors'," the region's metropolitan improvement supervisor Emmanuel Gregoire said a week ago. "It isn't our best option to sell them the Parc des Sovereigns. It is the legacy of the city, of Parisians."
The Parc des Sovereigns was initially underlying the south-west of the city, near the tennis courts of Roland Garros, in 1897 and was home for the public football and rugby crews until the Stade de France was worked for the 1998 football World Cup.
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