International Leagues

Neither Messi nor Cristiano want him close, his fate would be in the hands of PSG

Paulo Dybala has no choice but to look for PSG, where he would share a dressing room with Neymar Junior

By Fredi Roman

Paulo Dybala has no choice but to look for PSG, where he would share a dressing room with Neymar Junior
Paulo Dybala has no choice but to look for PSG, where he would share a dressing room with Neymar Junior

The Argentine striker Paulo Dybala cannot meet the Juventus team in this season, without a doubt the arrival of the coach Andrea Pirlo has been an important factor in the player's debacle, who has had to watch practically all the games from the bench, when the last tournament was named MVP of the Serie A. However, the fault is not entirely the player, as Pirlo has not been able to make a solid team in Juventus, which is in 6th place, 10 points behind AC Milan.

It seems that those seasons where Juventus were unstoppable are over. On the other hand, Dybala's relationship with Cristiano Ronaldo is not good, and that does not benefit him at all. At 27 years old, it could be said that he is in the best moment of his career so he should be at the top, but the reality is that he is not. Dybala is going through a delicate moment similar to the one he lived through the last months before Massimiliano Allegri left office at Juventus.

The Argentine international is clear that he must leave the club, he has offered himself to several clubs, such as Real Madrid and also to FC Barcelona, as he would love to play in La Liga Santander, but has been rejected by both. Zinedine Zidane does not see space for him with Benzema ahead and at the Camp Nou, he is banned by Messi. That even if Messi left, the Barcelona board does not have Dybala in mind as a first option.

So, the Argentine has no choice but to look for Paris Saint-Germain, where he would share a dressing room with Neymar Junior. Mauricio Pochettino, who will occupy the position of coach, sees it with good eyes. His contract ends in 2022, and those in Turin would ask for about 80 million euros to let him go, something expensive for the economic crisis affected by the pandemic.


Fredi Roman

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