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PSG

Zlatan, Silva and Becks offer PSG cause for hope

Can Paris Saint-Germain pull off a major upset and beat Barcelona in the Camp Nou on Wednesday night? The odds are stacked against them and not many outside France give them a prayer, but there is reason for hope.

Zlatan, Silva and Becks offer PSG cause for hope
PSG train at the Camp Nou ahead of Wedesday's match. Photo: Lluis Gene/AFP

Hopes remained high in Paris on Wednesday that Paris-St-Germain could pull off what would go down as one of the greatest ever Champions League shocks, by beating Barcelona on their home turf.

After last week’s 2-2 draw in the first-leg of their quarter final at the Parc Des Princes, PSG are faced with the daunting task of having to win at the Camp Nou, unless the game ends as an unlikely 3-3 or even 4-4 draw, which would send PSG through on the away goals rule.

“We will give it our best shot,” PSG coach Carlo Ancelotti said on the eve of the match.

With the odds clearly stacked against PSG, who should start with David Beckham lining up in midfield, most observers outside France have written off their chances.

However, hope springs eternal in France that the club, bankrolled by oil-rich Qataris can match what the team achieved in 1995, when it knocked out Barcelona on the way to the European Cup semi-finals.

The French press were upbeat about the team’s chances, with Europe1 radio laying out three crucial factors in favour of PSG, under the headline “Why PSG can do it”.

The main reason why PSG can allow themselves a semblance of hope in the Camp Nou is the potential absence of record-breaking goal scorer and finest player on the planet, Lionel Messi.

The Argentine striker was injured in the first leg and is a doubt for the return match. He has not been ruled out however and PSG will be biting their finger nails until the Barcelona team is announced.

Even the sight of Messi starting on the bench would  give the Parisians a huge psychological boost.

The second reason why Europe1 believes in PSG, is the presence in the team of the “best defender in the world,” Thiago Silva. English midfielder Joey Barton admitted he had made a fool of himself by criticizing PSG’s Silva before last week’s game, only for the Brazilian to then “have the game of his life”. 

He will need to repeat that performance tonight if his team are to hold out any chance of making the semi-finals.

Barcelona’s supposedly shaky defense is another reason why PSG should be optimistic. The  Barcelona captain Carlos Puyol will be missing, along with his replacement Javier Mascherano. Both are absent through injury.

Central defender Carlos Puyol is likely to be partnered by the inexperienced Marc Bartra, who has only 17 appearances under his belt.

Finally there is Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the Swedish international who perhaps more than anyone will carry the hopes of PSG. Ibrahimovic, a former Barca player whose time at the Camp Nou was marked by rumours of spats with players and management, has unfinished business against his old club.

He would dearly love to score the winner and has all the ability at his disposal to do just that. Despite scoring in the first leg, “Ibra” had a disappointing game. He will be looking to make up for that tonight.

“Barcelona has already been beaten by Inter Milan and Chelsea [in the champions League] so why not PSG?” asked Réné Girard, the coach of Montpellier.

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ENVIRONMENT

Why has the expansion of Barcelona airport prompted mass protests?

Around 10,000 people demonstrated against the expansion of the El Prat airport in Barcelona on Sunday.

Why has the expansion of Barcelona airport prompted mass protests?
People march during a demonstration against the expansion of the Barcelona-El Prat airport. Photo: Pau BARRENA / AFP

Several ecological and agricultural organisations, have demanded that the expansion be stopped due to the fact nearby wetlands and farms would have to be destroyed.

The demonstration took place on Calle Tarragona in the Catalan capital between Plaça d’Espanya and Plaça dels Països Catalans.

The protests still took place, even though last week, Spain suspended the €1.7 billion airport expansion project, citing differences with the Catalan government, after president Pere Aragonès said he wanted to avoid destroying La Ricarda lagoon, a natural reserve next to the airport. 

Environmentalists decided not to call off the march, in case plans for the airport expansion still went ahead.

READ ALSO: Six things you need to know about Barcelona airport’s €1.7 billion planned expansion

Political representatives from ERC, En Comú Podem and the CUP also attended, as well as the leader of Más País, Íñigo Errejón; the Deputy Mayor for Ecology of the Barcelona City Council, Janet Sanz, and the Mayor of El Prat de Llobregat, Lluís Mijoler.

People from neighbourhoods across the city marched towards Calle Tarragona and could be seen holding placards that read Nature yes, airport no and shouting slogans such as “More courgettes and fewer planes” and “Fighting for the climate, health, and life”. 

One of the largest groups of people were those from El Prat de Llobregat, the municipality which is home to the airport, who were led by tractors. 

People march during a demonstration against the expansion of Barcelona-El Prat airport. Photo by Pau BARRENA / AFP

In addition to protesting against the expansion of the El Prat airport, people were also demonstrating against the Winter Olympic Games in the Pyrenees and extensions to airports in Mallorca and Madrid. 

A representative of Zeroport, Sara Mingorría said “We are here to defend not only La Ricarda, but the entire Delta”. 

The philosopher Marina Garcés also argued that the expansion of the airport would mean “more borders, more mass tourism, more control and more precarious jobs.” 

The leader of the commons in the Catalan parliament, Jéssica Albiach, who also attended the protest, asked the PSOE for “coherence”: “You cannot be passing a law against climate change and, at the same time, defend the interests of Aena [the airport operations company]”, she said. 

She also urged the leader of the Generalitat, Pere Aragonès, to “definitely say no. 

If the airport expansion in Barcelona goes ahead, environmentalists say that CO2 emissions would rise by a minimum of 33 percent. These levels would surpass the limits set by the Catalan government’s climate targets.

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