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PSG

Zlatan makes history as PSG see off Marseille

Zlatan Ibrahimovic entered the history books on Sunday, when he netted twice to become PSG's all-time top scorer and in doing so helped his team see off bitter rivals Marseille. Here's a look at the weekend's action in Ligue 1.

Zlatan makes history as PSG see off Marseille
Zlatan Ibrahimovic holds a trophy aloft after becoming PSG's top scorer of all time. Photo: AFP

Zlatan Ibrahimovic became the leading goalscorer in Paris Saint-Germain history on Sunday as the reigning Ligue 1 champions extended their lead at the top following a 2-1 victory over arch-rivals Marseille.

Michy Batshuayi nodded in the opener after 30 minutes at the Parc des Princes to give Marseille the lead but Ibrahimovic tucked away a pair of penalties in the space of three minutes just before the break.

The second of those spot-kicks saw the Sweden striker surpass former Portugal international Pauleta's 109-goal record and write himself into the capital club's history books.

Kevin Trapp then ensured the home side's lead remained intact early in the second half as he kept out an Abdelaziz Barrada penalty to help PSG extend their advantage over second-place Angers to five points.

PSG midfielder Blaise Matuidi said his side deserved to win.

“We knew Marseille would come here and give us a difficult match,” said the French international.

“They had nothing to lose but we scored the two penalities which changed things around. We played well and it was a good performance.

“It's important that we keep our streak going and put results together but Marseille showed their place in the table is not deserved, although I don't think they deserved to win tonight (Sunday).”

A minute's silence was observed prior to kick-off for the victims of Saturday's heavy flooding on the French Riviera that claimed 17 lives, with four people still missing.

Marseille took the lead on the half hour as Batshuayi beat David Luiz to Barrada's cross to head past Trapp for his sixth goal this term.

But a woeful pass back towards his own goal from Belgian striker Batshuayi four minutes before half-time proved costly with PSG awarded a penalty after goalkeeper Steve Mandanda collided with Ibrahimovic.

The Swede duly converted from the spot to draw level with Pauleta's mark and repeated the trick three minutes later to put PSG ahead and claim the record outright of 110 goals after Rolando had handled following a corner.

Trapp steps up

Marseille won a penalty of their own 10 minutes into the second period as Serge Aurier sent Barrada sprawling but the Moroccan international saw his effort turned away by the German 'keeper.

Javier Pastore should have put the game out of Marseille's reach on 78 minutes but the Argentine substitute was thwarted by a stunning reflex save from Mandanda.

“We played to the same level as PSG, I think we did a lot more than the result reflects,” said Marseille coach Michel, who insisted his side think about how they take the defeat.

“I don't want my team to react like a little side satisfied that we troubled PSG.

“We can't be asatisfied that Trapp was the best Paris player tonight, we must go away sad.”

Earlier, Monaco's stuttering early-season form continued as they were held to a 1-1 draw at home to Rennes, while Caen rose to third, level on points with promoted Angers, after beating Saint-Etienne 1-0.

Rennes, whose terrific start has somewhat subsided after a fourth draw in a row, took a first-half lead at the Stade Louis II through Abdoulaye Doucoure.

But Monaco fought back after the break with Brazilian Wallace scoring his first Ligue 1 goal to salvage a point for Leonardo Jardim's men, who also had Danijel Subasic to thank for a second-half penalty save from Pedro Henrique

Meanwhile, Caen registered a fourth win in five as Andy Delort's 62nd-minute goal was enough to give them all three points against Saint-Etienne as Les Verts slumped to a second successive defeat, having entered the weekend in second.

Lorient rallied from a goal down to beat Bordeaux 3-2 with Benjamin Moukandjo, Majeed Waris and Zargo Toure all on target for the hosts after Diego Rolan had given Willy Sagnol's men a first-half lead.

Both teams finished with 10 men as Lorient's Lamine Gassama and Bordeaux's Andre Biyogo Poko were dismissed near the end before Adam Ounas pulled oneback for the visitors.

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FOOTBALL

‘Not football’s job’ to combat homophobia: French football chief

The head of French football has pulled away from a hardline stance against homophobic chanting and banners in stadiums on Friday, saying that "too many matches" have been stopped due to anti-gay abuse.

'Not football's job' to combat homophobia: French football chief
Photo: FRANCK FIFE / AFP

Noel Le Graet, president of the French Football Federation (FFF), said that the FFF would not instruct referees to stop matches except in cases when a “whole stadium” was guilty of homophobic chanting.

“I think we're stopping too many matches! That makes certain government ministers happy, but it bothers me. Football can't be taken hostage by vulgarity,” said Le Graet in an interview with newspaper Ouest-France.

Several matches have been temporarily halted in France this season after the French football League (LFP) introduced over the summer plans to tackle fan homophobia during matches, including allowing referees to stop games.

“Matches have been stopped when they shouldn't have been,” Le Graet continued.

“We will stop them if there is consistent homophobic abuse from the whole ground, but if among 30,000 people there are 2,000 imbeciles I don't see why the other 28,000 should be punished.”

Le Graet referred to France's sports minister Roxana Maracineanu, who in April launched the appeal for matches to be stopped in the event of homophobic abuse, and equalities minister Marlene Schiappa.

Schiappa publicly praised referee Clement Turpin after he stopped Marseille's 2-1 win at Nice for over 10 minutes last month following sustained abusive chanting and banners from home fans, but Le Graet insisted that it wasn't football's job to combat homophobia.

Paris Saint-Germain's match at Metz two days later was also briefly halted for a banner unfurled by the hosts' supporters asking the French league (LFP) to allow them to aim homophobic chants at PSG.

“Did football invent homophobia? You can be a know-it-all when you have got much to say. But there are more important political issues,” he said.

“This crisis will resolve itself. We will work with club presidents, people who don't stick their oar in every morning, who don't want to just look good in front of the television cameras.”

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