PSG 2025: Stats, Records & Titles | Paris Football

The year started with a victory. It ended with success. From the 974 stadium in Doha, Qatar, for the Champions Trophy won against Monaco on January 5 (1-0) on a goal from Dembélé, to La Beaujoire, this Saturday evening, for a great success against the fans of Vendée Fontenay in the 32nd final of the Coupe de France (4-0), PSG has had a totally crazy last 12 months. A look back in figures at an exceptional year, which will remain engraved in the memories of Parisian supporters.

6 trophies

The record number of trophies won by PSG in 2025, an incredible vintage. It all started with the Champions Trophy in January, before the validation of the French champion title on April 5. This was followed a week apart by the Coupe de France (May 24) before the apotheosis of the victory in the Champions League (May 31) against Inter Milan (5-0).

The 2025-2026 season began with the European Super Cup against Tottenham on August 13, then the year ended with success in the Intercontinental Cup last Wednesday. He only missed the Club World Cup at PSG to sign a “perfect”.

50 wins

To win so many titles, PSG obviously had to win an incredible number of matches. Fifty, to be precise, out of a total of 65 matches played, or a winning ratio of 77% (6 draws and 9 defeats). According to stats specialist Opta, this is a record number of victories for a Ligue 1 team in all competitions in a calendar year.

In detail, the Parisians have won 25 Ligue 1 matches (out of 34 played, or 74%), 11 in the Champions League (out of 15, or 73%), six in the Coupe de France (100%), five in the Club World Cup (out of 7, 71%), to which are added successes in the Champions Trophy, the European Super Cup and the Intercontinental Cup.

22 matches with 4 goals (or more)

Proof of its offensive power in this year 2025, the Parisian club has scored at least four goals on 22 occasions. That is to say one match in three! This makes it, again according to Opta, the most spectacular club of the 5 major European championships, if we stick to this criterion, ahead of Barcelona (19 times) and Bayern Munich (16).

Among these matches with four goals or more, how can we not mention the recital in the final of the Champions League against Inter Milan (5-0), those against Atlético Madrid or Real at the Club World Cup (4-0) or even the spankings inflicted in the Champions League this season at Bayer Leverkusen (7-2) or Atalanta Bergamo (4-0).

3 finals on penalties

To win titles, you also need a bit of success. PSG had it, or at least knew how to provoke it, by winning the three penalty shootouts it had to play in 2025.

In order against Liverpool in the Champions League (4-1 tab), against Tottenham in the European Super Cup (4-3 tab) and, obviously, against Flamengo during the Intercontinental Cup (2-1 tab) with the incredible performance of Matvey Safonov and his four penalties saved. Curiosity, PSG won its three sessions with… three different goalkeepers, Gianluigi Donnarumma against Liverpool, Lucas Chevalier against Tottenham and, therefore, Safonov against Flamengo.

If we broaden the spectrum, PSG has not yet lost a single penalty shootout since the arrival of Luis Enrique at its head, an incredible four out of four.

32 goals for Dembélé

What would 2025 have been like without the contribution of a great striker? Ousmane Dembélé’s talent has shone before the eyes of the world since January, making Luis Enrique wonder at the start of the year what his striker “had eaten at Christmas” to achieve such a transformation in efficiency.

In total, the Ballon d’Or will have scored 32 goals in 48 matches in 2025, or 0.67 per match. But it was especially in the first half of the year that he made his mark, averaging an astonishing 0.87 goals per game (26 in 30 games) before slowing down since the start of the current season (six goals in 18 games), undermined by repeated injuries. But his excellent performance on Saturday evening suggests a bright future. For an equally memorable year 2026?

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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