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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Scott Murray

Newcastle 4-1 Paris Saint-Germain: Champions League – as it happened

Newcastle United's Fabian Schar celebrates scoring their fourth goal against Paris St Germain.
Fabian Schar makes it four. Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters

No word from Eddie Howe, but no matter, because Louise Taylor’s verdict is in. Here it is! Thanks for reading this MBM. Nighty night.

Meanwhile in Dortmund, Milan played out another goalless draw. All of which means …

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 Newcastle 2 3 4
2 PSG 2 -1 3
3 AC Milan 2 0 2
4 Borussia Dortmund 2 -2 1

Sean Longstaff talks to TNT. “It’s some night … for me and Burny to score tonight is pretty surreal … I’m lost for words really … it’s an unbelievable night … my family will be proud and probably a bit drunk! … this is the elite of the elite … they have some of the best players in the world … we wanted to show how good we are … we have stuff to improve on but tonight we will just celebrate the win … if anyone in Newcastle ever had an excuse not to go in [to work] it’s this!”

Kylian Mbappé sighs, blowing out in the traditional gallic style. Bof. Bof squared. Bof². The illustrious striker didn’t perform tonight, and neither, with the possible exception of the young Warren Zaire-Emery, did any of his team-mates. Thing is, they weren’t allowed to: Newcastle came at them from the off, with just the right mixture of tenacity and talent, and blew them away. Magnificent strikes by Miguel Almirón and Fabian Schär; dream goals for the local lads Dan Burn and Sean Longstaff. Newcastle made it back to the Champions League ahead of schedule; they haven’t wasted any time in proving that they most certainly belong in it, either.

FULL TIME: Newcastle United 4-1 Paris Saint-Germain

Worth waiting 20 years for.

Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak celebrates after the final whistle of the Champions League victory over Paris Saint-Germain at St. James’ Park.
Newcastle United’s Alexander Isak celebrates at the final whistle. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA
Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe celebrates after his team’s 4-1 win over Paris St-Germain.
Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe savours a famous victory. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
Newcastle United fans celebrate winning the game at full time against Paris Saint Germain.
As do the Newcastle fans. Photograph: Richard Lee/Shutterstock

Updated

90 min +5: St James’ Park en fête. The flags are out again. What glorious bedlam!

Newcastle fans celebrate after the Champions League game against Paris Saint-Germain at St James' Park.
Flag-tastic. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

90 min +3: This will be Newcastle’s biggest victory in the Champions League. Gordon makes way for Targett.

GOAL! Newcastle 4-1 PSG (Schar 90+1)

Schar robs Ramos 35 yards out with a slide tackle. The ball breaks to Murphy, who rolls gently to his right for Schar, who had kept going. Leaning back, Schar sends a heatseeker into the top right. Donnarumma no chance!

Newcastle United’s Fabian Schar scores their fourth goal against Paris St Germain.
Fabian Schar thumps home Newcastle United’s fourth. Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters
Newcastle United’s Fabian Schar celebrates scoring their fourth goal against Paris St Germain with Alexander Isak.
Happy happy ... Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters
Fabian Schaer of Newcastle United celebrates with teammates after scoring the team's fourth goal against Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
Joy joy. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Updated

90 min: There will be five added minutes.

89 min: Hakimi flies down the right and cuts back for Mbappe, who attempts to power clear down the inside-right channel but only succeeds in clattering Gordon. Not his evening.

88 min: Pope is booked for taking his sweet time over a goal kick.

86 min: Mbappe dribbles down the left and cuts back for Vitinha, who blazes wildly over from 25 yards.

85 min: Mbappe’s shot takes a huge deflection off Lascelles’ rear end. Newcastle are awarded a goal kick nevertheless. Mbappe keeps his counsel despite clearly fuming.

84 min: A bit of time for Isak, just to the left of the PSG D. His shot goes straight down Donnarumma’s throat.

83 min: PSG are pressing Newcastle back in their own half … but Newcastle are holding them at arm’s length. Barcola tries to break the line with a dribble down the left wing, but the ball pings through to Pope. “Eddie Howe has got the mix right in terms of paying PSG respect and getting at them,” writes Chris Paraskevas. “They’ve pressed well at key moments but have also been streetwise in sitting deep when required. It also helps that Mbappe is having one of the worst games of his career … so far.”

81 min: From the resulting free kick, Guimaraes flashes a header straight at Donnarumma. A couple of feet either side and that really would have been game over.

Newcastle United's Bruno Guimaraes heads at goal but has his shot saved against PSG.
Newcastle United's Bruno Guimaraes can’t direct his header far enough away from Donnarumma. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

80 min: … so having said that, they get ponderous in the midfield. Guimaraes nips in to steal the ball and buy a cheap foul off Zaire-Emery. The young PSG midfielder is booked, not so much for that challenge, but a series of recent ones; he’d only just barged Gordon in the back.

79 min: Zaire-Emery drives with purpose down the middle. He lays off to Dembele on the overlap down the right. Dembele fires in a dangerous low cross, but it sails just too far ahead of Mbappe, racing in towards the penalty spot. Inches away from completing a move of fast-paced brilliance. For the first time tonight, it feels like PSG are knocking on the door.

77 min: Dembele and Ramos attempt a mid-distance one-two down the right. It doesn’t quite come off, but full marks for ambition. Then Dembele comes down the right again, taking a touch to stride into the box and rasping a drive towards the top left. Pope parries with strong arms.

75 min: Anderson leaves a little on Mbappe. Nothing so dramatic as to stop the play, just enough to let him know he’s about. Newcastle doing a no-nonsense number on PSG tonight.

73 min: Mbappe sends a simple pass out of play on the left. Barcola gives him the what-for; Mbappe looks at him with a haughty mixture of disinterest and disdain. The greatest player in the world right now has had an evening to forget. But then we said this at roughly the same point during the World Cup final, and look what ended up happening there.

71 min: Almiron has felt a twinge, and makes way for Murphy.

70 min: Gordon is booked for a late slide on Marquinhos.

69 min: Dembele responds positively, racing clear down the inside-right channel after a lovely long pass by Hakimi. As he enters the box and shoots, he feels the pressure of Lascelles on his back. It’s enough to put him off. He slices wide right. A huge chance spurned, and had that gone in, the atmosphere would have really changed.

67 min: Dembele is booked for something or other. The player looks utterly confused, and presses the point with the referee, who isn’t up for a philosophical back-and-forth.

66 min: Anderson’s first contribution is a ball-glued-to-boot skitter down the left wing. He makes it all the way into the box, sailing past a couple of challenges, but takes one touch too many and the chance to shoot is gone. That would have been some introduction.

65 min: Newcastle respond by swapping out Tonali for Anderson.

64 min: Ugarte is replaced by Vitinha.

63 min: Newcastle have ridden that little storm. A drop in intensity, and given PSG are the scorers of the last goal, with momentum on their shoulder, that’s just fine.

61 min: Mbappe miscontrols a simple pass in the centre circle, earning dog’s abuse from the crowd. He doesn’t bother chasing the ball that whistles under his foot, even though it’s right next to him. Very poor.

59 min: The corner’s worked back to Hakimi, whose shot from distance is deflected out for a corner on the right. Nothing comes of that one, and it’s a goal kick to Newcastle, but the home side are suddenly going through their first patch of turbulence of the evening.

58 min: There’s a VAR check for offside, but the goal stands. Barcola comes on for Kolo Muani and immediately wins a corner down the left. All of a sudden, PSG have a spring in their step, and the mood in St James’ has shifted ever so slightly.

GOAL! Newcastle 3-1 PSG (Hernandez 56)

He’s got to pick the ball out of the net now, though. PSG ping it around patiently. Zaire-Emery, quarterbacking from a central position, 30 yards out, shovels delicately down the middle and into the box. It drops to Hernandez, who steers such a clever header across Pope and into the bottom right. Pope had no chance, and PSG have a sliver of hope.

Lucas Hernandez of PSG scores their first goal past Newcastle United goalkeeper Nick Pope.
Lucas Hernandez of PSG scores their first goal past Newcastle United goalkeeper Nick Pope. Photograph: Daniel Chesterton/Offside/Getty Images
Paris Saint-Germain's Lucas Hernandez celebrates with Marquinhos after pulling a goal back at Newcastle.
Paris Saint-Germain's Lucas Hernandez (left) celebrates with Marquinhos after pulling a goal back at Newcastle. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

Updated

55 min: Dembele curls to the far stick. Skriniar sticks out his studs and pokes weakly wide, but he was offside anyway. Pope has had next to nothing to do.

54 min: Tonali brings down Ramos just to the left of the D. A big chance for PSG to hit back quickly.

Newcastle United's Sandro Tonali tussles with Paris St Germain's Goncalo Ramos under the ref’s nose.
Newcastle United's Sandro Tonali tussles with Paris St Germain's Goncalo Ramos under the ref’s nose. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

53 min: PSG have enjoyed 66 percent of possession, but very little else.

52 min: That was a glorious pass by Trippier, a fine run and opportunistic shot by Longstaff. But the PSG defending was appalling – nobody tracking and so much space – while ultimately that goes down as a huge goalkeeping clanger. But do Newcastle and the denizens of St James’ Park care? No they do not!

GOAL! Newcastle 3-0 PSG (Longstaff 50)

One Geordie boy has already scored; now another gets onto the scoresheet! Trippier plays a cute diagonal pass down the right wing to release Longstaff into the box. He hits a low drive that Donnarumma should parry, but mishandles, allowing the ball to ping up towards the top corner and in!

Newcastle United's Sean Longstaff scores his team's third goal during the Champions League group game against Paris Saint-Germain at St James' Park.
Sean Longstaff fires home a third. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images
Newcastle’s Sean Longstaff scores his side’s third goal during the Champions League group game between Newcastle and Paris Saint Germain at St. James’ Park.
Longstaff and the Toon Army are in dreamland. Photograph: Scott Heppell/AP
Paris St Germain’s Kylian Mbappe looks dejected after Newcastle United’s Sean Longstaff scores their third goal.
Whilst for Kylian Mbappe and his PSG teammates, it’s more of a nightmare. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

49 min: Dembele turns on the jets to make his way down the right. His cutback is cleared by one of the eight Newcastle players positioned in the box.

48 min: Longstaff nearly dispossess Ugarte on the edge of the PSG box. No immediate sign of the visitors upping the tempo, a necessary requirement if they’re to get back into this match you’d have thought.

46 min: PSG begin the half with a period of patient possession.

Newcastle get the second half underway. No changes.

Half-time mailbag. “Howe will need to calm down his team. I’m honestly surprised Guimares wasn’t sent off for suckerpunching Ugarte. Newcastle are living on the disciplinary edge” – Kári Tulinius

“That was unbelievably stupid by Guimaraes, who was otherwise immense in that first half. Imagine if he had got a red card there after all that effort to achieve that lead? Talk about letting your teammates down. Lucky, lucky boy” – Shaun Wilkinson

Half-time advertisement break. It’s out!

HALF TIME: Newcastle United 2-0 Paris Saint-Germain

Newcastle go off to another huge roar of appreciation. They’ve earned every decibel. This scoreline doesn’t flatter them at all. They’ve been as effervescent as PSG have been poor.

45 min +7: Newcastle launch one last first-half attack. Guimaraes tussles with Ugarte, who seems to overpower him in a footrace. He’s booked, and is fairly lucky the referee is in a good mood, because as Ugarte passed him, he seemed to make a slightly strange chopping motion with an arm that caught his opponent on the back of the head. Could easily have been a red.

45 min +6: Kolo Muani drives down the left to win a corner. The set piece is worked to Mbappe, who cuts back for Ramos. A shot is deflected wide left and nothing comes of the second corner.

45 min +4: Nothing comes of the free kick. PSG counter through Dembele, who skedaddles down the right and whips in low. It’s a dangerous ball, but there’s nobody in blue taking a chance on a run. Dembele indulges in some righteous frustration with his buddies.

45 min +3: Hakimi tugs back Gordon as the Newcastle winger drifts in from the left. Free kick, and the PSG defender, having just been booked, wants to watch himself here.

45 min +2: Longstaff brings down Hakimi, just to the right of the Newcastle box. Dembele loops towards the far post, where Pope punches confidently clear. Everything going right for Newcastle at the moment. PSG are clearly rattled now.

45 min: There will be seven extra first-half minutes.

44 min: Hakimi was booked in the aftermath of the VAR decision for arguing the toss. Not sure why it took so long, given Uefa’s semi-automated system. Still, gotta trust the process, huh?

GOAL! Newcastle 2-0 PSG (Burn 39)

Marquinhos was playing Guimaraes onside with his trailing foot! St James’ explodes again, and what was left of the roof after the first goal heads towards Sunderland.

Dan Burn of Newcastle United scores their second goal during the Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
Dan Burn rises highest and heads home to double the home side’s lead. Photograph: Daniel Chesterton/Offside/Getty Images
Dan Burn of Newcastle United scores their second goal during the Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
Here’s a view of the header from the other side of the pitch. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA
Newcastle United’s Dan Burn celebrates scoring the team’s second goal during the UEFA Champions League Group F football match between Newcastle United and Paris Saint-Germain at St James’ Park.
Burn celebrates his goal. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images
Newcastle United’s Dan Burn celebrates scoring their second goal with teammates during the Champions League Group F football match between Newcastle United and Paris Saint-Germain at St James’ Park.
Then is congratulated by his teammates. Photograph: Carl Recine/Reuters

Updated

41 min: The VAR check for offside is interminable. But it’s worth the wait, because …

39 min: Trippier curls it into the mixer … and then bedlam, bedlam, bedlam! It initially looks as though Lascelles handles before heading, but no whistle. PSG pause. Ugarte slices towards his own goal. Donnarumma claws it away. Guimaraes, by the left-hand corner of the six-yard box, tries to catch the keeper out from a tight angle. Donnarumma parries. Guimaraes take two: this time he chips to the far stick, where Burn rises and bashes a close-range header towards the top right. Donnarumma claws it out again, but the ball’s gone well over the line. The offside flag goes up, but someone’s going to have to unpick all that. Over to VAR!

Updated

38 min: Trippier creams a delicious long pass down the right touchline to release Almiron into acres. He zones in on the box, but before he can reach it, Hernandez cynically brings him down. The PSG right-back goes into the book, and this is a free kick in a very dangerous position, just to the right of the box, 25 yards out.

37 min: Isak back on, to a great wave of affection.

36 min: Poor Isak felt that, and it takes a while to wrap a Terry Butcher bandage around his head. But it looks like he’ll be good to continue.

34 min: Isak hits Gonçalo Ramos late with a forward’s challenge. Just mistimed, no malice. But he comes off worse, somehow, taking a whack upside the head as the pair fall. On comes the trainer to mop the blood and fix him up.

32 min: PSG, who have had 66 percent of possession so far, continue to pass and probe to no effect.

30 min: PSG are seeing more of the ball. But they’re doing very little with it.

28 min: Gonçalo Ramos attempts to burst past Schar and into the box down the left. Schar stands firm and takes the hit of an opponent running at full pelt. Brave, and a well-timed clearance too, because the players were just inside the area.

27 min: Gonçalo Ramos drives at goal. His shot is deflected wide left. From the resulting corner, Mbappe attempts to take on Almiron down the left, but his cross is flicked out of play by the Newcastle midfielder’s studs. However the home side get the goal kick, and Mbappe’s frustration betrays him. Diddled out of a corner, his team a goal down, he’s not happy. All going very nicely for Newcastle so far.

25 min: … Almiron pulls back for Schar, who pelts a low drive inches wide of the bottom right. Had that been on target, Donnarumma was beaten all ends up. Half the ground celebrate, the side netting having been rippled. So close to doubling Newcastle’s lead.

24 min: Trippier sends Almiron into space down the right. Almiron attempts to shuttle further on to Isak, but the PSG defence half clear. Newcastle come back down the same flank, whereupon Marquinhos, attempting to usher the ball out for a goal kick, confuses himself and hacks out for a corner. From which …

22 min: Mbappe accelerates down the inside-left channel, then lays off to Kolo Muani to his left. Kolo Muani fizzes a low cross into the mixer. Newcastle clear. PSG come again, though, Zaire-Emery pearling a long-distance riser towards the top right. Inches wide. Burn was beaten. That was a proper potential net-ripper, and a reminder that while PSG have started slowly, they’ve got plenty of scope to improve quicksmart.

21 min: The noise at St James’, though! The sudden, explosive end of 20 years of yearning.

19 min: That’s Newcastle’s first Champions League goal since Alan Shearer breached Internazionale in San Siro in 2003. Dembele tries to counter it with a dribble down the right, but his low cross disappears into a pocket of home defenders and is cleared accordingly.

GOAL! Newcastle 1-0 PSG (Almiron 17)

Newcastle press and press, and refuse to allow PSG out of their final third. Marquinhos’s poor pass out is headed straight back by Guimaraes. Isak slams goalwards. Donnarumma parries well, but the ball breaks right to Almiron, who opens his body and steer-slams a curler into the bottom left! What a finish! The roof at St James’ copters off towards Berwick.

Miguel Almiron steers the ball home to open the scoring against PSG.
Miguel Almiron steers the ball home to open the scoring with a fine finish. Photograph: Michael Regan/Getty Images
Miguel Almiron of Newcastle United celebrates after scoring a goal to make it 1-0 during the UEFA Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain.
Almiron is rather pleased. Photograph: Robbie Jay Barratt/AMA/Getty Images
Fans of Newcastle United celebrate as Miguel Almiron of Newcastle United (not pictured) scores the team’s first goal during the UEFA Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
As are the Toon Army. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Updated

15 min: Almiron is clanked to the ground by Ugarte, who comes sliding in with great feeling, in the time-honoured Uruguayan style. The great Obdulio Varela would have appreciated that no-nonsense challenge, one suspects. No booking, and nothing comes of the resulting free kick, but no matter, because …

14 min: Hakimi ships possession carelessly 40 yards from his own goal. A pass towards nobody. Almiron takes up possession and immediately zips down the middle, before hoicking a wild effort miles over the bar. He had options either side, too.

12 min: Isak briefly looks like breaking clear down the inside-right channel, but the referee spots his not particularly subtle push in the back of Skriniar, and there goes that whistle.

11 min: It is tipping down all of a sudden. “When Dan Burn was playing for Fulham in the lower divisions I don’t suppose he could have imagined facing someone like Mbappé in the Champions League,” writes Richard Hirst. “The lad has certainly done well for himself.” Up up and howay?

Updated

9 min: Hernandez attempts to release Mbappe into space out on the left touchline. Lascelles reads the danger, coming across to blooter clear. Had he arrived on the scene one second later, Mbappe was most likely tearing free. Fine defending.

7 min: Tonali, Guimaraes and Gordon look lively down the left wing. They combine with some crisp passes and eventually Gordon is skittled. The resulting free kick is launched into the box, Lascelles winning a header that Donnarumma claims adroitly. Both teams attempting some front-foot football here.

5 min: PSG nearly take the lead with a wonder goal. Mbappe strides down the left and, upon reaching the corner of the box, swings a ball towards Dembele, rushing in from the other flank. Dembele opens his body and steers a glorious first-time shot inches wide of the left-hand post. Had that been on target, the rooted Pope was beaten. That would have been a picture-book goal.

Ousmane Dembele (right) of PSG watches his shot goes wide during the Champions League group game at Newcastle United.
Close but no cigar for Ousmane Dembele (right). Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA

Updated

4 min: Marquinhos gets on the home fans’ nerves by putting his foot on the ball and standing stock still for a good few seconds, the professional drawing of some early sting. Eventually he passes the ball backwards and Newcastle launch their press again. Gordon hares after it down the left but Marquinhos sees it out for a goal kick. Gordon immediately waves his arms to demand more cheering. The crowd grant his wish with another roar.

2 min: PSG come out swinging too, though, Dembele nearly releasing Hakimi on the overlap down the right. Burn ushers the ball out for a goal kick.

1 min: Just 40 seconds in, and Newcastle’s press has already forced the visitors into shipping possession on three occasions. A hectic start, in other words.

PSG get the ball rolling. Over to the players, then!

The teams are out! Newcastle in their famous black and white stripes, PSG first-choice blue and red. Anyway, the fans have waited two decades for this, and it won’t be shock breaking news to tell you that they’re seriously up for it as a result. The entire place is briefly transformed into a sea of rippling black and white stripes, everyone giving it plenty with their cleverly co-ordinated flags. The Leazes End spells out “Hello hello, we are the Geordie Boys”; everyone’s put in the effort tonight all right. What an atmosphere! We’ll be off in a couple of minutes!

Newcastle United fans display a tifo before the match against PSG.
Fans of Newcastle United look on as they wave a flag prior to the UEFA Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
Fans of Newcastle United look on as they wave a flag prior to the UEFA Champions League match between Newcastle United FC and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA

Updated

Pre-match soundtrack. There’s the wild Uefa reimagining of Zadok the Priest, of course, but nothing ever tops the traditional St James’ Park airing of the theme from one of the greatest movies ever made.

MAN: Are you sure there are two Ls in ‘Lascelles’, Gideon?
GIDEON: Yes … and are there two Gs in ‘bugger off’?

Time for some sepia-toned memories of old-time PSG (est. 1970) with Chris Paraskevas. “I’m glad somebody mentioned the criminally underrated Intertoto Cup: the look on Scott Parker’s face during the trophy presentation (click below) is still iconic/haunting to this day. I also seem to remember a time when PSG had that slightly hipster-cool feel to them: Pauleta, Ronaldinho, the baggy jerseys. Now it’s very mainstream: it’s all Jordan crossover-this, and Kylian Mbappe-that. By the way, Ronaldinho’s only trophy with PSG? You guessed it... the Intertoto Cup.” Chris Paraskevas, ladies and gentlemen, also known in literary circles as The Weaver.

You want more on that aforementioned 3-2 win over Barcelona … as well as Newcastle’s last home Champions League game, a 2-0 defeat by the same opponents in 2003? We got it.

Eddie Howe speaks to TNT Sports. “It’s very special … you come here and see what it means to everybody … we want to succeed, do well, it’s going to be a big night for us … it’s about the detail, we’ve got to get it right … we have to be tactically aware of what we have to do … hopefully we have a fast start and it will settle us down … we come into this game in good form … we’ve got some very good players … underneath that ability, team spirit and commitment … a really tight group … we’ve come together as one … we’ve done our work on Kylian Mbappé, it depends on where he plays, out left or in a more central position, we’ve prepared for both.”

Newcastle United fans before the Champions League match between Newcastle United and Paris Saint-Germain at St. James Park.
The Newcastle United fans are up for this. Photograph: MB Media/Getty Images

Updated

Newcastle have made one change to their starting XI from the 2-0 won over Burnley at the weekend. Sandro Tonali comes in for Elliot Anderson, who drops to the bench. The future Scotland/England international will be sitting alongside 17-year-old midfielder Lewis Miley, who started the recent League Cup victory over Manchester City. Joelinton and Callum Wilson are injured.

PSG boss Luis Enrique returns to the scene of his first Champions League appearance in a Barcelona shirt. He improvised Barca’s first goal in a 3-2 defeat to the Toon in 1997, the Faustino Asprilla match, forcing a Luis Figo cross past Shay Given from close range with the old nips. Tonight he makes four changes to his team from last weekend’s draw at Clermont: Warren Zaire-Emery, Lucas Hernandez, Manuel Ugarte and Goncalo Ramos replace Danilo Pereira, Vitinha, Fabian Ruiz and Bradley Barcola, who are all benched.

Updated

The teams

Newcastle United: Pope, Trippier, Lascelles, Schar, Burn, Longstaff, Guimaraes, Tonali, Almiron, Isak, Gordon.
Subs: Dubravka, Dummett, Targett, Karius, Hall, Livramento, Murphy, Anderson, Miley.

Paris Saint-Germain: Donnarumma, Hakimi, Marquinhos, Skriniar, Hernandez, Dembele, Ugarte, Emery, Muani, Ramos, Mbappe.
Subs: Navas, Fabian, Pereira, Vitinha, Mukiele, Soler, Barcola, Tenas.

Referee: Istvan Kovacs (Romania).

The Paris Saint-Germain team coach arrives at St James' Park ahead of the Champions League group game between Newcastle United and Paris Saint-Germain.
The Paris Saint-Germain team bus arrives at St James’ Park. Photograph: Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Preamble

Newcastle’s return to the Champions League after a 20-year wait produced a highly encouraging draw away to last season’s semi-finalists …

… so can they go one better at home against the 2020 runners-up? PSG can assert some real dominance over Group F with a win at St James’ Park tonight, having won their first match 2-0 at Borussia Dortmund thanks to goals from Kylian Mbappé and Acharaf Hakimi. Newcastle will fancy their chances, though, having not lost at home in Europe since Deportivo La Coruña came to town in the 2006 Intertoto. Could be a cracker. Kick off is at 8pm BST. It’s on!

Pos Team P GD Pts
1 PSG 1 2 3
2 AC Milan 1 0 1
3 Newcastle 1 0 1
4 Borussia Dortmund 1 -2 0
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