
Paris Saint-Germain's Champions League-winning squad will show off European club football's most prestigious trophy during a victory parade on Sunday afternoon along the Champs-Elysées in Paris.
The team claimed the prize for the first time after annihilating Inter Milan 5-0 at the Allianz Arena in Munich on Saturday night.
Following the voyage in an open-top double-decker bus, the squad will go to the Parc des Princes to present the trophy to fans inside their home stadium.
The gala is expected to finish with a lavish reception at the Élysée Palace with President Emmanuel Macron.
"The club wants all PSG fans to make this celebration a show of solidarity and passion," said a club spokesperson. "We want this incredible moment to be enjoyed with respect and without violence."
Incidents
Two people died and nearly 600 were arrested in France overnight during celebrations, the interior ministry said on Sunday.
A spokesperson said 491 people were arrested in Paris when crowds converged on the Champs-Élysées and clashes broke out with police.
A man riding a motor scooter died after being hit by a car in the south-western Paris, and in Dax in south-western France, a 17-year-old boy was fatally stabbed at a party.
Authorities said the teenager died after the match. The prosecutor's office said it did not know whether the incident was related to the Champions League final.
Paris erupted with flares and fireworks, car horns and an Eiffel Tower glittering in blue and red to celebrate Saturday night's success.
Achraf Hakimi and Désiré Doué scored within the first 20 minutes to give Luis Enrique's side a grip on the game.
Doué added PSG's third after 63 minutes and 10 minutes later, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia made it 4-0.
With four minutes remaining, academy graduate Senny Mayulu thrashed in the fifth to catapult PSG into the record books with the biggest winning margin in the final of the 69-year-old competition.