Playmakerstats
·8 maggio 2025
Inter and PSG ready to make history

Playmakerstats
·8 maggio 2025
This year’s Champions League final is confirmed, and it’s not your typical showdown.
Inter Milan will face Paris Saint-Germain in Munich on 31 May, marking the first final without a club from England, Spain or Germany since 2004.
That year, it was a young, sharp-suited José Mourinho guiding Porto to a 3-0 win over Monaco - and breaking the mould in a competition long dominated by Europe’s traditional powerhouses. Now, over two decades later, we’ve got a final that’s just as rare, and just as intriguing.
Even more remarkably, the winner won’t come from England, Spain or Germany either - something that hasn’t happened since 2010. That, too, featured Mourinho, this time leading Inter to a 2-0 victory over Bayern Munich in Madrid.
For Inter, this will be their seventh appearance in the final of Europe’s top competition. They've lifted the trophy three times — back-to-back in 1964 and 1965, and then again in 2010.
They've also fallen short three times: in 1967, 1972, and most recently in 2023, when they narrowly lost to Pep Guardiola’s treble-winning Manchester City.
As for PSG, it’s only their second-ever Champions League final. Their first came in the pandemic-delayed 2019/20 season, where they were edged out 1–0 by Bayern Munich in Lisbon.
The match also marks only the second-ever Champions League final between a French and Italian club - the first was in 1993, when Marseille beat AC Milan in the inaugural edition of the modern competition, also held in Munich.