PARIS (AFP) – Marseille’s fierce rivalry with Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) has lost some of its edge in recent years as the Qatar-owned club have dominated French football, but OM’s resurgence under Igor Tudor has their passionate supporters dreaming of beating the capital club to the title.
PSG have been French champions in eight of the past 10 years and have lost just two of their last 27 meetings with Marseille – whose last Ligue 1 crown came in 2010 under Didier Deschamps.
Yet one of those defeats came earlier this month, when Marseille outfought and outclassed their old foes to win 2-1 in a French Cup tie played in a frenzied atmosphere at the Velodrome.
The stadium will be the scene of tomorrow’s rematch, with 65,000 home fans hoping to see their side once again get one over on Kylian Mbappe, Lionel Messi and PSG’s other stars.
All meetings between the clubs are huge occasions, but this is a potentially pivotal game in the fight for the title, with second-placed Marseille knowing a win will leave them just two points adrift of a stuttering PSG at the top of the table.

“Of course we are thinking about the title, but we are just taking things one game at a time,” said centre-back Chancel Mbemba after Marseille’s 3-2 win at Toulouse last weekend.
While PSG have struggled in 2023, Marseille have won 12 and drawn one of 14 matches played since going out of the Champions League at the start of November.
It is all a far cry from the beginning of the season, when Igor Tudor was booed by the Velodrome when his name was read out ahead of Marseille’s opening game with supporters unimpressed by the identity of the man chosen to replace the popular Jorge Sampaoli as coach.
Yet the 44-year-old former Juventus and Croatia defender had done a fine job leading Verona to ninth place in Serie A last season and was headhunted by Pablo Longoria, the 37-year-old Spanish president of Marseille who runs the club on behalf of American owner Frank McCourt.