Back to Back.The slogan was painted on the back of the team bus and down the back of the Champions League winners’ custom-made shirts. Even Rue du Bac, Line 12 of the Paris metro, was renamed Rue du Back-to-Back.After all “it was never going to be just one”, as the collector’s T-shirt read, worn by fans and Paris Saint-Germain’s players during Sunday’s celebrations. By the morning after the night before — which saw “unacceptable scenes of violence”, according to president Emmanuel Macron, spread throughout the French capital — Parc des Princes was already wrapped in new artwork featuring the dates 2025 and 2026 either side of two stars above the words “Champions d’Europe”.With the majestic Eiffel Tower providing a magnificent backdrop, a blue, white and red carpet dressed an avenue, reserved only for the best: the Champs Elysees. The champions sauntered down the iconic route, flanked by around 85,000 to 90,000 fans, making their way fittingly enough towards l’Arc de Triomphe.Following PSG’s victory over Arsenal (1-1, 4-3 on penalties) on Saturday, they became only the second team to win consecutive Champions Leagues since the competition was rebranded in 1992, joining Real Madrid. The man at the centre of it all was Luis Enrique.The victory even prompted a message from former Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson to PSG’s president, Nasser Al-Khelaifi. “Nasser, Alex Ferguson here,” he wrote, as reported by L’Equipe. “Well done, it was a tough night for you, but you were up against a boring team that did nothing but defend. Enjoy your holidays, you deserve them.”PSG’s football advisor Luis Campos, Luis Enrique, Nasser al-Khelaifi and captain Marquinhos join President Emmanuel Macron to raise the trophy (Christophe Petit Tesson/AFP via Getty Images)After a month which saw big manager moves — Liverpool sacked Arne Slot, Manchester United handed Michael Carrick a two-year contract, Jose Mourinho signed a contract in Madrid, and Pep Guardiola left Manchester City — PSG will be gleefully smiling they have such a coach on their hands.The 56-year-old only has one year left on his deal. After Saturday’s final, however, Al-Khelaifi backed him to the hilt, and you would expect so, given the former Barcelona coach has been recognised for transforming the Parisian club.He brought some much-needed discipline to a team full of individuals, exemplified by the straight-talking feedback he offered Kylian Mbappe in that infamous one-on-one analysis session. Indeed, Al-Khelaifi told CBS his “best decision” was hiring Luis Enrique and not one of the star-studded players on which the club have spent €2.5billion (£2.2bn, $2.9bn) since Qatar Sports Investments bought PSG in 2011.After the squad were welcomed at the Elysee Palace by Macron, who described Luis Enrique as an “extraordinary conductor”, the ebullient head coach, accompanied by his staff, led the team out inside an effervescent Parc des Princes.The fans bellowed his name. He lifted the enormous trophy above his head, the silverware dwarfing his scrawny body which bobbed up and down on stage engulfed in the mosh pit of players and staff.