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PSG's total dominance removes any drama from French league

PARIS (AP) - Fuelled by funding from Qatar, Paris Saint-Germain's crushing dominance this season has removed all suspense from the French league with 16 matches remaining.

Unless you are a PSG fan, the excitement factor has evaporated. PSG already leads closest rival Monaco by a colossal 21 points and has only setting domestic records to worry about.

At the current rate, PSG will finish on 104 points - smashing its own record by 15 - while coach Laurent Blanc's side is on course to score around 100 league goals and concede the least ever in a season.

A second straight domestic treble is odds-on, with PSG playing in the League Cup semifinals on Tuesday, and if PSG avoids defeat at Saint-Etienne on Sunday it will equal the longest unbeaten league run of 32 games, set by Nantes 21 years ago.

PSG's Qatari owners, Qatar Sports Investments, have pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into the club since taking over in June 2011 in a bid to join Europe's elite.

The club is worth around €480 million in terms of revenue, making it the fourth richest behind Manchester United, Barcelona and No. 1 Real Madrid, according to Deloitte's rankings.

It's all too easy, meaning that Blanc's side will ultimately be judged on how well it does in the Champions League - having lost in the quarterfinals for the past three seasons - rather by how many points it wins its fourth straight title by.

Therefore, it is understandable that Blanc has spent the past two weeks talking about the importance of being ready to face Chelsea in the last 16 - even though the first leg is not until Feb. 16.

But in doing so he may as well grab a megaphone and tell everyone how weak the domestic competition is.

Saturday's 5-1 hammering of Angers extended an unbeaten league run dating back to March 15, matched a club record for 11 straight wins and improved PSG's whopping goal difference to + 46. At the ripe age of 34, Zlatan Ibrahimovic is on course for his best ever tally - he has 17 league goals so far, despite missing five games - while winger Angel di Maria has already beaten his league scoring record as well as setting up the most goals in Ligue 1.

PSG's only defeat anywhere was 1-0 away to Real Madrid in the Champions League on Nov. 3.

In boxing terms, PSG's dominance would be the equivalent of a heavyweight champion knocking out petrified middleweights within a minute of the opening round.

Seven-time French champion Lyon and nine-time champ Marseille did challenge last season, but both languish 30 points behind.

Monaco threatened to upstage PSG after a massive cash outlay under Russian billionaire owner Dmitry Rybolovlev three years ago, but then did everything to undermine that bid.

In the past two seasons, Monaco has sold Colombia's World Cup star James Rodriguez to Real Madrid, France midfielder Geoffrey Kondogbia to Inter Milan, speedy winger Yannick Ferreira Carrasco to Atletico Madrid, lynchpin defender Aymen Abdennour to Valencia, and rising star Anthony Martial to Manchester United - as well as letting once-feared striker Radamel Falcao join United on loan.

For a club hoping to challenge PSG, that is a funny way of showing it.

Instead, Monaco has now become purely a profit-making club - and a very good one - using its vast scouting network to recruit exceptionally talented young players and sell them for a profit.

Even if Monaco does finish second, it would be hard to bet against the club selling more of its promising assets.

Monaco has achieved one thing PSG never has, though - reaching the Champions League final, in 2004 - and Marseille won it in 1993.

But Marseille only has an outside shot of qualifying for next season's Champions League and, having spent several seasons clearing debts, it has scant funds available.

Owner Margarita Louis-Dreyfus is increasingly keen to sell - the asking price is around € 85-100 million euros - with potential buyers from Kazakhstan, Kuwait and China showing an interest, according to a report Sunday on football show Telefoot.

However, any buyer would have to invest considerably more to attract the likes of Di Maria and Edinson Cavani - PSG's €64-million striker who now sits on the bench.

Buying Marseille comes with another snag: the Stade Velodrome is owned by the city and mayor Jean-Claude Gaudin does not want to sell it.

"As long as I'm mayor of Marseille, it won't change," he told Telefoot.

The example of Lens should be a warning sign to clubs hoping for a miracle investor, too.

Having secured considerable backing from major shareholder Hafiz Mammadov of Azerbaijan, all seemed promising when the northern club won promotion back to the first division two seasons ago.

That was until the league's financial watchdog (DNCG) spotted a 10-million euro hole in the club's proposed budget for 2014-15. The promotion was ruled invalid and Lens was ordered to be relegated no matter where it finished in Ligue 1 last season.

Now, Lens is seventh in the second division.

The best hope of a long-term challenge to PSG rests with Lyon, which has moved into a new stadium - which it fully owns - and always has promising players coming through from its superbly-run youth academy.

But Lyon only has a slim chance of keeping star striker Alexandre Lacazette, who recently gave an interview saying he would relish playing in the Premier League.

Therefore, next season could be the same again, with little excitement outside of PSG's Champions League campaign.

Furthermore, club president Nasser Al-Khelaifi has lamented how the atmosphere at Parc des Princes is far less passionate than at Saint-Etienne, Marseille or Nantes - clubs with a traditionally loyal and noisy fan base.

The atmosphere at Parc des Princes is stifled and much akin to a theater crowd in the way it is excessively demanding - with some fans even jeering 20 minutes into Saturday's rout of Angers, while others were still taking their seats.

Unlike other major European cities, Paris does not have a cross-city rival to at least make for some exciting local derbies and PSG's fans appear only vaguely interested until their team gets into heavy scoring mode.

Spoilt home fans even jeered Ibrahimovic when he missed a chance a few games ago - astonishingly harsh on such an entertainer who, in just four seasons, has become the club's all-time leading scorer with 126 goals.

But with no rivals, PSG fans have the luxury of picking holes in their own team.

PSG's Zlatan Ibrahimovic stands after shooting a free kick, during the League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Angers, at the Parc des Prince stadium in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) The Associated Press
PSG's Lucas, center, celebrates with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, right, and Blaise Matuidi, after scoring during the League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Angers, at the Parc des Prince stadium in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) The Associated Press
PSG's Angel Di Maria, center, challenges for the ball with Angers' Romain Saiss, left, and Vincent Manceau, during the League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Angers, at the Parc des Prince stadium, in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) The Associated Press
PSG's Angel Di Maria, right, looks the ball as she scores during the League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Angers, at the Parc des Prince stadium in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) The Associated Press
PSG's Lucas, center, celebrates with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, right, and Blaise Matuidi, after scoring during the League One soccer match between Paris Saint Germain and Angers, at the Parc des Prince stadium in Paris, Saturday, Jan. 23, 2016. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus) The Associated Press
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