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The Champions League semi-finals kick off on Tuesday night — but if you expect real drama only on the pitch, look closer at the accounts.

While everyone watches the twenty-two players chase a ball, your reporter is following the money to witness a high-stakes clash between entirely different visions of how to build a global sporting empire.

Let’s take a look at it together.

First, we have Paris Saint-Germain. Owned by Qatar Sports Investments, PSG has transcended football to become a global lifestyle brand.

And at the centre is Nasser Al-Khelaifi, the most prominent face of European investment. While not the first to arrive, he has become its most influential ambassador.

They face Bayern Munich, the gold standard of the German model. Under the 50+1 rule, club members still hold a majority of voting rights, legally preventing any single billionaire from seizing control.

Although executives suggested scrapping the rule last month, Bayern remains, for now, a machine built on fiscal efficiency rather than individual ego, underpinned by its industrial alliance with Adidas, Audi and Allianz.

And then on Wednesday, it is a battle of US investment strategies. Until 1992, Atlético Madrid was the “people’s club,” but it underwent a complete corporate makeover since.

Following last month’s majority takeover by US private equity firm Apollo Sports Capital and with home games at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano, they have become a hybrid of Wall Street capital and Saudi partnership.

And they face Arsenal, the crown jewel of Stan Kroenke’s real estate empire.

Kroenke, the largest private landowner in the US, does not just buy players, he buys postcodes. His model treats the stadium as an anchor for massive urban development.

So, whether you prefer Qatari luxury, German democracy, or US private equity, Tuesday and Wednesday have something for every corporate strategist.

Oh, and I am told there might be some football played as well.

Watch the Euronews video in the player above for the full story.

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