French football superstar Kylian Mbappe snubbed Saturday a move to Spanish giant Real Madrid as he signed a new three-year deal to stay at Paris Saint-Germain.
Mbappe said he was "very happy" to stay with the French Ligue 1 champion until 2025, in a deal that could set PSG back by a whopping $898 million.
PSG, however, will be starting the new season without sporting director Leonardo, who was dismissed late on Saturday after Mbappe's decision.
"I am very happy to stay in France, in Paris, in my city," Mbappe told supporters on the Parc des Princes pitch before he marked his new deal with a hat trick in PSG's 5-0 win over Metz in their final Ligue 1 match of the season.
Standing next to PSG president Nasser al-Khelaifi, Mbappe said: "I hope I'm going to be able to continue to do what I like most – winning football matches and trophies with all of you."
Mbappe's hat trick Saturday took his total of league goals for the season to 28 as he finished as Ligue 1's leading scorer for a fourth straight campaign.
His decision ends months of speculation surrounding arguably the hottest property in world football.
Real Madrid had pursued Mbappe for months and had reportedly agreed on a deal that would have included a signing-on fee of 150 million euros ($158 million).
Mbappe had made no secret of his desire to play one day for Real, who will face Liverpool in the Champions League final in Paris next weekend after securing a 35th La Liga championship.
But PSG, who won the French title for a record-equalling 10th time but angered its hardcore supporters with an exit against Real in the last 16 of the Champions League, has battled to hold on to its biggest asset.
"I found out that he was staying just a few minutes before the announcement," admitted PSG coach Mauricio Pochettino, who is widely expected to leave the club this close season despite having a year to run on contract.
Sporting Director Leonardo, 52, was dismissed hours after Mbappe extended his contract, according to a source with knowledge of the matter, confirming media reports.
The Brazilian, in the post since 2019, paid the price after a disappointing season for PSG, who lost to Real Madrid in the knockout stages of the Champions League in March.
The president of Spain's La Liga, Javier Tebas, complained bitterly Saturday that the massive financial resources of the PSG owners had proved decisive in persuading Mbappe to stay in France.
"What PSG is doing by renewing Mbappe with large sums of money ... after posting losses of 700 million euros in recent seasons and having a wage bill of over 600 million euros, is an INSULT to football," Tebas tweeted.
La Liga announced in a statement it was launching an official complaint about PSG's actions "to UEFA, the French administrative and fiscal authorities and the appropriate decision-making bodies of the European Union."
In his tweet, Tebas also called Khelaifi "a danger to European football."
Khelaifi is the chairman of the influential European Club Association and sits on the UEFA Executive Committee.
Mbappe will now line up next season alongside Neymar and probably Lionel Messi – assuming he stays at the club – to help PSG in its protracted quest to land the Champions League, the title that has so far eluded the club.
Real Madrid fans were bemused after the widely-hyped move collapsed.
"Now I don't want him to come to Real Madrid anymore. It's not worth it," David Pulido, a 42-year-old Real supporter, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Mbappe played on both fronts. First, he wanted to come to Madrid, and now for the money, he stays at PSG. I have no interest in Mbappe anymore, I'm sorry. He's a great player. I liked him at times, but not anymore."
Mbappe joined PSG on a seasonlong loan from Monaco in August 2017 that turned into a permanent deal worth 180 million euros.
He has helped the club win four Ligue 1 titles in five seasons, having also won a championship in the principality.
In the Champions League exit to Real this season, Mbappe scored in both legs of the tie, but could not prevent PSG from losing 3-2 on aggregate.
Last week he was named France's player of the year for a third time in four seasons – the exception being in 2020 when no winner was crowned due to the pandemic.
He will be a key figure when France attempts to defend the World Cup in November and December.
The president of the Real Madrid supporters' associations, Luis Caceres, told Spanish radio station Cadena Cope: "Real Madrid have won 13 Champions Leagues without Mbappe. He will not be missed."