Kylian Mbappe's departure was expected to sidetrack Paris Saint-Germain this season. How would a team long viewed as over-reliant on the France superstar cope without him after his move to Real Madrid?
Who could score so freely for PSG when Mbappe averaged more than 40 goals per season over the past four campaigns and more than 250 in seven years at the club? And, who would bail the team out of trouble with last-gasp winners?
Things have turned out rather well, so far, and the widely anticipated post-Mbapp headache has not materialised. Far from it.
PSG is the only team to have won its first three games in the French league and has scored an impressive 13 goals.
No longer being so reliant on Mbappe seems to have produced an early side effect, whereby the goals are being shared around and teamwork has improved in coach Luis Enrique's side.
Bradley Barcola has led the way with four goals, adding a finishing touch to his skilful dribbling down the left, while his France teammate Randal Kolo Muani and South Korea forward Lee Kang-in have netted twice each.
France right winger Ousmane Dembele has chipped in with a goal and two assists for the defending champion, while new signing Joo Neves leads the league with three assists.
Kolo Muani and Dembele continued their form with France, each scoring on Monday in a 2-0 win against Belgium in the Nations League.
Behind the forwards, Portugal's Vitinha and France's Warren Zare-Emery form a solid midfield pairing along with the 19-year-old Neves, an offseason signing from Portuguese side Benfica.
More From This Section
For now, it seems like Mbappe's absence is being felt more keenly off the field than on it.
On Wednesday, he rejected a mediation offer by the French football league's legal commission in his dispute with PSG over wages and bonuses.
PSG officials and Mbappe's representatives met in Paris after Mbapp asked the commission to get involved. Mbappe, who joined Madrid on a free transfer, says the club owes him 55 million euros (USD 60 million). PSG said it was pleased with how the commission hearing went.
While PSG's power struggle with its ex-striker continues, PSG's current crop of forwards look for more goals when the team hosts Brest on Saturday before facing Spanish side Girona on Wednesday when the Champions League starts.
Mbappe is expected to make his European debut for Madrid the previous night, at home to Stuttgart.
He never won Europe's most prestigious club prize with PSG, but most observers would argue he has a far better chance of doing so with record 15-time champion Madrid.
At some point this season, their paths may cross again on the field.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)