Lens Seize the Moment as Samson Baidoo’s Header Sinks Paris FC in a Flurry at Stade Bollaert-Delelis
In the autumn haze of Stade Bollaert-Delelis, RC Lens carved out a victory that spoke less of luck and more of a growing conviction. On a day where the margins mattered, Lens overcame Paris FC by a 2-1 scoreline, reinforcing their claim as one of Ligue 1’s early pace-setters and nudging their guests further into mid-table uncertainty.
Odsonne Édouard set the tone before seventeen minutes had ticked away, presenting the home crowd with the certainty only a striker’s finish delivers. With applause rising from the terraces, Édouard latched onto Florian Thauvin’s clever through ball and — with a single sharp touch — dispatched the ball past Paris FC’s keeper, reminiscent of his crucial opener at Auxerre two weeks prior. It was Édouard’s second in as many matches and a flourish that underlined the forward’s importance in Lens’s attacking renaissance.
Yet if Lens imagined a tranquil afternoon, Paris FC wasted little time rewriting the narrative. Barely ten minutes later, Pierre Lees Melou engineered parity. The midfielder, dancing through traffic just outside the box, found the smallest window and drilled a shot low to Brice Samba’s left, silencing the home support in the process. Lees Melou, instrumental throughout Paris FC’s campaign, produced a finish that carried purpose — and it was his first goal in two months.
What unfolded next was a contest marked by fierce midfield battles, with both clubs eager but neither reckless; cards remained mostly pocketed, and the officials presided with restraint. For a spell, the tension was more chessboard than open field, each side probing for a misstep. Paris FC, emboldened by their recent run — just one loss in four — pressed, with Ilan Kebbal and Jean-Philippe Krasso seeking spaces that rarely materialized.
The turning point would arrive with the hour mark approaching. Lens forced a sequence of corners that tested Paris FC’s resolve, and it was from the third such set-piece that Samson Baidoo made history. It was Thauvin again providing the delivery, whipping a ball to the near post where Baidoo, timing his leap with precision, rose above the crowd to flash a header beyond the stranded keeper. The defender’s celebration was as emphatic as the goal itself — his first for Lens since joining this summer.
The final act was not short of drama. Paris FC, trailing for the first time, shifted gears and launched themselves at Lens’s back line. Kebbal, lively on the left, engineered the best chance — a curling ball that forced Samba into an acrobatic save. The energy, though, was met by Lens’s steely organization. The home side managed the clock expertly, repelling attacks and countering with intent. As the whistle blew, the home supporters understood the significance: this was a statement win.
Lens’s resurgence has been one of measured growth. With thirteen points from seven matches — four wins and just two losses — they have climbed to sixth in Ligue 1. The victory tonight adds to a positive run: three wins in their last four, including triumphs against Lille and Auxerre. Their clean sheet against Rennes now sits as a foundation, but it is their newfound ability to grind out close results, such as today, that suggests a team coming of age.
Paris FC, by contrast, are navigating volatile form. With ten points from seven matches and lingering in ninth, they have alternated between promise and frustration. Their recent win over Lorient, courtesy of Kebbal and Krasso, hinted at momentum; yet, today marks their third defeat in the last five. The inability to consolidate leads, as seen in their draw at Nice and collapse against Strasbourg, is becoming a theme.
There was little in the head-to-head history to tip the scales: Lens and Paris FC had produced nervy affairs in years past, marked mostly by stalemates and narrow margin results. Today’s match, then, was something of a departure, a contest with real stakes and genuine quality.
As the league table settles, Lens’s ascent indicates ambition — the top four only a whisper away. With opponents like PSG and Marseille waiting, every point is precious. Paris FC must quickly rediscover their attacking fluency and resolve, lest the mid-table mediocrity become an unwanted destination.
For both sides, October’s fixture list offers no respite. But as the sun set on Bollaert-Delelis, it was Lens who looked upwards, buoyed by Baidoo’s decisive header and a belief that, in this season of early promise, they may yet have the final word.