PSV Eindhoven's title defense is a disaster waiting to happen
The High-Wire Act of Peter Bosz
Back-to-back Eredivisie titles are notoriously difficult to pull off, and PSV Eindhoven are about to find out exactly why. Defending a championship is never just about keeping the squad together. It's about maintaining the hunger, tweaking the system before opponents figure it out, and hoping your aging core doesn't suddenly hit a physical wall. Right now, PSV feels like a team tempting fate.
Peter Bosz deserves immense credit for transforming PSV into an absolute machine. His high-pressing, relentless attacking style blew the doors off the league last season. It was thrilling to watch. But there is a well-documented "Bosz Tax" that his teams eventually pay. His system demands maximum physical exertion, and history shows his squads often suffer dramatic drop-offs in his third season. We saw it at Ajax. We saw it at Bayer Leverkusen. Why would Eindhoven be any different?
PSV's 2025-26 title defense rests on a spine that is undeniably talented but terrifyingly brittle. Luuk de Jong is an Eredivisie legend. Full stop. But he turns 35 this year. Relying on him to lead the line and execute a high press twice a week across the league and an expanded Champions League format is playing with fire. You cannot cheat time, and De Jong looked heavy-legged during the final stretch last May.
When De Jong isn't firing, the entire attacking structure crumbles. The buildup play becomes lethargic. The crosses into the box suddenly find empty space instead of a towering header. PSV management failed to secure a legitimate, battle-tested successor this summer, opting instead for cheap depth. That arrogance will cost them points.
The Midfield Engine Room
If PSV are going to retain their crown, the midfield pairing of Jerdy Schouten and Joey Veerman has to be perfect. Last year, they were arguably the best double pivot outside of Europe's top five leagues. Schouten dictated the tempo with ruthless efficiency, while Veerman provided the killer final ball. But European nights take a massive toll.
More importantly, the domestic competition has had a full year to analyze their passing lanes. Eredivisie managers are not stupid. They watched how Bosz sets up his midfield traps. Teams are already dropping into a low block, forcing Schouten and Veerman to play horizontal passes rather than vertical line-breakers.
This brings us to the biggest critical flaw in PSV's setup: their defensive transition. When Bosz's press is bypassed, the backline is frequently left exposed in terrifying one-on-one situations. We saw it happen against top-tier European opposition, and we started seeing bottom-half teams exploit it late in games last spring. Olivier Boscagli is a phenomenal ball-playing defender. He can ping a 40-yard diagonal pass onto a winger's chest. But he isn't exactly a pure stopper when isolated in open space against a quick forward.
PSV's transfer window has been a mixed bag, to put it mildly. They haven't adequately replaced the defensive depth they lost. The replacements they did bring in look like raw projects rather than instant starters. You cannot defend an Eredivisie title with projects. You need proven winners who can step into the cauldron of De Kuip and survive.
The Competition Isn't Sleeping
Feyenoord and Ajax are not going to roll over. Feyenoord have quietly retooled their squad, building a physical, counter-attacking unit specifically designed to punish teams like PSV. They took notes from last season's defeats. They know that if you can bypass the first wave of PSV's press, the pitch opens up massively.
Ajax, despite their well-publicized boardroom chaos over the last two years, still have an academy capable of churning out game-changers at a moment's notice. They are wounded, embarrassed, and desperate to reclaim their spot at the top of Dutch football. Writing them off would be a monumental mistake.
Let's look at the raw numbers. PSV conceded just 20 goals in their record-breaking 2023-24 campaign. That was a defensive anomaly. They failed to replicate that stinginess last year, and regression to the mean is inevitable. When you play Boszball, you are always one missed interception away from conceding a catastrophic counter-attack.
The pressure is squarely on Johan Bakayoko. If he stays in Eindhoven, he has to elevate his game from "exciting prospect" to "unplayable superstar". He needs to be the guy who bails PSV out when the system breaks down. If he gets sold late in the window, PSV lose their most dynamic outlet on the right flank. It makes them instantly more predictable, forcing them to attack entirely through the middle where teams will be packing the box.
The Final Verdict
PSV Eindhoven are the defending champions on paper, but they feel like a team bracing for impact rather than one preparing to dominate. The Eredivisie is unforgiving to teams that stand still, and PSV's summer moves reek of complacency.
They might still have enough sheer attacking firepower to overwhelm the lower half of the table. You can always count on them putting four past RKC Waalwijk on a Sunday afternoon. But in the crucial top-four clashes that decide the title? Bosz's stubborn refusal to adopt a Plan B is going to cost them dearly.
Defending a title requires evolution. PSV look like they are trying to replay last season's greatest hits. My bet: the Eredivisie trophy doesn't stay in Eindhoven this May. The Bosz cycle is hitting its natural, chaotic conclusion, and Feyenoord are perfectly positioned to pick up the pieces.
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Frequently Asked Questions
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