Nathaniel Adjei turned the Coupe de France into his personal stage on Wednesday night, delivering a dominant display that powered FC Lorient past FC Paris in a 2–0 victory and earned him the Man of the Match award.
The night carried extra weight. Paris FC arrived at Stade du Moustoir wrapped in the glow of their recent giant-killing act against Paris Saint-Germain, a result that had cast them as the competition’s unlikely villains for the established order.
🏆 Qualification de nos Merlus au terme d’une prestation de grande qualité !
Des buts de Noah Cadiou et Sambou Soumano.
Sur 5, vous mettez quelle note ? pic.twitter.com/Ijwv64ScGj
— FC LORIENT 🐟 (@FCLorient) February 4, 2026
Their shock win over PSG last month, the first in their history against their wealthier city rivals, had rewritten the script of the tournament and set up another potential fairytale.
But fairytales end. And Adjei made sure this one did. From the opening exchanges, Paris FC pressed with purpose, playing with the belief of a team that had already toppled a titan. Lorient absorbed the early wave, and at the heart of their resistance stood the 22-year-old Ghanaian defender. Calm under pressure, sharp in his reading of danger, Adjei snuffed out attacks before they could gather momentum, setting the tempo for a composed home performance.
As Lorient edged in front, the contest grew tense. Paris FC pushed higher, throwing bodies forward in search of another dramatic twist. The defining moment came in the second half when a dangerous delivery arced into the penalty area, threatening to unravel Lorient’s slim advantage.
Adjei rose above the mêlée and thumped the ball away, a clearance that felt like a line drawn under the visitors’ hopes. The roar from the stands said it all, the tide had turned.
Even with the danger averted, Adjei refused to sit back. Under pressure, he threaded a clever pass from deep, launching the move that led to Lorient’s second goal and effectively sealed the contest. It was the kind of contribution that underlined his influence on both sides of the game: destroyer at the back, initiator in possession.
Lorientais, Lorientaises, on file en quart ! 🫵🧡 pic.twitter.com/28q38mKFbx
— FC LORIENT 🐟 (@FCLorient) February 4, 2026
By the final whistle, Paris FC’s dream run was over. The giant-killers had been halted, their momentum broken by a defender who refused to be swept up in the romance of the cup. As the stadium exhaled, Adjei’s quiet celebration told its own story, job done, statement made.
His authority across the night was reflected in the numbers, with the Ghanaian earning a standout 7.9 rating and walking away with the Man of the Match honour, the defining figure in Lorient’s march into the next round.





