THIS is the shocking moment a huge brawl breaks out on the streets of Paris ahead of the crunch Champions League tie between PSG and Aston Villa.

Footage shows opposing sets of fans erupting into a fight just outside of a busy bar in the French capital with punches, beers and several chairs thrown in the melee.

A street brawl at night.

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Opposing sets of fans threw dozens of punches at the start of the fightCredit: Facebook
Person running away from fireworks with a tray in hand.

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Fans quickly started to pick up chairs and throw them at one another in ParisCredit: Facebook
Man fighting another person outside a restaurant at night.

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Pints of beer were also being tossed across the busy streets overnightCredit: Facebook

English underdogs Aston Villa are set to take on soon-to-be French champions Paris Saint-Germain in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final showdown at the Parc des Princes tonight.

Video taken from inside a bar where dozens of fans were drinking overnight shows the moment the brawl unfolded.

Several clashes can be seen with several punches being thrown at first.

Shortly after, one set of fans start to launch their drinks at the oncoming group.

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Many of the rushing supporters had their hoods up as they approached the older looking fans who were at the bar to begin with.

It is unclear exactly who was involved in the brawl.

As the fighting continued, a number of bar stools started to be used as weapons.

One fan can be seen carrying it across the pavement with the pointed legs directed at the other supporters.

Then both sides begin to pick up chairs and throw them back and forth.

Dozens of onlookers started to gather around the mass brawl as they watched on from across the road.

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The Parisians are seasoned campaigners in European knockout football, having reached at least the quarter-finals in each of the past 13 seasons.

They’ve already wrapped up the Ligue 1 title with an astounding six games to spare and knocked out tournament favourites Liverpool in the last round.

But Villa are in outstanding form and are riding a seven-match winning streak.

They breezed into the quarter finals with an emphatic 6-1 aggregate victory over Club Brugge in the last 16. 

The side have also scored 20 goals and kept five clean sheets in their last seven matches and with four-time Europa League winner Unai Emery at the helm their fans are hopeful for an upset.

Aston Villa have finally given us an English side we can all get behind

BY Dave Kidd, Sun’s Chief Sports Writer

IT was a night of nights in early October when Villa Park welcomed back elite European football after a hiatus of four decades.

To be there at one of English football’s grandest, most historic and atmospheric stadiums as Bayern Munich were vanquished in a Champions League group match was a rare privilege.

Villa won the game and I left the ground feeling delighted for Villa’s supporters.

Which is strange because, usually, when English clubs play in Champions League football, I couldn’t honestly care less whether they win or lose.

I don’t think I’m alone in this. The Premier League’s traditional Big Six were difficult to love even before they tried to sell English football down the gurgler by signing up to a breakaway Super League.

And Newcastle, with their bottomless Saudi wealth, leave many of us equally cold. But Villa’s European adventure — next stop Paris Saint-Germain’s Parc des Princes in tomorrow’s quarter-final first leg — feels different.

It feels like a throwback to decades gone by, when English football fans would genuinely want other English clubs to thrive in Europe.

When Villa face Qatari-backed PSG in the French capital, most of England — except for the blue half of Birmingham and the Black Country supporters of Wolves and West Brom — will be firmly behind them.

And that’s because Villa’s successes under Unai Emery give the supporters of many other clubs something realistic to aspire to.

Villa are not a member of the modern elite, with all the spoilt-rotten sense of entitlement that status brings.

They are an authentic club, competing at Europe’s top table with underdog status, with a modest net spend, with a likeable, talented manager and with supporters who have followed their club through thick and thin, providing consistently the best atmosphere in the Premier League.

Unai Emery at a press conference.

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Four-time Europa League winner Unai Emery speaking at a press conference ahead of the gameCredit: Getty
Paris Saint-Germain soccer team celebrating a penalty shoot-out win.

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PSG come into the quarter finals after a huge win over LiverpoolCredit: PA
Marcus Rashford of Aston Villa training.

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English star Marcus Rashford training with Aston Villa ahead of their UEFA Champions League clashCredit: Getty