Delirious Paris St Germain fans got their first glimpse of world-record signing Neymar on Saturday although he was restricted to some pre-match ball juggling after being forced to sit out the Ligue 1 opener.
The Brazilian, whose 222 million euros ($261.32 million) signing from Barcelona doubled the world-record transfer fee, was prevented from making his debut against Amiens as his registration had gone through too late.
Fireworks greeted Neymar's appearance from the tunnel an hour ahead of the scheduled 1515GMT kickoff before he stood on a podium to address the crowd who chanted his name.
"Merci," Neymar said, before adding via an interpreter that "my intention is to win many trophies with you."
Neymar, who was joined by PSG's CEO Nasser Al-Khelaifi, then paraded around the pitch, showing his ball-juggling skills and ending up bare-chested after throwing his shirt into the crowd.
Neymar, 25, joined on a five-year contract from Barcelona on Thursday after PSG met the cost of the buyout clause in his contract. PSG believe he will help them challenge for this year's Champions League title.
He joins fellow Brazilian and former Barcelona team mate Dani Alves in the French capital after he joined from Juventus.
Neymar had said at a media presentation on Friday that he hoped to take part in PSG's opening league match, although PSG did not need him, winning easily enough 2-0.
Saturday's ceremony fuelled a marketing blitz by PSG, who on Friday sold 10,000 replica shirts printed with Neymar's name and registered 500,000 euros in merchandise sales, according to news channel BFM TV.
Al-Khelaifi told reporters on Friday that the value of the club had risen by half a billion dollars since the signing of Neymar who will earn a salary of 45 million euro.
Tickets for PSG's first away match, at Guingamp next weekend, have already sold out and fans in Brittany may be rewarded by seeing Neymar make his debut for PSG.
Neymar's arrival has raised hopes in France that Ligue 1's profile will be boosted, although PSG's Qatari owners have also drawn criticism for potentially undermining Financial Fair Play rules covering European clubs.
($1 = 0.8495 euros)