Ballon d'Or
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Ballon d'Or trophy
Awarded forExcellence in football
CountryFrance
Presented byFrance Football
First award18 December 1956 (1956-12-18)
Currently held by Ousmane Dembélé
(1st win)
Most awards Lionel Messi
(8 awards)
Most nominations Cristiano Ronaldo
(18 nominations)
Websiteballondor.com
RelatedAdditional awards

The Ballon d'Or (French pronunciation: [balɔ̃ dɔʁ] ; lit. 'Golden Ball') is an annual football award presented by French magazine France Football since 1956 to honour the player deemed to have performed the best over the previous season.

Conceived by sports writers Gabriel Hanot and Jacques Ferran, the Ballon d'Or was based exclusively on voting by football journalists up until 2006. Originally, it was awarded only to players from Europe and was widely known as the European Footballer of the Year award. In 1995, the Ballon d'Or was expanded to include all players of any origin that have been active at European clubs. The award became a global prize in 2007 with all professional footballers from around the world being eligible; additionally, coaches and captains of national teams were also given the right to vote, before reverting to just journalists in 2016.

Between 2010 and 2015, in an agreement with FIFA, the award was merged with the FIFA World Player of the Year, and was known as the FIFA Ballon d'Or. That partnership ended in 2016, and the award reverted to the Ballon d'Or, while FIFA also reverted to its own separate annual award, The Best FIFA Men's Player. In 2022, France Football modified the rules for the Ballon d'Or. The timing was changed so that awards were given not for achievements during a calendar year, but for a football season, and it was also determined that an international jury of specialized journalists, with one representative per country, from the top 100 in the latest FIFA Men's World Ranking would elect the winner of the award. UEFA co-organizes the Ballon d'Or gala since 2024, with France Football retaining the voting system and the Ballon d'Or name.

Lionel Messi has won the Ballon d'Or a record eight times, followed by Cristiano Ronaldo with five. Johan Cruyff, Michel Platini and Marco van Basten each won the award three times, while Alfredo Di Stéfano, Franz Beckenbauer, Kevin Keegan, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge and Ronaldo have each won it twice. Ousmane Dembélé is the current holder of the award, having won its 69th edition in 2025.

Overview

The Ballon d'Or is widely regarded as football's most prestigious and valuable individual award.[1][2][3][4] Prior to 2007, it was based exclusively on voting by football journalists and was generally known as the continental European Footballer of the Year award in English language and much international media.[5][6] Even after 2007, it was usually identified with and referred to by that name because of its origin as a European award,[7][8] until it was merged with the FIFA World Player of the Year award cementing its new worldwide claim.[9][10] Stanley Matthews of England was the inaugural winner of the award.[11][12] Liberia's George Weah, the only African recipient, became the first non-European to win the award in 1995, the year that rules of eligibility were changed and the Ballon d'Or was expanded to include all players of any origin, active at European clubs;[13][14] two years later, Ronaldo of Brazil became the first South American without a European citizenship to claim the award,[13] and he is still the youngest winner ever at 21 years, 96 days old.[15] The award became a global prize in 2007 with all professional footballers from clubs around the world being eligible;[16] additionally, coaches and captains of national teams were also given the right to vote,[6][15] before reverting to just journalists in 2016.[17][18]

Lionel Messi holds the record for most Ballon d'Or wins with eight,[4][19] while five-time winner Cristiano Ronaldo earned the most nominations with eighteen.[20] Messi is the only player to win the award with three clubs and also the only one to win it while playing outside Europe,[21][22] as well as being the player with the most podiums, finishing in the top-three a record fourteen times, including eleven consecutive from 2007 to 2017.[4] Three players have won the award three times each: Johan Cruyff, Michel Platini and Marco van Basten.[11][20] With seven awards each, Dutch, German, and Portuguese players have won the second most Ballons d'Or, underneath Argentina and France in first with eight.[14] Players from West Germany (1972, 1981) and the Netherlands (1988) occupied the top-three spots in a single year. West German (1972) and Italian (1988–1990) clubs achieved the same feat, including two individual years dominated by Milan players (1988, 1989), a unique record until Spanish clubs experienced an unprecedented dominance (2009–2012, 2015, 2016) and Barcelona (2010) became the second club to occupy the top-three.[19] The award shows a bias in favour of attacking players,[23] and, over time, it has gone to a more exclusive set of leagues and clubs.[6] Prior to 1995, ten leagues supplied Ballon d'Or winners, whereas only England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United States have supplied winners since then.[6][24] Spain's La Liga has the most Ballon d'Or winners overall, with twenty-four wins shared between Barcelona and Real Madrid; with twelve wins each,[25] the two Spanish clubs also lead the overall club ranking for producing the most winners.[24][26]

Between 2010 and 2015 inclusive, the award was merged with a similar one, the FIFA World Player of the Year award, to create the FIFA Ballon d'Or,[18][27] which was awarded to the world's best male player before FIFA and France Football decided not to continue the merging agreement.[2][15] The recipients of the joint FIFA Ballon d'Or are considered as winners by both award organizations.[6][28][29] After 2011, UEFA created the UEFA Best Player in Europe Award to maintain the tradition of the original Ballon d'Or of specifically honouring a football player from Europe.[30] In 2020, Groupe Amaury, to which France Football belongs,[31] decided that no award would be given for the year due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on association football.[1][32] The widespread public opinion is that the 2020 Ballon d'Or should have been awarded to Robert Lewandowski.[33][34][35]

France Football modified the rules for the Ballon d'Or in 2022.[18] They changed the timing so that awards were given not for achievements during a calendar year, but for a football season.[15][36] It was also decided that an international jury of specialized journalists, with one representative per country, from the top 100 in the latest FIFA Men's World Ranking would determine the winner of the award;[17][37] the plebiscite had previously been open to all countries since 2007.[15][36] UEFA co-organizes the Ballon d'Or gala since 2024, with France Football retaining the voting system and the Ballon d'Or name.[31][38]

Criteria

The Ballon d'Or is awarded based on three main criteria:[18][37]

1) Individual performances, decisive and impressive character;
2) Team performances and achievements;
3) Class and fair play.

Nevertheless, critics have occasionally described the award as a "popularity contest",[39][40] criticizing its voting process,[17] its bias in favour of attacking players,[23] and the idea of systematically singling out an individual in a team sport.[41][42]

Winners

Note: Until 2021, the Ballon d'Or was awarded based on player performance during the calendar year. Since 2022, jurors have been instructed to take into account the previous season.[2][36]

Player (X) Denotes the number of times the player had won the award at that time (for players with multiple wins)
Ballon d'Or winners[a]
Year Rank Player Team Points
Ballon d'Or (1956–2009)
1956 1st Stanley Matthews Blackpool 47
2nd Alfredo Di Stéfano[note 1] Real Madrid 44
3rd Raymond Kopa Real Madrid[note 2] 33
1957 1st Alfredo Di Stéfano (1) Real Madrid 72
2nd Billy Wright Wolverhampton Wanderers 19
3rd Duncan Edwards Manchester United 16
Raymond Kopa Real Madrid
1958 1st Raymond Kopa Real Madrid 71
2nd Helmut Rahn Rot-Weiss Essen 40
3rd Just Fontaine Reims 23
1959 1st Alfredo Di Stéfano (2) Real Madrid 80
2nd Raymond Kopa Reims[note 3] 42
3rd John Charles Juventus 24
1960 1st Luis Suárez Barcelona 54
2nd Ferenc Puskás Real Madrid 37
3rd Uwe Seeler Hamburger SV 33
1961 1st Omar Sívori[note 4] Juventus 46
2nd Luis Suárez Inter Milan[note 5] 40
3rd Johnny Haynes Fulham 22
1962 1st Josef Masopust Dukla Prague 65
2nd Eusébio Benfica 53
3rd Karl-Heinz Schnellinger 1. FC Köln 33
1963 1st Lev Yashin Dynamo Moscow 73
2nd Gianni Rivera Milan 55
3rd Jimmy Greaves Tottenham Hotspur 50
1964 1st Denis Law Manchester United 61
2nd Luis Suárez Inter Milan 43
3rd Amancio Real Madrid 38
1965 1st Eusébio Benfica 67
2nd Giacinto Facchetti Inter Milan 59
3rd Luis Suárez Inter Milan 45
1966 1st Bobby Charlton Manchester United 81
2nd Eusébio Benfica 80
3rd Franz Beckenbauer Bayern Munich 59
1967 1st Flórián Albert Ferencváros 68
2nd Bobby Charlton Manchester United 40
3rd Jimmy Johnstone Celtic 39
1968 1st George Best Manchester United 61
2nd Bobby Charlton Manchester United 53
3rd Dragan Džajić Red Star Belgrade 46
1969 1st Gianni Rivera Milan 83
2nd Gigi Riva Cagliari 79
3rd Gerd Müller Bayern Munich 38
1970 1st Gerd Müller Bayern Munich 77
2nd Bobby Moore West Ham United 70
3rd Gigi Riva Cagliari 65
1971 1st Johan Cruyff (1) Ajax 116
2nd Sandro Mazzola Inter Milan 57
3rd George Best Manchester United 56
1972 1st Franz Beckenbauer (1) Bayern Munich 81
2nd Gerd Müller Bayern Munich 79
Günter Netzer Borussia Mönchengladbach
1973 1st Johan Cruyff (2) Barcelona[note 6] 96
2nd Dino Zoff Juventus 47
3rd Gerd Müller Bayern Munich 44
1974 1st Johan Cruyff (3) Barcelona 116
2nd Franz Beckenbauer Bayern Munich 105
3rd Kazimierz Deyna Legia Warsaw 35
1975 1st Oleg Blokhin Dynamo Kyiv 122
2nd Franz Beckenbauer Bayern Munich 42
3rd Johan Cruyff Barcelona 27
1976 1st Franz Beckenbauer (2) Bayern Munich 91
2nd Rob Rensenbrink Anderlecht 75
3rd Ivo Viktor Dukla Prague 52
1977 1st Allan Simonsen Borussia Mönchengladbach 74
2nd Kevin Keegan Hamburger SV[note 7] 71
3rd Michel Platini Nancy 70
1978 1st Kevin Keegan (1) Hamburger SV 87
2nd Hans Krankl Barcelona[note 8] 81
3rd Rob Rensenbrink Anderlecht 50
1979 1st Kevin Keegan (2) Hamburger SV 118
2nd Karl-Heinz Rummenigge Bayern Munich 52
3rd Ruud Krol Ajax 41
1980 1st Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (1) Bayern Munich 122
2nd Bernd Schuster Barcelona[note 9] 34
3rd Michel Platini Saint-Étienne 33
1981 1st Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (2) Bayern Munich 106
2nd Paul Breitner Bayern Munich 64
3rd Bernd Schuster Barcelona 39
1982 1st Paolo Rossi Juventus 115
2nd Alain Giresse Bordeaux 64
3rd Zbigniew Boniek Juventus[note 10] 39
1983 1st Michel Platini (1) Juventus 110
2nd Kenny Dalglish Liverpool 26
3rd Allan Simonsen Vejle[note 11] 25
1984 1st Michel Platini (2) Juventus 110
2nd Jean Tigana Bordeaux 57
3rd Preben Elkjær Hellas Verona[note 12] 48
1985 1st Michel Platini (3) Juventus 127
2nd Preben Elkjær Hellas Verona 71
3rd Bernd Schuster Barcelona 46
1986 1st Igor Belanov Dynamo Kyiv 84
2nd Gary Lineker Barcelona[note 13] 62
3rd Emilio Butragueño Real Madrid 59
1987 1st Ruud Gullit Milan[note 14] 106
2nd Paulo Futre Atlético Madrid[note 15] 91
3rd Emilio Butragueño Real Madrid 61
1988 1st Marco van Basten (1) Milan 129
2nd Ruud Gullit Milan 88
3rd Frank Rijkaard Milan[note 16] 45
1989 1st Marco van Basten (2) Milan 129
2nd Franco Baresi Milan 80
3rd Frank Rijkaard Milan 43
1990 1st Lothar Matthäus Inter Milan 137
2nd Salvatore Schillaci Juventus 84
3rd Andreas Brehme Inter Milan 68
1991 1st Jean-Pierre Papin Marseille 141
2nd Dejan Savićević Red Star Belgrade 42
Darko Pančev Red Star Belgrade
Lothar Matthäus Inter Milan
1992 1st Marco van Basten (3) Milan 98
2nd Hristo Stoichkov Barcelona 80
3rd Dennis Bergkamp Ajax 53
1993 1st Roberto Baggio Juventus 142
2nd Dennis Bergkamp Inter Milan[note 17] 83
3rd Eric Cantona Manchester United 34
1994 1st Hristo Stoichkov Barcelona 210
2nd Roberto Baggio Juventus 136
3rd Paolo Maldini Milan 109
1995 1st George Weah Milan[note 18] 144
2nd Jürgen Klinsmann Bayern Munich[note 19] 108
3rd Jari Litmanen Ajax 67
1996 1st Matthias Sammer Borussia Dortmund 144
2nd Ronaldo Barcelona[note 20] 143
3rd Alan Shearer Newcastle United[note 21] 107
1997 1st Ronaldo (1) Inter Milan[note 22] 222
2nd Predrag Mijatović Real Madrid 68
3rd Zinedine Zidane Juventus 63
1998 1st Zinedine Zidane Juventus 244
2nd Davor Šuker Real Madrid 68
3rd Ronaldo Inter Milan 66
1999 1st Rivaldo Barcelona 219
2nd David Beckham Manchester United 154
3rd Andriy Shevchenko Milan[note 23] 64
2000 1st Luís Figo Real Madrid[note 24] 197
2nd Zinedine Zidane Juventus 181
3rd Andriy Shevchenko Milan 85
2001 1st Michael Owen Liverpool 176
2nd Raúl Real Madrid 140
3rd Oliver Kahn Bayern Munich 114
2002 1st Ronaldo (2) Real Madrid[note 25] 169
2nd Roberto Carlos Real Madrid 145
3rd Oliver Kahn Bayern Munich 110
2003 1st Pavel Nedvěd Juventus 190
2nd Thierry Henry Arsenal 128
3rd Paolo Maldini Milan 123
2004 1st Andriy Shevchenko Milan 175
2nd Deco Barcelona[note 26] 139
3rd Ronaldinho Barcelona 133
2005 1st Ronaldinho Barcelona 225
2nd Frank Lampard Chelsea 148
3rd Steven Gerrard Liverpool 142
2006 1st Fabio Cannavaro Real Madrid[note 27] 173
2nd Gianluigi Buffon Juventus 124
3rd Thierry Henry Arsenal 121
2007 1st Kaká Milan 444
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Manchester United 277
3rd Lionel Messi Barcelona 255
2008 1st Cristiano Ronaldo (1) Manchester United 446
2nd Lionel Messi Barcelona 281
3rd Fernando Torres Liverpool 179
2009 1st Lionel Messi (1) Barcelona 473
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid[note 28] 233
3rd Xavi Barcelona 170
FIFA Ballon d'Or (2010–2015)
2010 1st Lionel Messi (2) Barcelona 22.65%
2nd Andrés Iniesta Barcelona 17.36%
3rd Xavi Barcelona 16.48%
2011 1st Lionel Messi (3) Barcelona 47.88%
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid 21.60%
3rd Xavi Barcelona 9.23%
2012 1st Lionel Messi (4) Barcelona 41.60%
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid 23.68%
3rd Andrés Iniesta Barcelona 10.91%
2013 1st Cristiano Ronaldo (2) Real Madrid 27.99%
2nd Lionel Messi Barcelona 24.72%
3rd Franck Ribéry Bayern Munich 23.36%
2014 1st Cristiano Ronaldo (3) Real Madrid 37.66%
2nd Lionel Messi Barcelona 15.76%
3rd Manuel Neuer Bayern Munich 15.72%
2015 1st Lionel Messi (5) Barcelona 41.33%
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Real Madrid 27.76%
3rd Neymar Barcelona 7.86%
Ballon d'Or (2016–present)
2016 1st Cristiano Ronaldo (4) Real Madrid 745
2nd Lionel Messi Barcelona 316
3rd Antoine Griezmann Atlético Madrid 198
2017 1st Cristiano Ronaldo (5) Real Madrid 946
2nd Lionel Messi Barcelona 670
3rd Neymar Paris Saint-Germain[note 29] 361
2018 1st Luka Modrić Real Madrid 753
2nd Cristiano Ronaldo Juventus[note 30] 476
3rd Antoine Griezmann Atlético Madrid 414
2019 1st Lionel Messi (6) Barcelona 686
2nd Virgil van Dijk Liverpool 679
3rd Cristiano Ronaldo Juventus 476
2020 Not awarded due to the COVID-19 pandemic[1][32]
2021 1st Lionel Messi (7) Paris Saint-Germain[note 31] 613
2nd Robert Lewandowski Bayern Munich 580
3rd Jorginho Chelsea 460
2022 1st Karim Benzema Real Madrid 549
2nd Sadio Mané Bayern Munich[note 32] 193
3rd Kevin De Bruyne Manchester City 175
2023 1st Lionel Messi (8) Inter Miami[note 33] 462
2nd Erling Haaland Manchester City 357
3rd Kylian Mbappé Paris Saint-Germain 270
2024 1st Rodri Manchester City 1170
2nd Vinícius Júnior Real Madrid 1129
3rd Jude Bellingham Real Madrid 917
2025 1st Ousmane Dembélé Paris Saint-Germain 1380
2nd Lamine Yamal Barcelona 1059
3rd Vitinha Paris Saint-Germain 703
Notes
  1. Attributed to multiple sources:[11][20][25][26][43][44]
  1. Born in Argentina, Di Stéfano acquired Spanish citizenship in 1956, thus becoming eligible for the award.
  2. Kopa was signed by Real Madrid from Reims during 1956.
  3. Kopa was signed by Reims from Real Madrid during 1959.
  4. Born in Argentina, Sívori acquired Italian citizenship in 1961, thus becoming eligible for the award.
  5. Suárez was signed by Inter Milan from Barcelona during 1961.
  6. Cruyff was signed by Barcelona from Ajax during 1973.
  7. Keegan was signed by Hamburger SV from Liverpool during 1977.
  8. Krankl was signed by Barcelona from Rapid Wien during 1978.
  9. Schuster was signed by Barcelona from 1. FC Köln during 1980.
  10. Boniek was signed by Juventus from Widzew Łódź during 1982.
  11. Simonsen was signed by Vejle from Charlton Athletic during 1983.
  12. Elkjær was signed by Hellas Verona from Lokeren during 1984.
  13. Lineker was signed by Barcelona from Everton during 1986.
  14. Gullit was signed by AC Milan from PSV Eindhoven during 1987.
  15. Futre was signed by Atlético Madrid from Porto during 1987.
  16. Rijkaard was signed by AC Milan from Zaragoza during 1988.
  17. Bergkamp was signed by Inter Milan from Ajax during 1993.
  18. Weah was signed by AC Milan from Paris Saint-Germain during 1995.
  19. Klinsmann was signed by Bayern Munich from Tottenham Hotspur during 1995.
  20. Ronaldo was signed by Barcelona from PSV Eindhoven during 1996.
  21. Shearer was signed by Newcastle United from Blackburn Rovers during 1996.
  22. Ronaldo was signed by Inter Milan from Barcelona during 1997.
  23. Shevchenko was signed by AC Milan from Dynamo Kyiv during 1999.
  24. Figo was signed by Real Madrid from Barcelona during 2000.
  25. Ronaldo was signed by Real Madrid from Inter Milan during 2002.
  26. Deco was signed by Barcelona from Porto during 2004.
  27. Cannavaro was signed by Real Madrid from Juventus during 2006.
  28. Cristiano Ronaldo was signed by Real Madrid from Manchester United during 2009.
  29. Neymar was signed by Paris Saint-Germain from Barcelona during 2017.
  30. Cristiano Ronaldo was signed by Juventus from Real Madrid during 2018.
  31. Messi was signed by Paris Saint-Germain from Barcelona during 2021.
  32. Mané was signed by Bayern Munich from Liverpool during 2022.
  33. Messi was signed by Inter Miami from Paris Saint-Germain during 2023.

Wins by player

Player Winner Second place Third place
Lionel Messi 8 (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2019, 2021, 2023) 5 (2008, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017) 1 (2007)
Cristiano Ronaldo 5 (2008, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017) 6 (2007, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2018) 1 (2019)
Michel Platini 3 (1983, 1984, 1985) 2 (1977, 1980)
Johan Cruyff 3 (1971, 1973, 1974) 1 (1975)
Marco van Basten 3 (1988, 1989, 1992)
Franz Beckenbauer 2 (1972, 1976) 2 (1974, 1975) 1 (1966)
Ronaldo 2 (1997, 2002) 1 (1996) 1 (1998)
Alfredo Di Stéfano 2 (1957, 1959) 1 (1956)
Kevin Keegan 2 (1978, 1979) 1 (1977)
Karl-Heinz Rummenigge 2 (1980, 1981) 1 (1979)
Luis Suárez 1 (1960) 2 (1961, 1964) 1 (1965)
Eusébio 1 (1965) 2 (1962, 1966)
Bobby Charlton 1 (1966) 2 (1967, 1968)
Raymond Kopa 1 (1958) 1 (1959) 2 (1956, 1957)
Gerd Müller 1 (1970) 1 (1972) 2 (1969, 1973)
Zinedine Zidane 1 (1998) 1 (2000) 1 (1997)
Gianni Rivera 1 (1969) 1 (1963)
Ruud Gullit 1 (1987) 1 (1988)
Lothar Matthäus 1 (1990) 1 (1991)
Roberto Baggio 1 (1993) 1 (1994)
Hristo Stoichkov 1 (1994) 1 (1992)
Andriy Shevchenko 1 (2004) 2 (1999, 2000)
George Best 1 (1968) 1 (1971)
Allan Simonsen 1 (1977) 1 (1983)
Ronaldinho 1 (2005) 1 (2004)
Stanley Matthews 1 (1956)
Omar Sívori 1 (1961)
Josef Masopust 1 (1962)
Lev Yashin 1 (1963)
Denis Law 1 (1964)
Flórián Albert 1 (1967)
Oleg Blokhin 1 (1975)
Paolo Rossi 1 (1982)
Igor Belanov 1 (1986)
Jean-Pierre Papin 1 (1991)
George Weah 1 (1995)
Matthias Sammer 1 (1996)
Rivaldo 1 (1999)
Luís Figo 1 (2000)
Michael Owen 1 (2001)
Pavel Nedvěd 1 (2003)
Fabio Cannavaro 1 (2006)
Kaká 1 (2007)
Luka Modrić 1 (2018)
Karim Benzema 1 (2022)
Rodri 1 (2024)
Ousmane Dembélé 1 (2025)

Wins by country

Country Players Wins
 France 6 8
 Argentina 1 8
 Germany 5 7
 Netherlands 3 7
 Portugal 3 7
 Italy 5 5
 Brazil 4 5
 England 4 5
 Spain 3 4
 Soviet Union 3 3
 Bulgaria 1 1
 Croatia 1 1
 Czech Republic 1 1
 Czechoslovakia 1 1
 Denmark 1 1
 Hungary 1 1
 Liberia 1 1
 Northern Ireland 1 1
 Scotland 1 1
 Ukraine 1 1

Wins by club

Club Players Wins
Real Madrid 8 12
Barcelona 6 12
Juventus 6 8
Milan 6 8
Bayern Munich 3 5
Manchester United 4 4
Dynamo Kyiv 2 2
Inter Milan 2 2
Paris Saint-Germain 2 2
Hamburger SV 1 2
Ajax 1 1
Benfica 1 1
Blackpool 1 1
Borussia Dortmund 1 1
Borussia Mönchengladbach 1 1
Dukla Prague 1 1
Dynamo Moscow 1 1
Ferencváros 1 1
Inter Miami 1 1
Liverpool 1 1
Manchester City 1 1
Marseille 1 1

Additional awards

Seasonal awards

Special awards

Super Ballon d'Or

An honorary award, under the name Super Ballon d'Or, was awarded to Alfredo Di Stéfano in 1989,[17] who was voted the best multiple-time Ballon d'Or winner ahead of Johan Cruyff and Michel Platini.[58][59]

In addition Diego Maradona received an honorary Ballon d'Or in 1995 for his services to football dubbed the Golden Ballon d'Or.[17][58][60] Pelé also received a similar award during the 2013 FIFA Ballon d'Or ceremony dubbed the FIFA Ballon d'Or Prix d'Honneur.[17][61]

Football Player of the Century

In 1999, France Football voted Pelé as the Football Player of the Century after consulting their former Ballon d'Or recipients.[17] Among the 34 previous winners, 30 cast their votes, while Stanley Matthews, Omar Sívori and George Best refused to vote, and Lev Yashin had died. Each voter was allotted five votes worth up to five points; however, Di Stéfano only chose a first place, Platini a first and second place, and George Weah two players for fifth place. Pelé was named the greatest by 17 voters, receiving almost double the number of points earned by the second place, Diego Maradona.[62]

Football Player of the Century
Player Pts 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Pelé 122 17 5 4 2 1
Diego Maradona 65 3 6 5 5 1
Johan Cruyff 62 1 4 7 9 2
Alfredo Di Stéfano 44 4 3 3 1 1
Michel Platini 40 1 5 1 3 6

Le nouveau palmarès

To coincide with the 60th anniversary of the Ballon d'Or in 2016, France Football published an internationalized reevaluation of the awards presented before 1995, when only European players were eligible to win the award.[17][60] 12 out of the 39 Ballons d'Or presented during this time period would have been awarded to South American players; in addition to Pelé—seven times—and Diego Maradona—twice—Garrincha, Mario Kempes, and Romário were retrospectively recognized as worthy winners.[60][63] The original recipients, however, remain unchanged.[3]

Le nouveau palmarès (internationalized reevaluation)
Year Original winner Alternative
1958 Raymond Kopa Pelé
1959 Alfredo Di Stéfano Pelé
1960 Luis Suárez Pelé
1961 Omar Sívori Pelé
1962 Josef Masopust Garrincha
1963 Lev Yashin Pelé
1964 Denis Law Pelé
1970 Gerd Müller Pelé
1978 Kevin Keegan Mario Kempes
1986 Igor Belanov Diego Maradona
1990 Lothar Matthäus Diego Maradona
1994 Hristo Stoichkov Romário

Ballon d'Or Dream Team

An all-time all-star team, the Ballon d'Or Dream Team, was published in December 2020 by France Football, honouring football's greatest players of all time.[64][65] A second and a third team were also published.[66]

Ballon d'Or Dream Team
Goalkeeper Defenders Midfielders Forwards
First Team
Lev Yashin Cafu
Franz Beckenbauer
Paolo Maldini
Xavi
Lothar Matthäus
Diego Maradona
Pelé
Lionel Messi
Ronaldo
Cristiano Ronaldo
Second Team
Gianluigi Buffon Carlos Alberto
Franco Baresi
Roberto Carlos
Andrea Pirlo
Frank Rijkaard
Zinedine Zidane
Alfredo Di Stéfano
Garrincha
Johan Cruyff
Ronaldinho
Third Team
Manuel Neuer Philipp Lahm
Sergio Ramos
Paul Breitner
Johan Neeskens
Didi
Michel Platini
Andrés Iniesta
George Best
Marco van Basten
Thierry Henry

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