By: Amir Abdulazeez
I am writing on this not because I have any significant concern for the award or its credibility or because it has any correlation with the wellbeing of anybody in need (which I am often more concerned about). I am rather doing so due to the massive perennial debate it generates especially among youths in Nigeria as well as the misinformed opinions around it. Again, the Ballon d’Or like football itself has transcended sport to become part of international politics and history. I became shocked when I saw a globally renowned Muslim scholar congratulating Ousmane Dembele for winning the 2025 version and hailing its award to a ‘practicing Muslim’. Obviously, the crown now carries political significance that stretches well beyond the pitch.
Since its
inception in 1956, the Ballon d’Or has been regarded as football’s most
prestigious individual award. Founded by France Football (conceived by sports writers Gabriel
Hanot and Jacques Ferran), the award was initially designed to honour the best
European player annually, with Stanley Matthews of Blackpool becoming the
pioneer winner. Later, it evolved into a global prize, celebrating many other icons.
Many have rightly questioned the credibility of the award but mostly on myopic
grounds centred around player and club sentiments. However, as a long time football
observer, I believe there are much broader issues regarding the credibility of
the award that are worth discussing.
Let us start
with the politics. During the Cold War (1947-1991), Eastern European players (more
aligned to the Soviet Union) often struggled to receive equal recognition despite
dazzling performances, while Western European stars (more aligned to the United
States and friends) enjoyed more favourable media attention. Although Russian
goalkeeper Lev Yashin won the award in 1963, many argue that his case was only the
exception that proved the unwritten rule of ‘politics, geography and media
exposure consistently play decisive roles’. Today, the award continues to reflect
broader inequalities in football. European clubs dominate global coverage,
which inflates the recognition of their stars. Players performing in less
visible leagues whether in South America, Africa, or Asia rarely receive
consideration, even if their contributions are extraordinary.
Another concern is the award’s inconsistent eligibility rules over time.
Until 1995, only European players competing in European clubs were considered,
excluding legendary figures like Pelé and Diego Maradona from getting even a
nomination. It was only after a rule change that non-Europeans in European
leagues became eligible, allowing George Weah to win in 1995. Yet, by then, the
award had already excluded decades of worthy non-European and non-European
based winners. Mild allegations of racism also cast a dark shadow over the
award. Many believe players like Didier Drogba, Samuel Eto’o, Yaya Touré, Sadio
Mané and Mohammed Salah were routinely ranked below their pedigree. In 2021,
French pundit Emmanuel Petit openly questioned whether African players were
judged by double standards.
The
selection of voters itself raises concerns. Initially restricted to journalists,
it later expanded between 2010 and 2015 after a merger with FIFA’s “World
Player of the Year,” adding coaches and captains to the electorate whose votes
often reflected tribal, national or club loyalties rather than merit. The 2016
reversion to journalist-only voting is perhaps a tacit admission of voting flaws
thereby creating difficulties in comparisons across eras. For example, Lionel
Messi’s consecutive wins (2009-2013) under a global, mixed electorate cannot be
objectively compared to Michel Platini’s (1983-1985) under a European-only
jury. The current co-organization with UEFA, which began in 2024, signifies
another attempt to lend the award more institutional weight. However, the
constant changes in its format and governing alliances suggest an award in
search of a stable identity, struggling to balance its commercial ambitions
with its original purpose.
Bias towards attacking players has been an emerging hallmark of Ballon
d’Or selections. Legendary defenders like Paolo Maldini, Alessandro Nesta,
Sergio Ramos and Roberto Carlos, who defined an era of defensive excellence, always
fell short. The exception of Fabio Cannavaro in 2006 along with few others in
the past, after a World Cup-winning campaign with Italy, serves as a testament
to the rarity of a defender being recognized. More recently, Virgil van Dijk’s
2019 narrow runner-up finish sparked debate about whether non-attacking players
could ever realistically win in a sport increasingly obsessed with goals and flair.
The award relies heavily on football journalists who often prioritize goal highlight
reels, statistics and global recognition over tactical nuance and defensive
brilliance. Strikers and playmakers dominate the headlines that directly feeds
into voting behaviour.
To combat positional bias, a more revolutionary approach could be
implemented; nomination by quota. Why not have separate shortlists and voting
panels for goalkeepers, defenders, midfielders and forwards? The top three or
five of these categories could then be considered for the overall voting and
eventual award. This would ensure that the unique skills of each position are
evaluated by those who best understand them, guaranteeing that players are
judged on their specializations rather than against others with contrasting
roles.
The criteria for judgment also lack clarity and consistency. Officially,
the award considers individual performance, team achievements, talent, fair
play and career consistency. In practice, however, voters often seem swayed by
a single outstanding tournament or by sentimental narratives. Luka Modrić’s
2018 victory after Croatia’s World Cup run exemplified this. While Modrić was
superb, critics argued that other players had stronger year-round performances,
but the emotional weight of Croatia’s fairy tale run tilted the scales. But how
comes, this same emotion did not sway voters to select any player from
Leicester City’s 2016 Premier League incredible winning team? A pervasive,
though often unstated, criterion for many voters is team success. To win the
Champions League or a major international tournament has become almost a
prerequisite for contention. This creates an inherent unfairness, elevating
players in dominant teams while punishing extraordinary individuals in less
successful sides. This inconsistency reveals a fundamental confusion: is the
award for the "best player", “most popular player” or the "most
successful player"?
The
timing and calendar controversies is another issue.
International tournaments occur every two years, creating periods where
national team success heavily influences voting. World Cup years traditionally favour
tournament winners, regardless of club form. The recent calendar change to
August-July aimed to address this imbalance but created new problems, with
voters now contending with assessing performances from overlapping seasons and
tournaments. This temporal confusion affects not just voting patterns but
public understanding of what the award actually represents; is it recognition
for calendar year performance, season achievement or tournament success? The
2013 Ballon d'Or win by Cristiano Ronaldo was critiqued following timing inconsistencies
from odd deadline extensions. The current system, which can see a player win a
major tournament in the summer and have their performance rewarded a year
later, creates a disjointed narrative.
The question of authority is another big one. FIFA represents 211
national associations, UEFA oversees European football's institutional
framework, yet it is a private French publication that bestow football's most
prestigious individual honour. The comparison with FIFA’s The Best awards and
UEFA’s Player of the Year exposes this imbalance. This raises the paradox: why
should a magazine possess such outsized influence in determining football’s
most prestigious individual accolade, overshadowing awards backed by governing
institutions? While there is nothing fundamentally wrong with this, it only
emphasizes the need for France Football to show more responsibility by sanitizing
and standardizing its award.
I am not
in a position to coach France Football on how to reform its awards to minimize the credibility
dilemma, they have much better experts who can do that. My concern is to see
young football followers and analysts become more informed and equipped for
deeper debates that are beyond sentiments. My other concern which has little to
do with the Ballon d’Or is to see football giving a little back to its estimated 3.5
billion fans that have made it powerful. While fans give it a lot, the
sport appears to be giving almost nothing significant in return. It is sad to
see football remaining silent, bias and indifferent in the face of global
oppression and injustice. While it took FIFA and UEFA just four days to suspend
Russia after its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, both bodies have remained criminally
silent over two years since Israel launched its genocide on the football supporting
people of Palestine.
24-09-2025
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