Due to the coronavirus pandemic, last year’s Ballon d’Or ceremony was cancelled with Bayern Munich striker, Robert Lewandowski almost nailed on to win the award.
The year before Lionel Messi won his sixth prize, a moment which marked the 11th time in the last 12 years that either the mercurial forward or Juventus star Cristiano Ronaldo had picked up the prize.
Luka Modric’s win in 2018 broke the monopoly of the two ‘GOATs’ over one of the world’s top football prizes.
Prior to that, however, the Ballon d’Or was hardly ever in the hands of one player for more than two years.
Tonight, Messi is one of the favourites to win the award for the seventh time, along with Lewandowski and Chelsea duo, N’Golo Kante and Jorginho.
Ghana has produced a number of top footballers over the years. All of them have, however, fallen short of winning the big prize.
The Ballon d’Or has gone through a few evolutions. It was originally intended for players from European countries but in 1995, it was expanded to include all players playing their football in Europe and later expanded further to include players all over the world.
Before Messi and Ronaldo’s extended dominance, performances by some Ghanaians gave them a real shout of becoming Ballon d’Or winners themselves.
Here are three Ghanaians who could have won the Ballon d’Or?
Abedi Ayew Pele
Having become synonymous with the Number 10 shirt for the Black Stars and having been hailed as a star while at clubs like Marseille, there’s a lot to admire about former Black Stars captain Abedi Pele.
Abedi is one of the best players ever produced on the continent, a fact backed by his three consecutive African Player of the Year Awards.
Abedi had won the AFCON with the Black Stars back in 1982 but it was in 1991 where he really stepped up globally, winning the Ligue 1 title with Marseille. This led to his first African Footballer of The Year prize, and a first BBC African Footballer of the Year award. He was also on the initial list for FIFA Player of The Year. The Ballon d’Or for that year was eventually picked up by his club teammate, Jean-Pierre Papin.
The next year was even better for Abedi as he picked up a second straight Ligue 1 title, a second straight African Footballer of The Year, finished AFCON runner-up with Ghana, won the AFCON Golden Ball, and was ninth in the race for the FIFA Footballer of the Year. He was definitely in the league of eventual Ballon d’Or winner, Marco van Basten.
In the 1992-93 season, Abedi won the UEFA Champions League and his third African Footballer of the Year award. Despite being in phenomenal form for that three-year period especially, Abedi Pele was ineligible for the Ballon d’Or. However, with George Weah becoming the first African to win the award the year it was expanded, chances are that Abedi might have beaten him to the feat had that decision been taken a couple of years earlier.
Anthony Yeboah
Just like Abedi Pele, Anthony Yeboah’s best years came before the expansion of the Ballon d’Or parameters. This was unfortunate because on his day, ‘Yegoala’ was unplayable anywhere he played. Placing second at the 1992 AFCON with Ghana, Yeboah then finished third in votes for the African Footballer of the Year.
The next year, he went one better, only finishing behind Abedi Pele for the award after ending the season as the Bundesliga’s top scorer with 30 goals in 37 games and making the league’s Team of the Season. He also emulated Abedi’s ninth-place finish in the FIFA player of the Year award.
Michael Essien
The ‘Bison’, Michael Essien was the closest Ghana came to actually getting a Ballon d’Or winner prior to 2010 having been nominated for three straight years from 2005 to 2007.
While at French club Lyon in the 2004-05 season, Essien picked up the Ligue 1 title, was named the Ligue 1 Player of The Year, made it into the Ligue 1 Team of The Year, was named in the CAF Team Of The Year, came third for the African Footballer of the Year, and placed 22nd in the Ballon d’Or votes (won by Ronaldinho).
The next season, Essien moved to Chelsea where he won the Premier League title, yet again made it into the CAF Team of the Year, was named the BBC African Footballer of The Year, finished third yet again in the African Footballer of the Year award, and was nominated again for the Ballon d’Or (won by Fabio Cannavaro), although he did not get any votes.
The 2006/2007 season saw Essien win the FA Cup and English League Cup with Chelsea. He was named Ghana’s Player of The Year, Chelsea’s Player of the Year and also picked up the prize for Chelsea’s Goal of the Year. He was nominated for the Ballon d’Or again, this time finishing 24th. The award was won by Brazilian Kaka, the last time a player that wasn’t either Messi or Ronaldo won it, until the year Modric won it.
Asamoah Gyan
The ‘Baby Jet’ had an imperious 2010. Starting the year off at French club Rennes, he scored seven goals before his summer move to Premier League side Sunderland.
Gyan’s scoring form at club level continued, netting six times before December.
But it was with the national team where he really shone. Asamoah Gyan found the net seven times for the Black Stars.
Six of them came in major competitions – the 2010 AFCON and the 2010 World Cup – where the former Liberty Professionals forward dragged Ghana to the final and quarter-finals respectively.
Ghana were painfully a penalty kick away from a final but Gyan had already made his mark.
He was nominated for the Ballon d’Or that year (won by Messi) and finished 18, Ghana’s highest placing in the award so far.
A longer World Cup run would certainly helped Gyan end up much higher on the list.
Watch Citi Sports‘ Nathan Quao, Daniel Koranteng and Benjamin Nketsia discuss the topic on Citi TV‘s pidgin football show, Football Made in Ghana.