Last Premier League player to win Ballon d'Or: Erling Haaland chasing football's top prize

Ben Miller

Last Premier League player to win Ballon d'Or: Erling Haaland chasing football's top prize image

Manchester City's talismanic striker is usually too busy scoring more goals to be thinking about awards, but Erling Haaland was certainly competing to win the 2023 Ballon d'Or.

The Norwegian has been in awesome goalscoring form ever since joining City from Borussia Dortmund in the summer of 2022, in a £52m ($62.6m) transfer.

Haaland was unable to pip odds-on favourite Lionel Messi to the prize. The Inter Miami star won the award for the eighth time in his career after inspiring Argentina's World Cup heroics in 2022, meaning the wait for a Premier League player to lift the prize will go on for at least a 16th year.

Nevertheless, after a second consecutive Premier League title and Golden Boot, Haaland is back on the 2024 Ballon d'Or shortlist, with Messi not among the 30 nominees.

The Sporting News runs through the players from the Premier League (or English first division) to have won previous editions of the Ballon d'Or, as well as more details on the award.

MORE: What happened to Neymar? The sad story of PSG failure and ill-fated chase for the Ballon d'Or

Who was the last Premier League player to win the Ballon d'Or?

Karim Benzema's win in 2022 came after Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi had won all but one of the previous 13 titles between them.

Ronaldo remains the last player to have won while operating in the Premier League because of his first honour, which came during his first spell at Manchester United in 2008.

Others have gone close: City midfielder Kevin De Bruyne came third last in 2022, as did Chelsea's Jorginho in 2021 — although they were both a long distance behind respective winners Benzema and Messi in points terms.

Liverpool defender Virgil van Dijk missed out to Messi by only seven points in 2019, and Ronaldo (United), Frank Lampard (Chelsea), Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Fernando Torres (Liverpool) and Thierry Henry (Arsenal) have all finished in the top three since the Reds' Michael Owen prevailed in 2001. Haaland is the latest to get close after coming second in the 2023 vote.

The Premier League in its current guise did not exist when a player from the division previously won the Ballon d'Or. Northern Ireland legend George Best played for Man United in the First Division — the original name for the Premier League — when he won it in 1968.

Best was the third player for an English club to win in five years, following Bobby Charlton in 1966 and Denis Law in 1964, both of whom were also partly rewarded for their achievements at United.

Law was the next representative of English teams to win after Stanley Matthews, the inaugural Ballon d'Or recipient in 1956. Matthews had helped Blackpool — now a third-tier team — finish as First Division runners-up and dazzled in the colours of England.

Here is the full list of Ballon d'Or winners who played for Premier League or old First Division teams at the time.

YearPlayerTeam
1956Stanley MatthewsBlackpool
1964Denis LawManchester United
1966Bobby CharltonManchester United
1968George BestManchester United
2001Michael OwenLiverpool
2008Cristiano RonaldoManchester United

Who votes for the Ballon d'Or?

For the men's Ballon d'Or award, votes are now cast by 100 journalists from the 100 top ranked FIFA nations.

They are asked to rank their top five players from the 30-man shortlist in order of merit. The player ranked first receives five points, the second four points, and so on. 

The overall winner is confirmed by the player with the most total points from the votes. In the unlikely event of a tie, the winner is whoever has most first-place votes. 

Journalists will be instructed that individual performances should form the basis of their votes, with team trophies a secondary factor. 

Favourites to win Ballon d'Or 2024

Haaland is in contention once again but his Manchester City team-mate Rodri is the best-placed Premier League player to prevail.

City did not lose a game with Rodri in their team in England's top flight last season and the midfielder was similarly imperious as Spain romped to glory at Euro 2024.

Ironically, an Englishman might get in Rodri's way. Jude Bellingham excelled in his debut season at Real Madrid, for whom Vinicius Junior has also put himself in the frame.

MORE: Full list of Ballon d'Or 2024 nominees

Previous Ballon d'Or winners

Dutch giant Johan Cruyff became the first player to win the award three times in the 1970s. French star Michel Platini won three in a row — the first to achieve that feat — in the 1980s.

More recently, Messi beat Robert Lewandowski by a narrow margin for his seventh trophy in 2021.

YearPlayerClub
1956Stanley MatthewsBlackpool
1957Alfredo Di StefanoReal Madrid
1958Raymond KopaReal Madrid
1959Alfredo Di StefanoReal Madrid
1960Luis SuarezBarcelona
1961Omar SivoriJuventus
1962Josef MasopustDukla Prague
1963Lev YashinDynamo Moscow
1964Denis LawManchester United
1965EusebioBenfica
1966Bobby CharltonManchester United
1967Florian AlbertFerencvaros
1968George BestManchester United
1969Gianni RiveraAC Milan
1970Gerd MullerBayern Munich
1971Johann CruyffAjax
1972Franz BeckenbauerBayern Munich
1973Johann CruyffBarcelona
1974Johann CruyffBarcelona
1975Oleg BlokhinDynamo Kyiv
1976Franz BeckenbauerBayern Munich
1977Allan SimonsenGladbach
1978Kevin KeeganHamburg
1979Kevin KeeganHamburg
1980Karl-Heinz RummeniggeBayern Munich
1981Karl-Heinz RummeniggeBayern Munich
1982Paolo RossiJuventus
1983Michel PlatiniJuventus
1984Michel PlatiniJuventus
1985Michel PlatiniJuventus
1986Igor BelanovDynamo Kyiv
1987Ruud GullitAC Milan
1988Marco van BastenAC Milan
1989Marco van BastenAC Milan
1990Lothar MatthausInter Milan
1991Jean-Pierre PapinMarseille
1992Marco van BastenAC Milan
1993Roberto BaggioJuventus
1994Hristo StoichkovBarcelona
1995George WeahAC Milan
1996Mathias SammerBorussia Dortmund
1997RonaldoInter Milan
1998Zinedine ZidaneJuventus
1999RivaldoBarcelona
2000Luis FigoReal Madrid
2001Michael OwenLiverpool
2002RonaldoReal Madrid
2003Pavel NedvedJuventus
2004Andriy ShevchenkoAC Milan
2005RonaldinhoBarcelona
2006Fabio CannavaroReal Madrid
2007KakaAC Milan
2008Cristiano RonaldoManchester United
2009Lionel MessiBarcelona
2010Lionel MessiBarcelona
2011Lionel MessiBarcelona
2012Lionel MessiBarcelona
2013Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid
2014Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid
2015Lionel MessiBarcelona
2016Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid
2017Cristiano RonaldoReal Madrid
2018Luka ModricReal Madrid
2019Lionel MessiBarcelona
2020Cancelled due to pandemic
2021Lionel MessiPSG
2022Karim BenzemaReal Madrid
2023Lionel MessiInter Miami

Ben Miller

Ben Miller Photo

Ben Miller has been writing about sport for 25 years, following all levels of football as well as boxing, MMA, athletics and tennis. He’s seen five promotions, three relegations, one World Cup winner and home games in at least three different stadiums as a result of his lifelong devotion to Brighton & Hove Albion. His main aim each week is to cover at least one game or event that does not require a last-minute rewrite.