Professional Documents
Culture Documents
We and our partners use technologies, such as cookies, and collect browsing data to give you the best
online experience and to personalise the content and advertising shown to you.
Homepage
Accessibility links
Skip to content
Accessibility Help
Sign in
News
Sport
Reel
Worklife
Travel
Future
More
BBCSPORT
All Sport
Home
Football
Formula 1
Cricket
Rugby U
Tennis
Golf
Athletics
Cycling
European Football
Tables
Champions League
Europa League
More
All Teams
By Emlyn Begley
BBC Sport
599
Can Virgil van Dijk become the first Ballon d'Or winning defender since Fabio Cannavaro in 2006?
A Champions League winner and PFA player of the year, but could Liverpool defender Virgil van Dijk's
stellar 2019 get a whole lot better?
The Dutchman is odds-on favourite to win this year's Ballon d'Or - and told BBC Sport: "If I am rewarded
for the season I had that would be unbelievable and I would be so proud."
Luka Modric won the Ballon d'Or last year, beating former club-mate Cristiano Ronaldo and two men
who beat him in the World Cup final
The Ballon d'Or - the award for the world's best player - traditionally used to change hands most years -
until the 10-year stranglehold that 6-4 second favourite Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo (five years
each) had from 2008 to 2017.
That ended last year with Real Madrid midfielder Luka Modric lifting football's most prestigious
individual trophy after a Champions League final success and Croatia's run to the World Cup final.
So what do recent winners have in common? Usually they are forwards or creative midfielders - and
normally they have just won the Champions League.
The last defender to win was Italy captain Fabio Cannavaro in 2006 after leading the Azzurri to World
Cup glory.
Since then, nine of the 12 winners (well, four names - Kaka, Ronaldo, Messi and Modric) have won the
Champions League that season.
The only exceptions have been for outstanding goalscoring campaigns - Messi's 91 goals in 2012 and 60
in 2010, and Ronaldo's 66 in 2013.
In theory, the award is for a calendar year but it is mostly the previous campaign that is taken into
consideration, with the shortlist usually named in October and winner announced in December.
'Calm & unflappable' Virgil van Dijk wins PFA Player of the Year award
Van Dijk, 28, was probably the best player for the European champions, which has been the main
criteria for most of the past dozen years.
Since arriving at Liverpool from Southampton for £75m he has helped shore up an until-then leaky
defence to an unbelievable level, showing lots of leadership qualities too.
Last season he played every Premier League game as Liverpool only conceded 22 goals - the lowest
number in any of Europe's top six leagues - and picked up 97 points to finish just behind Manchester
City. He won the PFA award for player of the year in England.
The most remarkable stat is that nobody has dribbled past the former Celtic player in his past 64
appearances for Liverpool - a run starting in March 2018.
Is that one of those stats which sounds more impressive than it is?
Not really.
Van Dijk was the only man to play more than 1,000 minutes in Europe's top five leagues last season
without being dribbled past. He played 3,385 minutes, only missing the final 35 minutes of a 3-0 win
over former side Southampton in September with an injury.
Second on the list was forward Sam Vokes, who managed 914 minutes without anyone getting past him
before he left Premier League club Burnley for Championship side Stoke in January.
The next top defender not to be dribbled past once in the league was veteran Italian Andrea Raggi, who
played six Ligue 1 games for Monaco all season.
Van Dijk kept more clean sheets than any defender in Europe's top five leagues, with 20. The top four
were all Liverpool and Manchester City defenders.
He played more passes than any other defender - 3,037 to Aymeric Laporte's 2,998 - with a 90% success
rate.
He won a higher percentage of his duels than any other defender - 245 of 321 (76.3%) and ranked fifth
on that list for aerial battles.
His major disappointments were missing out on the Premier League title with a record points haul for
runners-up, and losing the Nations League final to Portugal with the Netherlands.
Alisson did not concede a goal from open play in the Copa America as Brazil won
Four of the six favourites to win the Ballon d'Or are Liverpool players, according to comparison website
Oddschecker.
Goalkeeper Alisson's odds were cut to as short as 7-1 after helping Brazil win the Copa America with a 3-
1 final victory over Peru this month.
He had a remarkable run of nine games without conceding for club and country, starting with Liverpool's
4-0 Champions League semi-final second-leg win over Barcelona and ending with a Paolo Guerrero
penalty in the Copa America final.
Alisson, who joined the Reds from Roma for £66.8m last summer, kept more clean sheets (21) than
anyone else in Europe's top five leagues, conceding one goal every 155.5 minutes - also the best figure.
"If I knew Alisson was this good I would have paid double," said Klopp after a crucial save against Napoli
prevented them from a Champions League exit in December.
He ranked third in successful passes (864) and fourth in percentage of shots saved (77%) in those
leagues.
Soviet Union legend Lev Yashin is the only goalkeeper to win the Ballon d'Or, doing so in 1963.
Also considered to have outside chances are Reds forwards Sadio Mane, who lost the Africa Cup of
Nations final with Senegal, and Mohamed Salah. The pair shared the Premier League Golden Boot with
Arsenal's Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang on 22 goals last season.
Cristiano Ronaldo (2008, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2017) and Lionel Messi (2009-2012 and 2015) were the
only Ballon d'Or winners for a decade
Barcelona's Messi, who has surprisingly not won since 2015, and Juventus's Ronaldo are second and
fourth favourites respectively.
If the Ballon d'Or was purely for goalscoring exploits, you could not look past Messi - who managed a
sensational 51 goals in 50 games for Barcelona last season - a goal every 78 minutes over an entire
campaign.
He won the Golden Boot in both the Champions League (12 goals in 10 games) and La Liga (36 in 34).
Messi's season ended in characteristic fashion - with a major tournament exit with Argentina. This time
they lost to Brazil in the Copa America semi-finals.
Ronaldo, now 34, had his worst goalscoring campaign since his final season at Manchester United in
2008-09, with 28 goals in all competitions and failing to win a league or Champions League Golden Boot.
His previous eight seasons had all yielded in excess of 40 goals.
However, he did win Serie A with his new club Juventus, and the Nations League with Portugal.
Beyond the six favourites already mentioned, everyone else seems a long shot.
The shortest odds for any of Manchester City's domestic treble-winning players are Raheem Sterling and
Copa America winner Gabriel Jesus at 66-1, the same odds as - for some reason - Tottenham and France
goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.
City winger Mahrez, who also won the Africa Cup of Nations with Algeria, is 100-1.
Despite Ajax's swashbuckling run to the Champions League semi-finals, none of their players are
considered contenders, with Dusan Tadic at 175-1 and Frenkie de Jong and Matthijs de Ligt not even
given odds.
Van Dijk, Messi and co will have to wait until an unconfirmed date - most likely in December - to
discover who has won this year's award.
La Liga
Bundesliga
Serie A
Read more on Serie A
Ligue 1
Top Stories
15h
11h
2h
Also in Sport
'What a moment' - Watch Lowry seal his first major at The Open
No gold, no Neville - what next for England after Netball World Cup?
Deadliest Day
How one patrol in Afghanistan still haunts British soldiers ten years on
Get latest scores and headlines sent straight to your phone, sign-up to our newsletter and learn where
to find us on online.
The latest rumours and stories from around the world of football.
Phil McNulty
How to get into football - the most popular sport in the world, with clubs and facilities throughout the
UK.
News Feeds
Home
News
Sport
Reel
Worklife
Travel
Future
Culture
Music
TV
Weather
Sounds
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Cookies
Accessibility Help
Parental Guidance
Advertise with us
Ad choices
Copyright © 2019 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our
approach to external linking.