
Football
France has announced new rules for the Ballon d'Or after the publication
resumed sole charge of the coveted football award. The revamped award will have
a 30-man shortlist, with no announcement of three finalists before the
presentation and votes cast solely by journalists.
On Friday,
FIFA ended its six-year association with Football France over the FIFA Ballon
d'Or, an award that celebrated the best footballer in the world annually and
combined the original honour and the World Player of the Year given by global
football's governing body from 1991 to 2009.
FIFA is yet
to announce its next move, which could amount to a reprisal of its own award,
while the Ballon d'Or will once again be voted for exclusively by a select
group of international journalists. This means the element of international
team coaches and captains contributing to the vote, which was introduced for
the merger with FIFA's prize, will be shelved.
A shortlist
of 30 players will now be presented for voting, an increase on 23 from previous
editions, and there will no longer be an announcement of three finalists ahead
of the award being presented. The winner and complete rankings of the shortlist
will be revealed before the end of the calendar year. The FIFA Ballon d'Or
held its awards gala in January of the following year.
Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have dominated the FIFA Ballon d'Or and its
precursor over the past eight years, with five and three victories
respectively. Brazilian midfielder Kaka was
the last man outside of the superstar forwards to claim the prize in 2007 when
he lifted the Ballon d'Or and the FIFA World Player of the Year.
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