Ballon d'Or at 60: What makes the perfect winner?

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Lionel Messi has been named winner of the Ballon d'Or for the fifth time, but does he fit a mould spanning 60 years?

The forward - standing 5ft 7in - comes in shorter on average than the 59 previous winners of the award, handed to the player deemed the best on the planet.

But what does such a rare player typically look like? Where are they from? And what heroics typically see someone take the honour?

From inaugural winner Stanley Matthews in 1956 to Real Madrid superstar Cristiano Ronaldo last year, we have profiled each of the recipients prior to Messi's win to analyse the "perfect" Ballon d'Or winner.

Note: The Ballon d'Or could only be won by European footballers between 1956 and 1994. Nominations were extended to include Europe-based players in 1995. In 2010 it became the world player of the year.

International success = Ballon d'Or success?

So if you're a 26-year-old, dark-haired, right-footed, German/Dutch-born Barcelona forward then you've a great chance of bagging the trophy.

But what about winning the World Cup or European Championship? Does lifting either trophy, or simply catching the eye that summer, help propel a player towards Ballon d'Or glory?

In World Cup years, 47% of Ballon d'Or winners helped their nation become champions - including England's 1966 hero Sir Bobby Charlton, France's 1998 match-winner Zinedine Zidane and Italy's 2006 victorious captain Fabio Cannavaro.

Only 36% helped their nation win the European Championship on the way to earning that year's Ballon d'Or.

However, strong performances by an individual at a major international tournament - for example, Czechoslovakia midfielder Josef Masopust, external at the 1962 World Cup finals, or USSR midfielder Igor Belanov, external at Mexico 86 - have helped unfancied names earn their place on the gold-covered bauble.

Messi magic

No British rule

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Blackpool's Stanley Matthews pipped Real Madrid greats Alfredo di Stefano and Raymond Kopa to the 1956 Ballon d'Or

England winger Matthews, then aged 41, was the first player to win the prize - but only five other men from the UK have followed in his footsteps.

British Ballon d'Or winners

Year

Player

Nation

Club

1956

Stanley Matthews

England

Blackpool

1964

Denis Law

Scotland

Manchester United

1966

Bobby Charlton

England

Manchester United

1968

George Best

Northern Ireland

Manchester United

1978

Kevin Keegan

England

Hamburg

1979

Kevin Keegan

England

Hamburg

2001

Michael Owen

England

Liverpool

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