Rodri and Aitana Bonmatí have been named winners of the 2024 Ballon d’Or at football’s annual awards ceremony in Paris, their trophies handed out at the end of a bizarre day in which Real Madrid’s delegation opted not to attend.
In Rodri’s case the award crowned an extraordinary year’s work in which the influential Manchester City and Spain midfielder became a Premier League and European champion, also winning the Club World Cup.
That was not enough to impress the contingent from Real that had been expected to attend. Their forward, Vinícius Júnior, had been hot favourite to win the award but they cancelled their plans to travel upon learning earlier in the day that he had been pipped to the prize.
Rodri is sidelined with a long‑term anterior cruciate ligament injury, meaning he walked up to the stage aided by crutches, but the 28‑year‑old holding midfielder has become indispensable to City since arriving five years ago from Atlético Madrid. He is the first non-forward to win the men’s prize since Luka Modric in 2018. “An incredible night for me,” Rodri said after receiving the trophy from George Weah, a previous winner who spent a brief spell at City in 2000. “Today is a very special day, not just for me but for my family and my country.”
He beat Vinícius to top spot, with the Brazilian’s Madrid teammate, England’s Jude Bellingham, in third place. Carlo Ancelotti, the Madrid coach, won the men’s Johan Cruyff award as the top manager.
Before the ceremony, Madrid issued a statement to AFP and the Spanish media, saying: “If the award criteria doesn’t give it to Vinícius as the winner, then those same criteria should point to [Dani] Carvajal as the winner. As this was not the case, it is clear that Ballon d’Or-UEFA does not respect Real Madrid. And Real Madrid does not go where it is not respected.”
Bonmatí became the second player to retain the women’s award since its inception in 2018, following in the footsteps of her Barcelona teammate Alexia Putellas. The playmaker was influential in another Liga F and Champions League double for Barcelona, also pulling the strings as Spain won the women’s Nations League earlier this year.
“What drives me to be here is the winning mentality that we have as a team and a national team, it’s what leads you to these successes,” Bonmatí said. The runner-up Caroline Graham Hansen and third-placed Salma Paralluelo completed a full Barca podium.
The ceremony was again held during a women’s international window, limiting the number of shortlisted players and coaches able to attend. Emma Hayes, who won the award for women’s coach of the year, accepted it remotely two days before her USA national team face Argentina.
Real’s apparent tantrum meant nobody was on hand to pick up their award for men’s club of the year. Barcelona received the women’s equivalent, with the club’s president, Joan Laporta, being joined on the stage by a handful of players.
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