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Ballon d’Or: All-time men’s winners, ceremony details after Rodri wins 2024 honor

The Ballon d’Or went to a new home this year, as Manchester City and Spain star Rodri outlasted three Real Madrid stars to be named the top player in men’s football for the 2023-24 season.

Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema, and Luka Modric are all off the shortlist and the only players to win the award since Kaka took home the honor in 2007.

[ BALLON D’OR: Men’s shortlist | Women’s shortlist ]

The 30-man shortlist was deep and talented but Real Madrid’s Vinicius Junior and Dani Carvajal joined Rodri as the favorites to take home the honor of being named the best male footballer in the world.

[ MORE: Who should win the Ballon d’Or 2024? ]

For the third-straight season, the award will honor the best player from the 2023-24 season instead of the calendar year. Vini Jr was the star of the UEFA Champions League Final, while Rodri won the Premier League with Man City and EURO 2024 with Spain.

When was the Ballon d’Or 2024 ceremony?

The Ballon d’Or ceremony was held at 2:45pm ET Monday, October 28, at theThéâtre du Châtelet in Paris

How to watch the Ballon d’Or 2024 ceremony

Time: 2:45pm ET
Date: Monday, October 28
Stream: Paramount+

Who has won more Ballons d’Or: Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo?

Messi has won the most Ballons d’Or ever: 8. Ronaldo has the second-most with five.

How many players have won multiple Ballons d’Or?

After Messi’s eight and Ronaldo’s five, there are three players who have won three awards — Michel Platini, Johan Cruyff, and Marco van Basten — and five players have claimed two. Those players are Franz Beckenbauer, Ronaldo, Alfredo Di Stefano, Kevin Keegan, and Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.

List of all Ballon d’Or winners: 1961-present

  • 1956: Stanley Matthews — Blackpool and England
  • 1957: Alfredo Di Stafano — Real Madrid and Spain
  • 1958: Raymond Kopa — Real Madrid and France
  • 1959: Alfredo Di Stefano (2) — Real Madrid and Spain
  • 1960: Luis Suarez — Barcelona and Spain
  • 1961: Omar Sivori — Juventus and Italy
  • 1962: Josef Masopust — Dukla Prague and Czechoslovakia
  • 1963: Lev Yashin — Dynamo Moscow and USSR
  • 1964: Denis Law — Manchester United and Scotland
  • 1965: Eusebio — Benfica and Portugal
  • 1966: Bobby Charlton — Manchester United and England
  • 1967: Florian Albert — Ferencvaros and Hungary
  • 1968: George Best — Manchester United and Northern Ireland
  • 1969: Gianni Rivera — AC Milan and Italy
  • 1970: Gerd Muller — Bayern Munich and Germany
  • 1971: Johan Cruyff — Ajax and Netherlands
  • 1972: Franz Beckenbauer — Bayern Munich and West Germany
  • 1973: Johan Cruyff (2) — Barcelona and Netherlands
  • 1974: Johan Cruyff (3) — Barcelona and Netherlands
  • 1975: Oleg Blokhin — Dynamo Kyiv and USSR
  • 1976: Franz Beckenbauer (2) — Bayern Munich and West Germany
  • 1977: Allan Simonsen — Borussia Monchengladbach and Denmark
  • 1978: Kevin Keegan — Hamburg and England
  • 1979: Kevin Keegan (2) — Hamburg and England
  • 1980: Karl-Heinz Rummenigge — Bayern Munich and West Germany
  • 1981: Karl-Heinz Rummenigge (2) — Bayern Munich and West Germany
  • 1982: Paolo Rossi — Juventus and Italy
  • 1983: Michel Platini — France and Juventus
  • 1984: Michel Platini (2) — France and Juventus
  • 1985: Michel Platini (3) — France and Juventus
  • 1986: Igor Belanov — Dynamo Kyiv and USSR
  • 1987: Ruud Gullit — AC Milan and Netherlands
  • 1988: Marco van Basten — AC Milan and Netherlands
  • 1989: Marco van Basten (2) — AC Milan and Netherlands
  • 1990: Lothar Matthaus — Inter Milan and Germany
  • 1991: Jean-Pierre Papin — Marseille and France
  • 1992: Marco van Basten (3) — AC Milan and Netherlands
  • 1993: Roberto Baggio — Juventus and Italy
  • 1994: Hristo Stoichkov — Barcelona and Bulgaria
  • 1995: George Weah — AC Milan and Liberia
  • 1996: Matthias Sammer — Borussia Dortmund and Germany
  • 1997: Ronaldo — Inter Milan and Brazil
  • 1998: Zinedine Zidane — Juventus and France
  • 1999: Rivaldo — Barcelona and Brazil
  • 2000: Luis Figo — Real Madrid and Portugal
  • 2001: Michael Owen — Liverpool and England
  • 2002: Ronaldo (2) — Real Madrid and Brazil
  • 2003: Pavel Nedved — Juventus and Czech Republic
  • 2004: Andriy Shevchenko — AC Milan and Ukraine
  • 2005: Ronaldinho — Barcelona and Brazil
  • 2006: Fabio Cannavaro — Real Madrid and Italy
  • 2007: Kaka — AC Milan and Brazil
  • 2008: Cristiano Ronaldo — Manchester United and Portugal
  • 2009: Lionel Messi — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2010: Lionel Messi (2) — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2011: Lionel Messi (3) — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2012: Lionel Messi (4) — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2013: Cristiano Ronaldo (2) — Real Madrid and Portugal
  • 2014: Cristiano Ronaldo (3) — Real Madrid and Portugal
  • 2015: Lionel Messi (5) — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2016: Cristiano Ronaldo (4) — Real Madrid and Portugal
  • 2017: Cristiano Ronaldo (5) — Real Madrid and Portugal
  • 2018: Luka Modric — Real Madrid and Croatia
  • 2019: Lionel Messi (6) — Barcelona and Argentina
  • 2020: Not awarded due to COVID-19 pandemic
  • 2021: Lionel Messi (7) — Paris Saint-Germain and Argentina
  • 2022: Karim Benzema — Real Madrid and France
  • 2023: Lionel Messi (8) — Inter Miami and Argentina
  • 2024: Rodri — Manchester City and Spain