The Sunday Times November 28, 2021 25
Sport
footballing brain, Peter
Taylor. In this breezy
documentary from
2015, almost all of the
players who took that
journey explain with
overflowing affection
just how extraordinary
the whole unlikely
business and Clough’s
regime was.
Frank Clark
remembers being fined
for training on his day
off, Garry Birtles
regularly missed
training so that he
could play squash with,
yes, Clough, and one
team-bonding
speciality involved
running through
patches of stinging
3
assists
8
goals
15
assists
41
goals
10
assists
64
goals
assists
goals
The winner of the award for the
best male footballer in the world
will be announced tomorrow.
Among the 30 shortlisted nominees,
Lionel Messi is favourite...
THE BALLON D’OR
DREAM TEAM
In October 2020, France
Football conducted an
internet poll to select a
greatest of all-time team
from previous Ballon
d’Or winners. The final
team was selected by
140 of the magazine’s
correspondents based
on the poll.
Lionel Messi
The six-time Ballon d’Or
winner finally secured his
first senior international
trophy for Argentina,
lifting the Copa America in
July as the competition’s
Player of the Tournament.
For Barcelona in 2021,
Messi scored 28 goals in
as many games in all
competitions to help his
side win the Copa del Rey
and finish third in La Liga.
Jorginho
As a defensive midfielder,
Jorginho obviously cannot
compete with the goal and
assist records of some others
on the shortlist. However, this
did not stop him winning Uefa
Player of the Year in August.
After successfully steering
Chelsea to a Champions
League title in May and Italy to
European Championship glory
in July, Jorginho heads into
tomorrow’s ceremony as one
of the favourites.
Robert Lewandowski
The undisputed favourite to
win last year’s award,
Lewandowski was deprived of
the 2020 Ballon d’Or when it
was controversially cancelled
by France Football during the
Covid-19 pandemic. However,
despite the setback, he
continued his exceptional
form into 2021, scoring in
buckets for Bayern Munich to
help add the Bundesliga, Club
World Cup and DFL-Supercup
to their trophy cabinet.
ANATOMY OF
...THE BALLON D’OR
Matthäus
(Ger)
Pelé
(Bra)
Maradona
(Arg)
Yashin
(Rus)
Xavi
(Sp)
Messi
(Arg)
Ronaldo
(Bra)
C Ronaldo
(Por)
Cafu
(Bra)
Beckenbauer
(Ger)
Beckenbauer
(Ger)
Maldini
(Ita)
3-4-3
MOST BALLON D’ORS WON
FIRST WINNER
By country By club
12 Barcelona (6)
11 Real Madrid (7)
8 AC Milan (6)
Juventus (6)
5 Bayern Munich (3)
4 Man Utd (4)
6 Lionel Messi
2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2019
5 Cristiano Ronaldo
2008, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017
3 Johan Cruyff
1971, 1973, 1974
Michel Platini
1983, 1984, 1985
Marco van Basten
1988, 1989, 1992
7 Germany (5 players)
Holland (3)
Portugal (3)
6 France (4)
Argentina (1)
5 Italy (5)
Brazil (4)
England (4)
3 Soviet Union (3)
Spain (2)
HOW IT WORKS
Presented annually by French
magazine France Football,
the award was launched in
- For the first 50 years,
the winner was decided on
votes cast by leading football
journalists. Since 2007,
coaches and captains of
national teams have been
given a vote.
Stanley Matthews (1956)
The former Blackpool and
Stoke City winger edged out
Real Madrid’s Alfredo di
Stefano to win the inaugural
Ballon d’Or at 41 years of age.
THE 2021
FRONTRUNNERS
By player
LESSONS FROM
A LIFE IN SPORT
GLENN HODDLE
The former England
player and manager on
Wenger, Jägerbombs
and being a cheap date
WHERE IT ALL BEGAN
Football was in my DNA. Even
when I could only crawl, I
would never throw a ball, I’d
put it at my feet. I even slept
with a ball. My mum and dad
did think that was a bit
strange.
MY BREAKTHROUGH MOMENT
My career was almost over
before it began when I nearly
lost an eye. I had to have my
whole cartilage out too,
which was horrendous. I
began to think I’d break
through when I went into
men’s football at 15 and found
I could cope. When I became
an apprentice at Tottenham
Hotspur, it was easier playing
against the men.
THE COACH I LOOKED UP TO
Arsène Wenger at Monaco.
He opened my mind. In
France, No 10 was the biggest
position, but it was
something we never had in
England. Arsène was ahead of
the game and did everything
different to how we were
doing it in England, not least
how you prepare a team in
pre-season. Nobody had
more influence on me.
MY CHILDHOOD HERO
Don Henley. I was an absolute
Eagles nut and he would be
the first person I would invite
to dinner if I could.
FOOTBALL NEVER GOT ANY
BETTER THAN...
My first goal on my first start
for Tottenham when I was 17.
It was at Stoke City, it was a
25-yarder past Peter Shilton.
It’s a moment I’ll treasure.
MORNING I HAD THE HANGOVER
TO END ALL HANGOVERS
At my daughter’s 30th
birthday, they got me on
Jägerbombs. I’d never heard
of them. The hangover lasted
for two days.
MY FAVOURITE GROUND
It took a long time to get a win
there, but I did like Anfield. It’s
a special place with a special
atmosphere.
MY LEAST FAVOURITE GROUND
MiIlwall. The concrete slab
being thrown at me as I took a
corner was quite something. I
took it as a compliment
though: it meant I was making
a difference.
MY TOUGHEST OPPONENT
In the first leg of a 1984 Uefa
Cup tie against Bohemians
Hoddle: Finished at Chelsea
Praha, Jiri Sloup attempted to
do me so many times it was as
if he was out to kill me, but I
got through it. In the second
leg over there, one assault led
to 26 stitches and a torn groin.
I LEARNT MOST FROM...
Getting my first Tottenham
contract. There were no
bottles of champagne or
celebrations from my dad. He
just said, “Congratulations,
the hard work starts now.” I
never forgot it.
MY FAVOURITE MEAL
You won’t beat calamari or
tiger prawns with garlic to
start, then a pasta with salmon
and tiramisu for dessert, plus
a nice glass of red wine. I’m a
cheap date.
I KNEW THE GAME WAS UP
WHEN...
I was warming up as
substitute for Chelsea against
Real Zaragoza in the 1994-95
Cup Winners’ Cup semi-final. I
was mentally and physically
exhausted by the pressure of
being manager and player.
The expectation of me going
on overwhelmed me.
MY ONE REGRET
Not winning the league at
Tottenham. We should have
done it twice when I was a
player and I didn’t get the
squad or the money as
manager.
BEST ADVICE FOR A YOUNG
SPORTSPERSON
Don’t rely on talent. You have
to have a burning desire, your
pride and your standards have
to be so high. If you haven’t
got that mental strength and
desire you will not get 100 per
cent out of yourself.
John Aizlewood
Playmaker: My Life and the
Love of Football by Glenn
Hoddle (Harper Collins, £20
hardback) is out now.
nettles while carrying a
team-mate.
It worked, though,
and the footage from
famous triumphs in
Athens and Cologne
bears out Clough’s
managerial ethos,
which was: work hard,
then you’ll play well,
then you’ll enjoy it.
Such a journey
won’t happen again. It
had never happened
before either.
John Aizlewood
YOUR NEXT
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I BELIEVE IN MIRACLES
NETFLIX
It was truly a football
miracle when
Nottingham Forest’s
journey from lying
in the middle of the
old Second Division
to becoming the
champions of Europe
took only two
giddy years.
The catalysts, of
course, were Brian
Clough and his