In 2024, football fans were left without a clear standout moment to define the year. Unlike previous years with memorable events like Manchester City's treble in 2023, Lionel Messi's historic achievements in 2022, or Italy's Euro triumph in 2021, 2024 did not have a singular standout moment. The absence of a defining moment highlighted the unpredictability and competitiveness of the sport, making it a unique and refreshing year for football enthusiasts.
And perhaps the best way to signal the fact that there wasn't a standout was the fact that neither Messi nor Ronaldo made it into the Top 30 of the Ballon d'Or nominees. The award they couldn't stop winning at one point had finally moved on for good.
Football in 2024 saw surprises. Perhaps more than we're used to. Bayern Munich no longer won the Bundesliga, dark horses Spain won the Euros, and a defensive midfielder won the Ballon d'Or. For good heavens, Ivory Coast won the Africa Cup of Nations after sacking their manager mid-tournament!
And what a ride that was. Ivory Coast barely scraped through to the knockouts in an AFCON on home soil. Their manager was sacked midway and the collapse couldn't look more calamitous. Neither could the comeback look more glorious than it ended up being. 'The Elephants' beat everyone in the knockouts, including then-defending champions Senegal, to claim a historic AFCON in their own territory.
What about Bayer Leverkusen? Not only did they dethrone the seemingly undethronable, they went invincible. Zero losses in 34 Bundesliga games. Zero losses in the German Cup. And were it not for a freak Europa League final defeat, it'd be zero losses all season. Xabi Alonso at the wheel, Florian Wirtz in the hole, Leverkusen were the team of the year.
Let's come to Spain. Before Euro 2024, England were heavyweights. People fancied Germany on home soil. France are always favourites. But one team beat them all. Spain. They didn't boast the best team, but undeniably played the best football.
Rodri was a metronome. His hype took away the shine from midfield partner Fabian Ruiz who was arguably better. Nico Williams was a tear on the flanks, and his wing partner? Phew. Superlatives fall short when one tries to describe what Lamine Yamal is doing at 17.
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It's hard to live up to the words 'The Next Messi'. But Lamine Yamal may very well just do it.
He finished 8th in the Ballon d'Or. At 17!
Perhaps the Ballon d'Or, and the fickle nature of individual awards, does not deserve the debate it gets. But it must certainly be discussed to celebrate the best individual players. The sweetest cream of the crop. And in 2024, there were three. Jude Bellingham, Vinicius Jr and Rodri.
Bellingham flew at Real Madrid, and was decisive whenever the occasion demanded it. El Clasico winner? Check. Champions League in your first season at Real Madrid? Check. Bicycle-kick 95th minute equaliser at the Euros? Check.
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His teammate Vinicius was stratospheric. If footballers were superheroes, no one would be feared more than Vinicius in the current scenario. Without a shadow of doubt, the player in world football most capable of turning a game on its head with the click of a finger.
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But the golden ball went to Rodri. In a game that typically needs you to have a goal tally to challenge for the big honours, Rodri was crowned for being the ticking heartbeat of Manchester City and Spain. Just look at how worse off his club is, now that he's injured. Rodri was so good that a people needed to sit up and realize that a defensive midfielder may just be the most important player in the world.
Football in 2024 was uncertain. It was diverse. It had no singular standout. It saw Pep Guardiola lose eight out of 11 games. It saw Kylian Mbappe finally join Real Madrid. It was a call back to the pre-Messi and Ronaldo era. And it's time we embrace it.