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How the 2025 Ballon d’Or List Reshaped Player Rankings: Winners, Risers and Fallers

Dembélé wins 2025 Ballon d’Or; major ranking shifts include Vitinha, Cole Palmer and several fallers

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The 2025 Ballon d’Or ceremony produced notable upheaval across the men’s rankings, with Ousmane Dembélé claiming the main prize for the first time and becoming just the sixth French player to win. The winner had never been shortlisted for the award until 2025. On the women’s side Aitana Bonmatí secured a third-straight Ballon d’Or Féminin, matching Lionel Messi as the only other player to win the Ballon d’Or three times in a row. First-time winners in the women’s game for the Kopa, Yashin and Gerd Müller awards were Vicky López, Hannah Hampton and Ewa Pajor.

Comparing the 2024 and 2025 shortlists highlights large movements. Cole Palmer rose from 25th to 8th for Chelsea, an increase of 17 places. Vitinha moved from 27th to 3rd for PSG, a jump of 24 spots. Several players who were unranked in 2024 entered high positions in 2025: Ousmane Dembélé (PSG) to 1st, Mohamed Salah (Liverpool) to 4th, Raphinha (Barcelona) to 5th, Achraf Hakimi (PSG) to 6th, Pedri (Barcelona) to 11th, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (PSG) to 12th and Scott McTominay (Napoli) to 18th.

There were sizeable declines as well. Rodri (Man City) and Dani Carvajal (Real Madrid) fell off the 2025 shortlist entirely after seasons disrupted by injury. Rodri, notably, was on crutches when he accepted his 2024 award. Vinícius Júnior (Real Madrid) dropped from 2nd to 16th, Jude Bellingham (Real Madrid) from 3rd to 23rd and Erling Haaland (Man City) from 5th to 26th. Lautaro Martínez (Inter Milan) moved from 7th to 20th, Florian Wirtz (in his final season at Leverkusen) fell from 12th to 29th and Phil Foden dropped off the shortlist.

Other active players who did not return to the 2025 list include Dani Olmo, Ademola Lookman, Martin Ødegaard, Federico Valverde, William Saliba, Antonio Rüdiger and Nico Williams. The reshuffle underlined how form, fitness and club trajectories altered perceptions between the 2024 and 2025 shortlists.

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Arsenal

Money Talks: CIES Ranks the World’s Most Valuable Squads

CIES values nine squads over $1bn; Real Madrid leads at $1.78bn while Tottenham exceed $1bn. Values.

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The surge in transfer prices and squad valuations has reshaped how clubs are measured. The CIES Football Observatory produces those estimates by weighing a player’s quality, age, position and length of contract, and those individual valuations are then summed to give each squad a market value.

The scale is striking. There are nine clubs with squads valued above $1 billion. At the top is Real Madrid with a squad valuation of $1.78 billion and Kylian Mbappé listed as the most valuable player at $221 million. Barcelona follow with $1.60 billion, Lamine Yamal accounting for $403.9 million of that total. Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain each sit at $1.55 billion, with Bukayo Saka ($131.5 million) and Désiré Doué ($150.3 million) named as their most valuable players respectively.

Liverpool’s roster is valued at $1.20 billion, most valuable player Florian Wirtz ($149.8 million). Bayern Munich come in at $1.15 billion with Michael Olise ($162.6 million) as their top-rated asset. Tottenham’s squad is valued at $1.03 billion; Xavi Simons is listed as their most valuable player ($98.1 million), despite the club’s current relegation fight and Igor Tudor’s assessment that players “are lacking when we attack, we lack the quality to score the goal. We are lacking in the middle to run and we are lacking behind to stay there to suffer and not concede the goal.”

The list also includes Manchester United ($953 million, Benjamin Šeško $100.3 million) and Inter ($942 million, Lautaro Martínez $117 million). Earlier-positioned squads under $1 billion include Atlético Madrid ($903 million, Julián Álvarez $136.5 million), Juventus ($896 million, Kenan Yıldız $152.5 million) and Brighton ($894 million, Diego Gómez $86.4 million).

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Several voices in the game have reflected on the market changes. Karl-Heinz Rumminegge said, “There are some players who do not come with a price tag.” Robert Lewandowski complained, “You are young, you score 10 goals in six months and some club will pay 60 or 70 million,” adding, “Before, you had to achieve something.” Vincent Kompany warned players about hype: “I always tell my players, ‘When there’s hype please don’t believe it, you’re not that good.’”

Whether the valuations mirror on-field quality or the inflation of a transfer market remains the central question CIES data brings into focus.

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Barcelona

Laporta Signals Potential Rework of Rashford Deal as Barcelona Reassesses Options

Laporta confirms Barcelona is studying Marcus Rashford’s future as loan, purchase options remain…

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Joan Laporta has confirmed Barcelona are reassessing the club’s approach to Marcus Rashford as the loanee’s long-term future in Catalonia grows uncertain. Laporta, who stepped down from his position to run for reelection, outlined that the board is weighing alternatives after recent dips in the forward’s form.

Speaking to Jijantes, Laporta said: “We could extend the loan further; it depends on what Deco wants.” He added: “There are options: exercising part of the purchase option with United, and we’ll see about the rest. We’re studying the deal.”

Rashford began his spell in Spain strongly, registering 15 goal contributions in his first 24 appearances across all competitions. That early momentum has slowed since Raphinha returned from injury and Rashford’s minutes decreased. In his 14 appearances in 2026, the England international has produced only five goal contributions, with the last coming in Barcelona’s 2–1 win over second-tier side Albacete in the Copa del Rey on Feb. 3.

Laporta’s comments come amid broader transfer planning. Barcelona are reported to remain linked with a big-money move for Atlético Madrid forward Julián Alvarez and may be prioritising financial flexibility ahead of the summer window. The club might be reluctant to trigger the agreed $34.4 million fee to make Rashford’s move permanent.

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A renegotiated loan would reduce immediate outlay and buy Barcelona an additional season to balance their books while pursuing needs such as a replacement for Robert Lewandowski and defensive reinforcements. The proposal would, however, conflict with Rashford’s stated preference for a permanent transfer to Barcelona, leaving the player to choose between returning to Manchester United or accepting continued uncertainty at the Spanish champions.

If Barcelona complete the purchase, Manchester United would receive a significant transfer fee to support their squad rebuilding. If Barcelona instead seek another loan, United could demand a higher price for a player whose value has risen following his performances in Spain.

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Barcelona

Barcelona’s Quiet Bid for a Preferential Line to Haaland

Font’s team met City executives in Madrid as Barcelona aims for a preferential path to Haaland. 2026

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Barcelona’s election contest has produced an early, long-term approach aimed at Manchester City’s striker rather than a near-term transfer plan. According to SPORT, Víctor Font sent two members of his team to Manchester City’s hotel in Madrid this week to open discussions. Carles Planchart and Xavier Aguilar met City chief executive Ferran Soriano and sporting director Hugo Viana, and were photographed leaving the venue.

SPORT’s account says Erling Haaland featured in the discussions. Font has described his would-be sporting department as “extremely active” and “meeting with clubs” to assemble options for Hansi Flick. The ambition is not to prise the player away immediately. Haaland signed a 10-year contract in 2024, has 363 career goals at the age of 25 and is valued by Transfermarkt at $230.6 million.

What Font appears to seek is a formal advantage: a preferential understanding that would place Barcelona at the front of the queue should Haaland ever become available, even if that opportunity arises years from now. The timing is tied to Barcelona’s presidential vote on March 15, when Font and Joan Laporta will compete for the job.

Any contact that took place with Manchester City has not involved Haaland or his camp, according to his agent Rafaela Pimenta. “We have a lot of respect and admiration for Barcelona, but there hasn’t been any contact whatsoever regarding a potential transfer,” she told La Sexta. “The player renewed his contract a few months ago, he’s very happy at Manchester City. Everything is going very well for him and we really have nothing to discuss about a transfer when everything is so good at City.”

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Pimenta, who inherited Mino Raiola’s client list, has previously emphasised players retaining control. “I don’t like it when the player has no freedom to decide,” she said. “I have done all the contracts in this agency in 25 years. All of them. There wasn’t a single time when a player said ‘I want to go’ and they could not.”

Haaland’s past moves were defined by release clauses: a $24 million clause took him from Red Bull Salzburg to Borussia Dortmund in January 2020 and a $63 million clause was triggered by Manchester City two-and-a-half years later. At City he has won two Premier League Golden Boots and helped the club to the treble in his debut season; he sits 87 goals short of Sergio Agüero’s club record of 260.

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