Football in the 1950s wasn’t the global circus it is today. No satellite broadcasts. No social media. Just grainy footage, newspaper clippings, and word-of-mouth reverence. The Ballon d’Or wasn’t even open to non-Europeans until 1995. That changes everything when you think about who “deserved” it. And yet, Matthews—The Wizard of the Dribble—won it on reputation, longevity, and a career that defied time itself.
The Origins of the Ballon d’Or: How a French Magazine Changed Football History
In 1956, France Football, a magazine with modest circulation but outsized ambition, launched a new award: the Ballon d’Or. The premise was simple—vote for the best player in Europe. But the implications were massive. For the first time, individual excellence would be measured across national lines. No more just “best Englishman” or “best Spaniard.” This was continental recognition. Journalists from 16 European countries cast ballots. Each selected their top three players, with points assigned 5-3-1.
And the winner? Stanley Matthews. Not Di Stéfano. Not Puskás. Not even Kopa, who’d later win it in 1958. Matthews had never won a league title. He’d never lifted the FA Cup—until 1953, that is, when he delivered one of the most legendary performances in English football history. Blackpool vs. Bolton. Three goals down. Matthews on the wing. Result? A 4-3 comeback. It wasn’t just a game. It was folklore. But that was three years before the Ballon d’Or even existed. So why did he win in 1956?
Because the voters remembered. Because he was still playing at the top level at age 31. Because he’d been the face of English football since the 1930s. His first cap came in 1934. His last? 1957. Fifty-four caps over 23 years. That’s not a career—it’s a civic institution.
Why 1956 Was the Perfect Year for a Legend
Matthews wasn’t statistically dominant. He scored 10 goals in 34 appearances that year. Solid, sure. But not Ballon d’Or material by today’s metrics. Yet perception mattered more than stats. The award wasn’t about analytics. It was about aura. He’d just led Blackpool to promotion. He was still weaving past defenders like they were standing still. He’d never been sent off. Not once. In his entire career. Try finding a modern winger with that record. It’s almost comical.
The real kicker? He didn’t even attend the ceremony. He was playing a match in England. That’s how disconnected the football world was. No live feeds. No red carpets. Just a phone call later and a trophy shipped by mail. Imagine that today. Lionel Messi skipping the event to play FC Getafe? Unthinkable.
How the Voting Process Worked Back Then
The 16 journalists who voted weren’t sports scientists. They were columnists, often with national biases. England had four voters. Italy had three. France had two. And so on. Matthews got 47 points. Di Stéfano—arguably the best player in the world at the time—got 41. Close, but not enough. Was it a snub? Maybe. But remember: Di Stéfano played in Spain. The Spanish Civil War had barely cooled. Franco’s regime was still isolating Spanish football. International exposure? Limited. Matthews, meanwhile, had toured the world, played in packed British stadiums, and been featured in newsreels across Europe.
And let’s be clear about this: the Ballon d’Or wasn’t meant to crown the best player. It was meant to crown the most admired. There’s a difference.
Stanley Matthews vs. the Myth of the Modern Winner
Today, the Ballon d’Or goes to goal machines. Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, Robert Lewandowski—they’re all strikers or attacking midfielders who break records. But Matthews? Right winger. Creator. Not finisher. His legacy wasn’t built on numbers. It was built on style. On sportsmanship. On surviving three decades at the top. He retired at 50. Yes, fifty. Still playing in the top flight. That’s not a typo.
He wasn’t just a player. He was a symbol. Of loyalty—playing for Stoke and Blackpool, never chasing glory or money. Of professionalism—training obsessively, eating clean, avoiding alcohol. In an era when players smoked before matches, Matthews was a monk. He once said: “I’d rather play football than eat.” And that wasn’t hyperbole. That changes everything when you measure greatness.
The Problem With Rewriting History
Some fans argue Di Stéfano should’ve won. And they’re not wrong. Real Madrid’s Argentine-Spanish magician had already won La Liga twice by 1956. He’d dominate Europe in the coming years, winning five consecutive European Cups. But in 1956? He wasn’t universally known. His first European Cup final was in May 1956—months after the voting closed. Timing is everything.
Yet here’s where it gets messy. Rewriting the past based on what we know now is dangerous. We see Di Stéfano as a legend. But the voters in 1956 didn’t have that luxury. They had to pick based on what they saw, heard, and believed. And for them, Matthews was the face of football. He’d survived two World Wars. He’d played through rationing and bombed stadiums. He was football’s enduring flame.
The Role of Media and Geography in 1950s Football
Let’s pause for a second. How many of you have seen footage of Matthews playing? Be honest. Probably not much. Now, how many have seen clips of Pelé, even if you weren’t born when he played? A lot more, right? That’s the power of media. In 1956, TV coverage was spotty. International broadcasts? Rare. So journalists voted based on reputation, not highlights. Matthews had decades of glowing reports. Di Stéfano? Just starting to make noise. Puskás? Still in Hungary, about to flee after the 1956 revolution.
Football was local. Global stardom didn’t exist. That explains why a player known more for his conduct than his stats could win the first award. It wasn’t just about talent. It was about character. And in that department, Matthews was untouchable.
Ballon d’Or Winners: Then vs. Now – What’s Really Changed?
Compare 1956 to 2023. Back then, one award. One winner. One continent. Today? Multiple awards—men, women, young player, club of the year. The process is global. Over 100 journalists from every footballing nation vote. The winner is announced in a glitzy Paris ceremony. Broadcast live. Streaming in 200 countries. The trophy? Still the same golden ball. But the meaning? Different.
In the 1950s, the Ballon d’Or was a journalist’s opinion. Today, it’s a brand. A product. A battleground between Manchester City and Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and PSG. The prize money? Zero. But the endorsement deals? Millions. Winning it can add $5–10 million to a player’s commercial value. That wasn’t the case in 1956. Matthews didn’t get a single sponsorship deal from winning.
The Influence of Team Success on Individual Awards
Back then, team success helped—but didn’t guarantee—victory. Matthews won without a league title. Today? Try winning the Ballon d’Or without a Champions League or World Cup. Nearly impossible. Since 2000, 18 of 23 winners played for the club that won the Champions League that year. Coincidence? Hardly.
But here’s the irony: Matthews’ Blackpool finished 18th in the First Division in 1955–56. Dead last in survival terms. And yet he won. That’s how much individual brilliance could outweigh team failure. Would that happen today? Not a chance. You could score 60 goals for a mid-table team and still get ignored. That’s the shift.
Frequently Asked Questions
Was the Ballon d’Or Open to All Nationalities in 1956?
No. Only players from European clubs were eligible. And only European journalists voted. It wasn’t until 1995 that non-European players could win. George Weah, the Liberian star, became the first—and so far only—African winner in 1995. Before that, it was effectively a Euro-only club. Which explains why Pelé never won, despite being arguably the greatest of all time. He played in Brazil. And later, the U.S. Neither counted.
Why Didn’t Pelé Ever Win the Ballon d’Or?
Simple answer: he wasn’t eligible until 1995. By then, he’d retired. He was active from 1956 to 1977. Dominant in the 1958, 1962, and 1970 World Cups. But because he played in South America and later the NASL, he was excluded. France Football didn’t expand eligibility until 1995. So one of the greatest careers in history was Ballon d’Or-less. Honestly, it is unclear why it took so long. Money? Politics? Bias? Experts disagree.
Has the Ballon d’Or Lost Its Meaning?
I find this overrated. People love to say the award is politicized, commercialized, irrelevant. But it still matters. Players want it. Fans care. Media obsess. Yes, it’s influenced by media visibility. Yes, team success weighs heavier. But that’s not corruption. That’s evolution. The thing is, any award based on opinion will have flaws. The real issue isn’t bias—it’s expectation. We want it to be scientific. But football isn’t a lab. It’s a theater. And Matthews won the first act.
The Bottom Line
Stanley Matthews won the first Ballon d’Or because he was more than a player. He was a standard. A benchmark. A man who played professionally until he was fifty, never got injured, never got booked. That’s not human. That’s myth.
Would he win today? Probably not. The game has changed. Stats rule. Trophies matter. Fame amplifies. But back then? He was the only logical choice. The voters weren’t blind. They were honoring longevity, class, and a career that spanned generations.
Some say Di Stéfano should’ve won. Others argue for Puskás. But rewriting history doesn’t erase context. And that’s exactly where people get it wrong. You can’t judge 1956 by 2024 standards. The award wasn’t meant to predict legacy. It was meant to reflect reverence.
And in 1956, no one was more revered than Stanley Matthews. The first Ballon d’Or winner. The last gentleman of football.
