What is the Golden Boy award? Previous winners, eligibility rules and nominees
- Everything you need to know about the Golden Boy award
- Prize crowns the best young player
- How the winner is decided, which players have won it in the past and who can win the prize in 2023
Dripping with Antonio Conte's typical determination, the Italian manager once declared: "There is no young and old, only victory or failure."
One can only speculate what the former Juventus midfielder would have thought when he picked up Turin's sports daily Tuttosport in 2003 to see the inaugural edition of the Golden Boy award - a prize handed out to individuals conditioned by youthfulness rather than solely success.
While it may have its critics, the Golden Boy award has blossomed into an international affair, with journalists from across Europe voting for the best young male footballer of the calendar year.
Here's everything you need to know about the baby Ballon d'Or.
What is the Golden Boy award?
The Golden Boy award is an individual prize handed out to the best player aged under 21 in Europe. Sports journalists vote for the footballer they find most deserving of the gong over a calendar year.
Media outlets included include Tuttosport, The Times, Bild from Germany, France's L'Equipe and Marca among others.
Which players are eligible for the Golden Boy award?
The Golden Boy award is only applicable to players that turn 20 years of age or younger in the year of their triumph.
Even though the initial long list of nominees is announced in June, the award is theoretically supposed to be based on the performance of players across the entire calendar year.
Individuals of any nationality can win the award but they have to be plying their trade in the highest league of a European country. Naturally, players from UEFA nations have dominated the list of champions, with every winner since 2010 hailing from Europe.
The Golden Boy is decided by journalists from England, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Spain and Switzerland.
Each voter nominates and ranks five players, awarding points on a sliding scale of ten for the front-runner, seven for second place, five for third, three for fourth and a single point for fifth. The Golden Boy is the individual that acquires the highest points tally.
Every player to win the Golden Boy award
Year | Player | Club(s) | Nationality | Birth year |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Rafael van der Vaart | Ajax | Netherlands | 1983 |
2004 | Wayne Rooney | Everton/Man Utd | England | 1985 |
2005 | Lionel Messi | Barcelona | Argentina | 1987 |
2006 | Cesc Fabregas | Arsenal | Spain | 1987 |
2007 | Sergio Aguero | Atletico Madrid | Argentina | 1988 |
2008 | Anderson | Man Utd | Brazil | 1988 |
2009 | Alexandre Pato | Milan | Brazil | 1989 |
2010 | Mario Balotelli | Inter/Man City | Italy | 1990 |
2011 | Mario Gotze | Borussia Dortmund | Germany | 1992 |
2012 | Isco | Malaga | Spain | 1992 |
2013 | Paul Pogba | Juventus | France | 1993 |
2014 | Raheem Sterling | Liverpool | England | 1994 |
2015 | Anthony Martial | Monaco/Man Utd | France | 1995 |
2016 | Renato Sanches | Benfica/Bayern Munich | Portugal | 1997 |
2017 | Kylian Mbappe | Monaco/PSG | France | 1998 |
2018 | Matthijs de Ligt | Ajax | Netherlands | 1999 |
2019 | Joao Felix | Benfica/Atletico Madrid | Portugal | 1999 |
2020 | Erling Haaland | Borussia Dortmund | Norway | 2000 |
2021 | Pedri | Barcelona | Spain | 2002 |
2022 | Gavi | Barcelona | Spain | 2004 |
Lionel Messi is the first and so far only player to win the Golden Boy and the Ballon d'Or, claiming the junior prize in 2005 before lifting the first of seven big balls four years later.
However, both Kylian Mbappe (2017) and Erling Haaland (2020) have also won the junior award. Even if Messi is the favourite to claim the senior gong again in 2023, at least one of Mbappe and Haaland will surely complete the set at some point.
Messi was voted the Golden Boy of 2005, the year that he turned 18. It wasn't until 2022 that another 18-year-old was deemed to be the best young player in Europe when Gavi hoisted aloft the accolade. Gavi had become the youngest player in the history of the men's Spanish national team the year before, making his debut against Italy. The Azzurri defender Emerson Palmeiri admitted: "I didn't know him." Soon everyone would.
The early recipients of the award - the likes of Wayne Rooney, Messi, Cesc Fabregas and Sergio Aguero - undoubtedly lived up to their potential. But the Golden Boy hasn't always matured into a similarly sparkling man.
The Brazilian duo of Anderson and Alexandre Pato won the award in consecutive years between 2008 and 2009 while representing Manchester United and Milan respectively. Yet, both left Europe before they turned 30, long after hitting their peak.
Ever the canny operators, Benfica exploited the prodigious talents of Renato Sanches and Joao Felix before moving them on. The two academy graduates were sold for a combined sum of more than €150m to Bayern Munich and Atletico Madrid respectively during the year in which they were crowned the Golden Boy. Both have desperately struggled to rediscover that resplendent allure.
Golden Boy 2023 nominees
Player | Club |
---|---|
Jude Bellingham | Real Madrid |
Jamal Musiala | Bayern Munich |
Xavi Simons | RB Leipzig |
Antonio Silva | Benfica |
Alejandro Balde | Barcelona |
Florian Wirtz | Bayer Leverkusen |
Benjamin Sesko | RB Leipzig |
Giorgio Scalvini | Atalanta |
Rasmus Hojlund | Manchester United |
Levi Colwill | Chelsea |
Johan Bakayoko | PSV Eindhoven |
Milos Kerkez | Bournemouth |
Arthur Vermeeren | Royal Antwerp |
Evan Ferguson | Brighton & Hove Albion |
Lucas Gourna-Douath | Red Bull Salzburg |
Warren Zaire-Emery | PSG |
Ousmane Diomande | Sporting CP |
Arnau Martinez | Girona |
Mathys Tel | Bayern Munich |
Andy Diouf | Lens |
Arda Guler | Real Madrid |
Bilal El Khannouss | Genk |
Martin Baturina | Dinamo Zagreb |
Joao Neves | Benfica |
Barcelona | Lamine Yamal |