When Ousmane Dembele was crowned the 2025 Ballon d’Or winner on Monday, September 22, 2025, in Paris, the world celebrated another glittering chapter in football’s most prestigious individual award.
For Ghanaians, it was a night that stirred mixed emotions. Their nation has never truly come close to winning the golden ball, yet a few Black Stars players have managed to break into the rankings, enough to remind the world that Ghanaian talent belongs on the biggest stage.
Though the Ballon d’Or has long been dominated by Europeans and South Americans, Ghanaian stars have occasionally broken through, earning recognition for moments of brilliance that captured the world’s attention.
These flashes may not have carried them to the top, but they remain part of Ghana’s football story, cherished as symbols of recognition in a race the nation has long admired from a distance.
Dembele shares emotional reaction on social media after winning the 2025 Ballon d’Or
This is the story of those rare yet unforgettable appearances — the highest-ranked Ghanaians in Ballon d’Or history, and the significance of their shining moments.
Michael Essien – 22nd in 2005
In 2005, Michael Essien was at the height of his powers. He had just joined Chelsea in a then-record £24.4 million deal, arriving in London from Lyon with the reputation of being one of the best all-round midfielders in the world.
That year, he broke into the Ballon d’Or rankings, finishing 22nd in the world.
It was a nod to his influence in Jose Mourinho’s midfield machine, powerful, tireless, and capable of scoring spectacular goals.
For Ghana, Essien’s ranking represented a breakthrough: the first time in modern football a Black Star was rubbing shoulders with the global elite at the Ballon d’Or stage.
Asamoah Gyan – 18th in 2010
Five years later, another Ghanaian etched his name in Ballon d’Or history.
Asamoah Gyan finished 18th in the 2010 Ballon d’Or, and his case was unique.
Unlike most nominees, Gyan did not play for a European superclub. He earned his place on the back of a heroic year that made him a household name across the globe.
At the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, Gyan’s goals fired Ghana to the quarter-finals, the furthest the country has ever gone.
He scored three times, including that unforgettable extra-time strike against the USA in the Round of 16.
Though his penalty miss against Uruguay broke hearts, his performance still stood as one of the best individual campaigns by an African player on the world stage.
Ballon d’Or voters noticed. Gyan became the highest-ranked Ghanaian ever in the award’s history, an achievement that has stood unchallenged for more than a decade.
Andre Dede Ayew and Christian Atsu – shortlisted
Not every Ghanaian story at the Ballon d’Or came with a final ranking. In 2015, both Andre Ayew, then with Swansea City and Christian Atsu then at Chelsea, were named in the 59-man shortlist for the award.
Neither made the final cut into the top 30, but their inclusion was a mark of respect.
Ayew had enjoyed a blistering debut season in the Premier League, scoring goals that lit up Swansea’s campaign, while Atsu was emerging as one of Africa’s brightest attacking prospects.
Despite these proud moments, Ghana has never truly threatened the top of the Ballon d’Or rankings.
Unlike George Weah of Liberia, Africa’s only Ballon d’Or winner, no Ghanaian has ever cracked the top 10.
Still, the achievements of Essien, Gyan, Ayew, and Atsu stand as milestones.
They represent eras when Ghanaian footballers carried the nation’s hopes onto the global stage, Essien bossing Europe’s midfields, Gyan nearly leading Ghana into a World Cup semi-final, Ayew dazzling in the Premier League, and Atsu flashing with potential.
FKA/JE
Meanwhile, watch the latest episode of Sports Check on Esports below