World
Cup-winning goalkeeper Manuel Neuer stands as the only barrier to
Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi extending their six-year domination
of FIFA's player of the year award on Monday.
Germany's Neuer
is the latest third man on the shortlist trying to break the
free-scoring superstars' grip on football's highest individual honor.
Ronaldo edged Messi for the 2008 and 2013 prizes, and was runner-up in
three of his great rival's four straight wins from 2009-12.
No
goalie has won since FIFA created its award in 1991, though the Germany
and Bayern Munich No. 1's all-around skill and game awareness made him a
standout in 2014.
"He has in recent years shaped how
goalkeepers play like no one before him," Germany coach Joachim Loew
told Bild daily this week.
Still, despite leading Germany to
World Cup victory, Neuer is seen as the outsider for the award because
Ronaldo and Messi set more scoring records last year.
Ronaldo
got 61 goals for Real Madrid and Portugal, and his record tally of 17 in
a Champions League season helped his club win a 10th European title.
Messi set the career scoring records in the Champions League and
Spain's La Liga in November, just as national team captains and coaches
and selected journalists were filling their Ballon d'Or ballots.
However, Messi's teams won no trophies: Argentina lost the World Cup
final, after its captain failed to score in four knockout rounds, while
Barcelona was beaten by Atletico Madrid in the Champions League
quarterfinals and for the Spanish title.
Even Messi's Golden Ball award for best player in Brazil "surprised" FIFA president Sepp Blatter.
Neuer supporters include veteran coach Ottmar Hitzfeld, whose
Switzerland team exited in the last-16 round after Messi created an
extra-time goal for Angel Di Maria.
"He's the prototype of a
modern goalkeeper, and it's about time that kind of player was selected
for the award," the German coach said in an interview published by FIFA.
The FIFA Ballon d'Or, which merged with the original award presented
since 1956 by France Football magazine, is the main honor in a lavish
annual ceremony in Zurich.
A Germany goalkeeper won the women's honor last year though Nadine Angerer is not nominated to defend her title on Monday.
Five-time winner Marta of Brazil, United States forward Abby Wambach,
who won the 2012 award, and Germany midfielder Nadine Kessler are on the
shortlist.
The contest brings Marta and Wambach to Zurich when
both are supporting a discrimination lawsuit filed in Canada for FIFA
allowing that country to stage the 2015 Women's World Cup on artificial
turf pitches.
In the men's coaching award, Loew is a strong
contender against the two club coaches from Madrid: Italian Carlo
Ancelotti for Real and Atletico's Diego Simeone from Argentina.
The coaching award for women's football is contested between two men -
Ralf Kellermann of Champions League winner Wolfsburg and Norio Sasaki,
coach of Japan's Asian Cup winner - and one woman, Maren Meinert, who
guided Germany to win the Under-20 World Cup.
Women's football can strike a notable win in the Puskas Award for most beautiful goal.
Ireland forward Stephanie Roche's goal in an amateur domestic league
match for Peamount United is shortlisted for the fan-voted prize against
World Cup goals by James Rodriguez for Colombia against Uruguay and
Robin van Persie for the Netherlands against Spain.
Roche has been supported by a heavy voting campaign in her home country to beat her star rivals.
Blatter will make his first public appearance and speech at the
ceremony since his FIFA executive committee colleague Prince Ali bin Al
Hussein of Jordan declared on Tuesday as a candidate for the
presidential election in May.
The longtime FIFA chief will also make a personal presidential award and present a fair play prize.
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