Ballon d'Or 2017: Matching Messi not enough for Ronaldo

Four-time winner determined to clinch seven titles before he ends illustrious career

epa06368363 Real Madrid's Portuguese forward Cristiano Ronaldo takes part in a training session at the team's Valdebebas sport facilities in Madrid, Spain, on 05 December 2017. Real Madrid will face Borussia Dortmund in a UEFA Champions League groups stage soccer match on 06 December.  EPA/EMILIO NARANJO
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Cristiano Ronaldo looks set to match his great rival Lionel Messi on Thursday by claiming a fifth Ballon d'Or as recognition for leading Real Madrid to a Primera Liga and Uefa Champions League double last season.

Barcelona's 30-year-old Argentine superstar won the coveted award from 2009 to 2012 and in 2015. Portugal's Ronaldo, who is 32, took the honours in 2008, 2013, 2014 and last year.

The man who came to maturity under the watchful eye of former Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson clinched his fourth Ballon d'Or after an unforgettable season, first spearheading Madrid to the Champions League title before also leading his homeland to Euro 2016 success in Paris.

The France Football magazine award is decided upon by a journalists ballot (with 173 voting in 2016) with each naming a top five from a list of 30.

Others in contention to win are Paris Saint-Germain's gifted Brazilian forward Neymar, the veteran Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon and the prolific England centre-forward Harry Kane.

The 2016/17 season was in a way just as successful for Ronaldo, who started the season slowly before Real shaded Barcelona to the domestic title and then became the first side in the modern era to defend their European crown.

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After seeing off Napoli, Bayern Munich and Atletico Madrid in the knockout rounds Ronaldo scored twice in a 4-1 win over Juventus in the final, taking his tally to 12 goals in the competition that season.

"Last season was exceptional. We won the league and the Champions League, where I was again the top scorer," Ronaldo told French daily L'Equipe.

Real have a staggering seven players on the shortlist of 30 with Karim Benzema, Marcelo, Isco, Luka Modric, Sergio Ramos and Toni Kroos all nominated alongside their talisman Ronaldo.

The only other Barca player other than Messi, is the Uruguayan centre-forward Luis Suarez.

On the prospect of equalling Messi's five wins Ronaldo quipped: "I want seven. Five is good but seven is my lucky number so seven would be great."

"I want seven children and seven Ballons d'Or."

Despite his position as outsider Messi can take heart from the award's history of upsets with Messi himself clinching the title against the odds in 2010.

That season purists pointed to the achievements of Dutch midfielder Wesley Sneijder, winner of the Champions League, Serie A and Italian Cup and indeed a World Cup finalist with the Netherlands.

Also, in the run up to the vote Ronaldo has only scored twice in the Primera Liga so far this season - although he has netted eight goals in five games in the Champions League - and Real are already eight points behind Messi's Barcelona.

Messi in contrast tops the Liga scoring charts with 13 goals and also secured a brilliant hat-trick for Argentina against Ecuador to clinch a last-gasp World Cup place in October, earning wide praise.

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"Leo is like Maradona for those of our generation," said Messi's compatriot, Juventus striker Paulo Dybala, himself tipped as a future winner. "He dragged us to the World Cup with the hat-trick in Ecuador. He is a born leader."

Aside from Messi and Ronaldo the Ballon d'Or, originally conceived to honour only European players before going fully global in 2007, has three triple winners - Johan Cruyff, Michel Platini and Marco van Basten.

This year's winner is being announced live on the L'Equipe television channel, the French sports daily being owned by the same company as France Football.