No More FIFA Ballon d’Or – FIFA Reveals ‘The Best’ Football Awards Trophy

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FIFA unveil ‘The Best’ trophy. Image Source: twitter

Internet Desk: Trophies are prized possessions, clung to dearly by those talented and fortunate enough to reach the pinnacle of their chosen profession. A trophy can often become the centrepiece of an event, with players in varying FIFA World Cup Finals walking out past the iconic sculpture, be it at senior men’s, women’s or at the varying age group category World Cups throughout FIFA’s portfolio. Thus, the trophy itself becomes the goal, symbolising as it does the victory and ultimate success of a team’s endeavour to reach the very top.

The Best FIFA Football Awards will honour the elite footballers and coaches from across planet football, and a suitably symbolic and iconic trophy is needed to represent the highest individual honours in the sport.

FIFA, therefore, commissioned the design of a new platinum-coated trophy to honour The Best. The trophy, with identical versions for both men’s and women’s players and coaches, has a shape which resembles the iconic World Cup Trophy, an homage to tradition with a contemporary, dynamic design. The new trophy began to take shape after Croatian artist Ana Barbic Katicic’s designs made their way to Zurich.

“The inspiration behind the design of this trophy is to honour the best players in the world for FIFA,” Katic told FIFA. “We shared the same beliefs that we should not deviate from classical conventions and to respect the familiar and well-known FIFA identity. It respects and honours the same values that have been the cornerstone of the sport since the earliest days of FIFA and we try to celebrate it again with this new iconic trophy.”

The design, with the ball used in the first World Cup Final played between Uruguay and Argentina in 1930 sitting atop the sleek body, was made into reality by Adon Production AG, a company based just outside Zurich. Some cutting edge technology was used in the creation.

“The trophy consists of five parts: the bottom, the base, a carbon piece over the base, the body and the ball,” Rover Schudel, CEO and Chairman of Adon explained. “The machine that shapes the ball is very new. It produces pieces for the aerospace industry, also for Formula 1, and has the precision of 12,000th of a millimetre.”

With imputs from FIFA.