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Ousmane Dembélé: 10 Things to Know About the 2025 Ballon d’Or Winner

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Ousmane Dembélé: 10 Things to Know About the 2025 Ballon d’Or Winner

Paris witnessed a special moment at the Théâtre du Châtelet as Ousmane Dembélé was named the 2025 Ballon d’Or winner. The PSG and France star capped a brilliant season that included leading Paris Saint-Germain to a historic first UEFA Champions League title, an achievement that heavily influenced voters.

He’s the first French winner since Karim Benzema in 2022 and the sixth Frenchman ever to lift the award.

1) Early life and heritage

Born May 15, 1997, in Vernon, Normandy, Dembélé grew up in a multicultural household with Mauritanian-Senegalese and Malian roots. That blend of cultures has always been part of his identity and is often referenced when he speaks about family, faith and motivation.

2) From local pitches to Rennes

Dembélé’s first steps came at local clubs in Évreux before Rennes spotted his talent. Coaches recall a fearless winger who tried take-ons again and again—win or lose. That appetite to attack defenders shaped the player we see today: direct, fast, and inventive on either wing.

3) Breakthrough season at Rennes

He made his professional debut in 2015 and quickly caught fire, hitting double-digit goals in his first full campaign. Scouts from Europe’s elite queued up as he combined raw pace with a final ball beyond his years. That single season was enough to convince Dortmund to make a move.

4) Dortmund polish under Tuchel

Joining Borussia Dortmund in 2016 put him under Thomas Tuchel, a coach known for sharpening young attackers. Dembélé responded with end-product and big-game moments, helping Dortmund win the DFB-Pokal in 2017 and cementing his status as one of Europe’s most exciting wide men.

5) Record transfer to Barcelona

After Neymar’s exit, Barcelona turned to Dembélé in 2017, paying over €100 million plus add-ons, one of the biggest deals of that era. The fee brought pressure and scrutiny, but it also showed how highly the game rated his ceiling at just 20 years old.

6) Injuries and the reset

Barcelona produced highlights but also hard lessons: repeated muscle injuries, especially hamstrings, stole rhythm and headlines. Those setbacks tested his discipline and lifestyle. The later move to PSG offered a clean slate, and a chance to prove he could stay fit, decisive and consistent when it mattered most.

7) A growing trophy cabinet

Dembélé’s shelves already include La Liga, Copa del Rey and the Spanish Super Cup with Barça, Ligue 1 and domestic cups with PSG—and now the sport’s biggest individual prize. The 2024/25 campaign added the missing piece: PSG’s first-ever UEFA Champions League, where his creative spark and big-match performances tilted tight ties.

8) World champion with France

He was part of France’s 2018 FIFA World Cup-winning squad in Russia. For any player, a World Cup medal is a career milestone; for Dembélé, it underscored that his talent belonged at the top level, even before his peak years arrived.

9) Truly two-footed and position-flexible

Dembélé isn’t just “good with both feet,” he’s genuinely ambipedal. He dribbles, crosses and shoots off either side, which makes him unpredictable and lets coaches switch him between right wing, left wing, or even a central role depending on the match plan. That dual-sided threat was a huge factor in PSG’s tactical flexibility this season.

10) PSG chapter: consistency, leadership… and the Ballon d’Or

He returned to France with PSG in 2023, reunited with a demanding, detail-obsessed environment under Luis Enrique. The result: decisive form in Europe, clutch displays when PSG needed a spark, and a leadership presence in a dressing room packed with stars.

That run, crowned by the Champions League, made his 2025 Ballon d’Or feel like the final stamp on a complete, comeback story

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