Let’s be honest — there was a time when writing “Ousmane Dembélé, back-to-back Champions League winner and reigning Ballon d’Or holder” would have sounded like a fever dream. The same guy who spent years at Barcelona as the ultimate “what if?” player, constantly sidelined, constantly doubted, constantly brilliant in flashes and then… gone again. Hamstring. Muscle. Knee. Pick one.
Well, look at him now.
From Nearly Man to the Best on the Planet

Dembélé’s journey to the top of world football is genuinely one of the great redemption arcs of this generation. He broke out at Borussia Dortmund as a teenager, earned a jaw-dropping €105 million move to Barcelona in 2017, and then spent the best part of six years giving Barça fans heart attacks — stunning when fit, infuriating when not.
The switch to PSG in 2023 for a reported €50.4 million felt, to many, like a last roll of the dice. Instead, it was the beginning of everything.

Under Luis Enrique’s relentless, press-everything system, Dembélé didn’t just rediscover himself — he became genuinely unstoppable. In 2024-25, he scored 35 goals and registered 14 assists in 53 matches as PSG swept the Champions League, Ligue 1 and Coupe de France. He was the joint top scorer in Ligue 1 with 21 goals. He was named both the Champions League and Ligue 1 player of the year. And then, in September 2025, he stood on stage at the iconic Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris and lifted the Ballon d’Or — becoming the first PSG men’s player to win it since Lionel Messi in 2021, a man he once shared a dressing room with at Camp Nou.

“The Ballon d’Or has not been a goal of my career,” he said through tears that night, “but it is exceptional.”
Budapest Just Added Another Chapter
If last season was Dembélé’s coronation, Saturday night in Budapest was him defending the throne — with a smile, a penalty, and absolutely zero nerves.

PSG were trailing 1-0 to Kai Havertz’s early Arsenal goal when the moment arrived. Kvaratskhelia won a penalty in the 65th minute after a foul by Cristhian Mosquera, and up stepped the Ballon d’Or winner. 67,000 people watching. Millions more at home. One ball, one goalkeeper, one chance to level the Champions League final.

Dembélé didn’t blink. He sent David Raya the wrong way, wheeled away in celebration, and single-handedly kept PSG’s back-to-back dream alive. Cool, composed, inevitable.

He was also carrying an injury — forced off before the end of normal time with cramp — yet still delivered when it mattered most. That, in a nutshell, is who Dembélé has become.

After the final whistle — and after the shootout drama had handed PSG the trophy — he was pure joy: “It is exceptional, it’s a great night. We have worked hard this season in order to do the back-to-back. It is magnificent. We are so pleased and we will savour this tonight.”
And Now? The 2026 Ballon d’Or Is Already His to Win

PSG scored 44 goals across this entire Champions League campaign. Dembélé also bagged a hat-trick against Bayern Munich in the semi-finals as PSG edged through 6-5 on aggregate — and has now ended the season with 20 UCL goals over the two campaigns combined.

Back in May, when asked about winning consecutive Ballon d’Or awards, Dembélé was typically humble, telling Bein Sport: “Individual trophies come later, if they come, if they don’t, that’s how it is. The most important thing is the team titles.”

Good answer. Wrong prediction. Because right now, heading into the World Cup with France — another potential stage to light up — it’s very hard to look at world football and find anyone doing it better.

Xavi once said Dembélé had everything it took to be the best player in the world. Nobody believed him back then.
They do now.












