Italy striker Paolo Rossi was the first player to be awarded the gong and since then there have been eight further winners, with no individual having claimed the prize twice.
It has been five World Cups since this illustrious double was last completed, with four runners-up since taking the prize. The exception to that rule is Uruguay attacker Diego Forlan, who claimed the award in South Africa 2010 despite finishing fourth in the competition.
It was little surprise that such accomplished defenders should be speaking of the striker, who had come off an electric season with Inter and was undoubtedly the greatest player on the planet going into the competition.
Only fate would deny Ronaldo the opportunity to really make his mark on the ultimate stage this time around. He took ill before the final, was initially named in the starting XI then withdrawn before ultimately starting the match. He was, however, just a shadow of himself and Brazil were beaten 3-0 by the host nation.
Germany 2006 would end in personal disaster for Zinedine Zidane, who made his exit from the competition and professional football having been sent off infamously for a headbutt on Marco Materazzi.
Of course, it all ended with him seeing red in Berlin. Italy went on to win a penalty shootout after a 1-1 draw and Zizou was denied his second World Cup trophy.
That bland final, utterly forgettable save for Roberto Baggio’s disastrous penalty over the bar in the shootout, was an unjust manner in which to finish the competition for a team that has shown so much attacking strength.
He had missed the 1980 European Championship as a result of what he branded “an injustice”, while he only returned to action just in time to play the end of the 1981-82 season with Juventus. Prior to the World Cup, he had made only three competitive appearances in two years.
If it was Italy’s defence that was to the fore in their 2-1 win over Argentina, Rossi grabbed centre stage against tournament favourites Brazil as he scored an incredible semi-final hat-trick.
Indeed, his performance in the quarter-final against England has gone down in history as one of the iconic individual displays. It showed the incredible dichotomy of Maradona’s character, as he opened the scoring with his famous ‘Hand of God’ goal then got the second with the most incredible solo run that saw him go by innumerable challenges before scoring from a tight angle.
Maradona then led Argentina to a 3-2 success over West Germany in the final in front of over 114,000 fans, leaving a legacy for the national team that even the great Messi has thus far struggled to match.