
Mohamed Salah will deserve the Ballon d’Or if he can inspire Liverpool to Champions League glory, according to Michael Owen.
He became the first player to score at least 32 goals in a 38-game Premier League campaign, winning the Golden Boot in the process, and was rewarded for his form with the PFA Players’ Player of the Year award and the FWA Footballer of the Year prize.
Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo and Barcelona’s Lionel Messi has shared the Ballon d’Or between them each year since 2007, but Owen believes Salah could be the man to end the duopoly.
“It just depends on what medals he wins at the end of the season. You can have a great season [but] if you win nothing, then you’re very unlikely. You need a goodwill cup or to win the Champions League.
The year 2007 is also the last time Liverpool contested a Champions League final, when they lost 2-1 to AC Milan.
They meet back-to-back winners Madrid in Saturday’s showdown in Kiev, having overcome Porto, Manchester City and Roma across three thrilling knockout ties this season.
“I find it really hard to predict,” he said. “I know people will have Real Madrid down as favourites but I think it is a toss of a coin. I just think Liverpool are so perfectly shaped for knockout football, one-off football, particularly against good teams.
“Real Madrid can play in any way, really. They can beat a team five, six-nil twice quite easily. They’re not going to do that to Liverpool but they can also grind out a result.
“But I keep going back to it: one-off games, against good teams, I don’t think there’s a better team in the world of football than Liverpool.”