2019 Puskas Award candidate list is on the way. Liverpool's Mohamed Salah in 2018 was the latest recipient of the Puskas Award – but which winning goal has been the best overall since 2009?
The award was founded in memory of Ferenc Puskas, the former Hungary and Madrid star who scored an incredible 512 goals in 528 appearances, and a then-world record 84 in 85 internationals.
It was created with the aim to commemorate the most aesthetically pleasing, “beautiful” goals of a calendar year – and here's what we made of each winner, using the extremely scientific calculation of subjectivity to rank them.
Here we go!
10. Mohamed Salah - 2018
There's no doubt that Salah was one of the best players in the world during 2017-18, but the decision for this particular goal in the Merseyside Derby to win the Puskas Award surprised plenty. James Milner described it as his seventh-best of the season.
It was still decent, mind. With his back to goal on the side of the area, Salah manages to peel off his marker before weaving inside and striking the goal firmly passed the goalkeeper.
Ultimately, though, this goal just wasn't different enough to be a Puskas winner.
9. Wendell Lira - 2015
Lira's Twitter bio simply reads '2015 FIFA Puskas Award Winner', but while he deserves to bask in the glory of it, we're suspicious that 2015 could have done better.
Lionel Messi came second with a typical Lionel Messi goal, while third was Alessandro Florenzi's goal from near the halfway line – against Barcelona.
It was also the year Fleetwood Town's David Ball made the shortlist, and probably deserved to win for his brilliant skill and 25-yard lob.
8. Mohd Faiz Subri – 2016
This is undoubtedly a wonderful goal, but as with Papiss Cisse's memorable strike for Newcastle United against Chelsea, it would take a brave man to say he meant for the ball to end up where it did.
For that reason, we can't possibly rank it any higher.
7. Cristiano Ronaldo – 2009
“Now Ronaldo. Long way out. What a goal.”
There are more technical types of goal in football, but few are more satisfying than long-range thunder genious.
6. Hamit Altintop – 2010
Seeing a player volley a corner straight in is one of football's most glorious sights.
Seeing a player do it from the very far corner of the box means you've just seen a Puskas Award winner. Woof.
5. Miroslav Stoch – 2012
See above. The audacity to hit this, with the height of the ball and the three players racing out to close him down, is just something else. It makes Paul Scholes' goal against Bradford City look simple.
He scores with his sidefoot, for goodness sake.
4. James Rodriguez – 2014
The header into him, the chest, the turn, the volley – this is a very, very pleasing goal to watch.
Again and again. After that goal, James moved to Real Madrid.
3. Neymar – 2011
Watching this does make you wonder how Lionel Messi has never won the award, but this is truly sensational.
The second of four consecutive nominations for Neymar, this was the best of the lot.
The one-two, the skill and then the lifted finish. Epic.
2. Zlatan Ibrahimovic – 2013
Ibrahimovic won the award for a 30-lob over Joe Hart in Sweden's win over England.
It was his fourth goal on the night. He was facing away from goal. The ball was about seven foot off the ground. It was an overhead kick.
As always from Zlatan, it was absolutely ridiculous.
1. Olivier Giroud – 2017
The definition of a 'beautiful goal', right from the flick from Giroud in his own half to the scorpion kick thumping into the top corner, via the underside of the crossbar.
Giroud himself admitted he was lucky that it came off, but this is what the Puskas Award is about. The sort of goal you only get to see once in a lifetime – or, in this case, twice in the space of a week after Henrikh Mkhitaryan did similarly.
Second place in 2017, incidentally, was a goalkeeper scoring a 96th-minute equalizer with an 18-yard bicycle kick.