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Sixty-two years after Stanley Matthews won the first Ballon d'Or, the women's game received its inaugural winner: Trailblazing Norwegian forward Ada Hegerberg.
Hegerberg looked visibly unimpressed and replied ‘non’ to the request. Solveig later tweeted an apology and said Hegerberg ‘understood it was a joke’.
This however isn't even the first time Hegerberg has had to stand up for herself. The 23-year-old has been in the news after declaring that she won’t play for Norway at the Women’s World Cup in France next June, and would be taking a break from international football.
Taking a stand against what she describes as a lack of respect for female players in Norway, Hegerberg hasn't played for the national team since it crashed out of the group stage of the Women's European Championship in 2017 without scoring a goal.
In Paris to collect her Ballon d'Or at a gala on Monday, Hegerberg said she has no plans to reconsider her decision taken to preserve her "authenticity and my values, as a person, as a footballer."
"Sometimes you have to take tough decisions to stay true to yourself. I let them know, quite clearly, what I found wasn't working," she said.
The three-time Women's Champions League winner with French team Lyon says she'll be resting during the World Cup and training for the next season with her club.
A jury of 45 journalists picked her from among 15 nominees for the inaugural Ballon d'Or for women.
Hegerberg, who scored a tournament-record 15 Women's Champions League goals last season, said winning the trophy "tops everything" and described it as "a huge step for women's football."
But she also expressed frustration with the uneven pace of progress for women.
"Sometimes you have episodes or situations where you feel like, 'Damn, we're in such a man's world,'" she said.
France Football magazine has been awarding the Ballon d'Or — until now only to men — since 1956, when Matthews was the first winner.
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