Three rankings run side by side: clubs, managers, and players. Clubs and managers share the same canonical ranking logic, so the rank shown in the table matches the rank shown on a manager's profile and on a club page. The players board is a separate ranking driven by career performance, not skill.
Trophies are king. The club that's won the most league titles sits at the top, no matter how its other numbers look. After that, league points break the tie (3 for a win, 1 for a draw, 0 for a loss across every league fixture ever played). A new club on a strong run can easily slot above an older club with more losses to its name.
Same idea, just measured against the manager rather than the club. League titles won across every club they've managed. Then total league points (3 for a win, 1 for a draw). A manager who's lifted a trophy at one club and joined a new one keeps both the trophy and the points in their tally. The ranking is a career view, not a current-club view.
The players ranking is a career performance board, not a skill rating board. Every match a player has ever played is aggregated into one composite score: goals count most, then assists, then chances created, tackles, saves, and a small contribution from passing accuracy and average match rating. The all time top scorer with 50 goals usually beats a 20 goal striker even if the second has a higher rating right now.
Retired players stay on the board. Their career numbers don't get wiped just because they stopped playing. A long retired great can still hold a top spot.
Players who have never played a match are excluded. Newly generated youth prospects with zero appearances do not appear until they take to the pitch.
Filter by position. Use the GK / DEF / MID / FWD buttons above the table to see the best in each role. Rank within a filtered view re-counts from #1.
The 0 to 100 number on the manager ranking and on every manager's profile. It blends your league points rate (3 for a win, 1 for a draw) with an experience bonus that caps at 20 points. A new manager who's won 4 of 5 matches scores around 80. A long running manager with a 60% points rate sits in the same neighbourhood. The score caps at 100, so the very best plateau there.
Rating is purely a snapshot of league results and experience. It does not affect your ranking position directly: trophies and league points do that.
The number in the # column is your canonical rank and never moves. Clicking a column header re-orders the visible rows so you can sort by squad value, wins, goals, or any other column, but every row keeps the rank it earned in the canonical order. The #1 club is always #1 even if you sort the table by squad value.
Clicks cycle through three states: first click sorts descending (biggest first), second click flips to ascending (smallest first), third click clears back to the default canonical view.
Rankings page: the full table for clubs and managers, with column header sorting.
Manager profile: your canonical rank shown alongside Manager Rating.
Club page: the club's canonical rank.
When the headline criteria above are tied, the ranking walks down this list and uses each tiebreaker in turn. Each one is only consulted if everything above it is equal:
Trophies. Total league titles won. A single trophy outranks any number of strong seasons.
League points. Three for a win, one for a draw, zero for a loss. League fixtures only, friendlies do not count. A side that draws more than it loses outranks one that wins the same number but loses the rest.
Manager of the Week count. Total times you've been named MOTW across every league you've managed in.
Goal difference. Goals scored minus goals conceded across all competitive matches.
Goals scored. Total goals scored across all competitive matches.
Experience. Total competitive matches played. The most active manager wins the final tie.