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Rankings
In a nutshell
The three boards
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.
What makes a club #1
A club is ranked by its prestige score: points earned across every competitive fixture ever played, league and cup alike (3 for a win, 1 for a draw, friendlies excluded), plus a bonus for every trophy it has won. Trophies are weighted by how hard they are to win, so a World League title or World Cup counts for far more than another league or cup. A major trophy is worth a strong run of results, but it no longer guarantees the top spot on its own, and a dominant record with no silverware can still outrank a club with one minor trophy.
What makes a manager #1
Same idea, measured against the manager rather than the club. Their prestige score sums competitive points and weighted trophies across every club they've managed, so a manager who's lifted a trophy at one club and moved on keeps it in their tally. World League and World Cup wins carry the most weight. The ranking is a career view, not a current-club view.
What makes a player #1
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 and saves, with a smaller contribution from passes completed 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.
Manager Rating
The 0 to 100 number on the manager ranking and on every manager's profile. It blends your points rate (3 for a win, 1 for a draw, across competitive matches) with an experience bonus that rewards long-serving managers up to a ceiling. A new manager who wins most of their early matches scores highly, and a long running manager with a strong points rate sits in the same neighbourhood. The score tops out at 100, so the very best plateau there.
Rating is a snapshot, not your rank
Sorting the table
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.
Where to see your rank
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.
Tiebreakers (full chain)
When the headline criteria 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. The chain below is the full manager order; the club board uses the same chain but skips the Manager of the Week step, because that award belongs to the manager, not the club:
What to do