FIFA World Rankings

This article is about the men's rankings. For the women's rankings, see FIFA Women's World Rankings.

Top 20 rankings as of 5 May 2016[1]
RankTeamPoints
1  Argentina 1532
2  Belgium 1352
3  Chile 1348
4  Colombia 1337
5  Germany 1309
6  Spain 1277
7  Brazil 1261
8  Portugal 1184
9  Uruguay 1158
10  England 1069
11  Austria 1067
12  Ecuador 1019
13  Turkey 983
14  Switzerland 974
15  Italy 959
16  Mexico 938
17  Netherlands 931
18  Hungary 925
19  Romania 920
20  Bosnia and Herzegovina 913
Complete rankings at FIFA.com

The FIFA World Ranking is a ranking system for men's national teams in association football, currently led by Argentina.[1] The teams of the member nations of FIFA, football's world governing body, are ranked based on their game results with the most successful teams being ranked highest. The rankings were introduced in December 1992, and eight teams (Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain) have held the top position, of which Brazil have spent longest ranked first.

A points system is used, with points being awarded based on the results of all FIFA-recognised full international matches. Under the existing system, rankings are based on a team's performance over the last four years, with more recent results and more significant matches being more heavily weighted to help reflect the current competitive state of a team.

The ranking system was most recently revamped after the 2006 World Cup, with the first edition of the new series of rankings issued on 12 July 2006. The most significant change is that the rankings are now based on results over the previous four years instead of the previous eight years. The change is perceived to respond to criticisms that the FIFA World Rankings, based upon the previous calculation method in use from January 1999 to June 2006, did not effectively reflect the relative strengths of the national teams.

Alternative systems have been devised, such as the World Football Elo Ratings, based on the Elo rating system used in chess and Go, ranking teams on an all time basis. The Unofficial Football World Championships ranks teams on the number of times they have defended the Unofficial Football World Championship, an award devised solely for that purpose.

History

In December 1992, FIFA first published a listing in rank order of its member associations to provide a basis for comparison of the relative strengths of these teams. From the following August, this list was more frequently updated, to be published most months.[2] Significant changes were implemented in January 1999 and again in July 2006, as a reaction to criticisms of the system.[3] Historical records of the rankings, such as listed at FIFA.com, reflect the method of calculation in use at the time, as the current method has not been applied retrospectively to rankings prior to July 2006. Membership of FIFA has expanded from 167 to 209 since the rankings began; all 209 members are currently included in the rankings.

1993–1998 calculation method

The ranking formula used from August 1993 until December 1998 was very simplistic and quickly became noticed for its lack of supporting factors. When the rankings were initially introduced, a team received one point for a draw or three for a victory in FIFA-recognised matches – much the same as a traditional league scoring system. This was a quite simplistic approach, however, and FIFA quickly realised that there were many factors affecting international matches.

1999 ranking system update

In order to meet the objective of fairly and accurately comparing the relative strengths of various national sides, the system was updated in 1999. The major changes were as follows:

Two new awards were introduced as part of the system:

The changes made the ranking system more complex, but helped improve its accuracy by making it more comprehensive.

1999–2006 calculation method

In January 1999, FIFA introduced a revised system of ranking calculation, incorporating many changes in response to criticism of inappropriate rankings. For the ranking all matches, their scores and importance were all recorded, and were used in the calculation procedure. Only matches for the senior men's national team were included. Separate ranking systems were used for other representative national sides such as women's and junior teams, for example the FIFA Women's World Rankings. The women's rankings were, and still are, based on a procedure which is a simplified version of the Football Elo Ratings.[4]

2006 ranking system update

FIFA announced that the ranking system would be updated following the 2006 World Cup. The evaluation period was cut from eight to four years, and a simpler method of calculation is now used to determine rankings.[5] Goals scored and home or away advantage are no longer taken into account, and other aspects of the calculations, including the importance attributed to different types of match, have been revised. The first set of revised rankings and the calculation methodology were announced on 12 July 2006.

This change is rooted at least in part in widespread criticism of the previous ranking system. Many football enthusiasts felt it was inaccurate, especially when compared to other ranking systems and that it was not sufficiently responsive to changes in the performance of individual teams.

Rank leaders

FIFA World Ranking Leaders

When the system was introduced, Germany débuted as the top-ranked team following their extended period of dominance in which they had reached the three previous FIFA World Cup finals, winning one of them. Brazil took the lead in the run up to the 1994 FIFA World Cup after winning eight and losing only one of nine qualification matches, while on the way scoring twenty goals and conceding just four. Italy then led for a short time on the back of their own equally successful World Cup qualifying campaign, after which the top place was re-claimed by Germany.

Brazil's success in their lengthy qualifying campaign returned them to the lead for a brief period. Germany led again during the 1994 World Cup, until Brazil’s victory in that competition gave them a large lead that would stand up for nearly seven years, until they were surpassed by a strong France team that captured both the 1998 FIFA World Cup and the 2000 European Football Championship.

Success at the 2002 FIFA World Cup restored Brazil to the top position, where they remained until February 2007, when Italy returned to the top for the first time since 1993 following their 2006 FIFA World Cup win in Germany. Just one month later, Argentina replaced them, reaching the top for the first time, but Italy regained its place in April. After winning the Copa América 2007 in July, Brazil returned to the top, but were replaced by Argentina in October.

In July 2008, Spain took over the lead for the first time, having won UEFA Euro 2008. Brazil began a sixth stint at the top of the rankings in July 2009 after winning the 2009 Confederations Cup, and Spain regained the title in November 2009 after winning every match in qualification for the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

In April 2010, Brazil returned to the top of the table. After winning the 2010 World Cup, Spain regained the top position and held it until August 2011, when The Netherlands reached the top spot for the first time,[6] only to relinquish it the following month.

In July 2014, Germany took over the lead once again, having won the 2014 FIFA World Cup. In July 2015, Argentina reached the top spot for the first time since 2008, after reaching both the 2014 FIFA World Cup Final, as well as the 2015 Copa America Final. In November 2015, Belgium became the leader in the FIFA rankings for the first time, after topping their Euro 2016 qualifying group.

Uses of the rankings

The rankings are used by FIFA to rank the progression and current ability of the national football teams of its member nations, and claims that they create "a reliable measure for comparing national A-teams".[2] They are used as part of the calculation, or the entire grounds to seed competitions. In the 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification tournament, the rankings were used to seed the groups in the competitions involving CONCACAF members (using the May rankings), CAF (with the July set of data), and UEFA, using the specially postponed November 2007 ranking positions.

The October 2009 ranking was used to determine the seeds for the 2010 FIFA World Cup final draw.[7] The March 2011 ranking was used to seed the draw for the 2012 CAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament second qualifying round.[8]

The rankings are also used to determine the winners of the two annual awards national teams receive on the basis of their performance in the rankings.

Criticism

Since their introduction in 1992, the FIFA World Rankings have been the matter of much debate, particularly regarding the calculation procedure and the resulting disparity between generally perceived quality and world ranking of some teams. For example, Norway was ranked second in October 1993 and July–August 1995,[9] and the United States reached fourth in 2006, to the surprise of even their own players.[10] However, criticism regarding the unrealistic ranking continued even after the introduction of the new formula. Israel's climb to 15th in November 2008 raised a few eyebrows even in the Israeli press,[11][12][13] with the team missing a huge opportunity to break into the top 10 after conceding a last gasp equaliser against Latvia.[14] Similarly, Belgium's rank of world number 1 in November 2015 was met with skepticism in the press, given that Belgium had only played in one tournament in the past 13 years.[15]

Prior to July 2006, one of the main criticisms was that the rankings considered the performances of teams over an eight-year period, and that teams' ranking positions did not correlate to their recent performances.[9][16] This criticism has lessened somewhat with the introduction of a new formula, reflecting results over a four-year period, introduced in July 2006. However, problems remain, particularly that hosts of some major tournaments do not take part in qualifying rounds, and instead participate only in friendlies which offer fewer points.

This has been a factor which has resulted in 2014 World Cup hosts Brazil falling to a record low ranking of 22nd in the world.[17][18] The perceived flaws in the FIFA system have led to the creation of a number of alternative rankings from football statisticians,[9] including the World Football Elo Ratings and the rec.sport.soccer Statistics Foundation rankings.

The current system has been criticised for being open to abuse. National teams can maintain a higher average score by playing fewer friendly matches, particularly against weaker opponents.[19] For example, Switzerland were seeded for the 2014 World Cup draw, largely thanks to only playing three friendly matches in the previous year.[19] Switzerland would have reduced their rating if they had played any more friendlies, as their average score was greater than the maximum possible score from winning a friendly match against the top-ranked nation.[19]

Romania were one of the surprise seeds for the 2018 World Cup preliminary draw after taking advice from a consultant and playing only one friendly in the year before the draw.[20][21][22]

Current calculation method

After the 2006 FIFA World Cup, a revised calculation procedure for the FIFA rankings was introduced, with a significantly simplified procedure. The new rankings were compiled in response to criticism from the media.[2] Meetings were attended by FIFA staff and external experts and a large amount of research was conducted by this group, resulting in the new ranking system.[2] The new system was confirmed in Leipzig on 7 December 2005 by a committee of FIFA executives. Notable changes include the dropping of the home or away advantage and number of goals from the calculation, and the simplification of many aspects of the system.

The system, like the previous ones, is extremely similar to that of a league, though with changes made to ensure that it is still representative of the teams' performance despite playing differing numbers of matches per annum, and the differing strength of opposition that teams have to face. The factors taken into account are as follows:

Teams' actual scores are a result of the average points gained over each calendar year; matches from the previous four years are considered, with more weight being given to recent ones.

International "A" matches

In October 2012, FIFA released a press circular defining what is considered to be an international "A" match.

For the purposes of the ranking, FIFA defines an international "A" match as a match between two FIFA members for which both members field their first representative team ("A" team).

The FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking is based on a list of all international "A" matches that are recognised by FIFA.

International "A" matches include matches played as part of the FIFA World Cup, FIFA World Cup qualifiers, FIFA Confederations Cup, continental final tournaments, continental qualifying competitions and international friendlies.

Jérôme Valcke, FIFA.com[23]

Win, draw or defeat

In previous years a complicated system of points allocation was used, depending on how strong the opponent was, and how large the loss margin, which allowed weaker losing teams to gain points when playing a much stronger opposition, if they managed to put up a decent match. With the new system, the points allocation is simpler: three points for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss, in line with most league systems around the world.

In the event of a match being decided by a penalty shootout, the winning team receives two points, and the losing team one point.

ResultPoints
Win (no penalty shootout)3
Win (penalty shootout)2
Draw1
Loss (penalty shootout)1
Loss (no penalty shootout)0

Until November 2012, in two-legged play-offs, if Team A lost the first leg 2 – 0, then matched the result in the return leg and won after a penalty shootout, it received two points. However, if Team A won the return leg by one goal only, being eliminated in the process, it received 3 points.[24] FIFA fixed this flaw starting with the November 2012 ranking.[25][26]

Match status

Different matches have different importance to teams, and FIFA has tried to respect this by using a weighting system, where the most significant matches are in the World Cup finals,[27] and the lowest weighted are friendly matches. FIFA states that it wishes to recognise that friendlies are still important, since they make up half of the competitive matches counted in the rankings.[28] FIFA also stated, however, that it did not plan to make any adjustment for teams that qualify directly for major tournaments.[29][30]

The match status multipliers are as follows:

Match statusMultiplier
Friendly matchx 1.0
FIFA World Cup and Continental cup qualifiersx 2.5
Continental cup and Confederations Cup finalsx 3.0
World Cup finals matchx 4.0

Opponent strength

Obviously, a win against a very highly ranked opponent is a considerably greater achievement than a win against a low-rated opponent, so the strength of the opposing team is a factor.

The new system uses an opposition strength factor based on team rankings. The previous system was based on points difference.

The formula used is:

\text{Opposition strength multiplier} = ({200-\text{ranking position})/100}

with the exceptions that the team ranked #1 is given a multiplier of 2, and teams ranked 150th and below are assigned the minimum multiplier of 0.5.

The ranking position is taken from the opposition's ranking in the most recently published FIFA World Ranking before the match is included in the ranking calculation.[31]

The rankings published before July 2006 are purely historical and are not used for the new ranking calculation. Instead, FIFA went back as far as 1996 to apply the new formula and is using those new rankings for the current calculations.[32]

See the detailed break-down of point totals for teams from the top 20 in the October 2007 rankings.[33]

Regional strength

In addition to the opposition strength multiplier, FIFA considers the relative strength of entire confederations in the calculation. Each confederation is assigned a weighting between 0.85 and 1.0, based on the relative performance of the confederations in the last three World Cups. Their values are as follows:[34][35][36]

ConfederationAfter 2014 World Cup After 2010 World Cup After 2006 World CupUp to and including 2006 World Cup
UEFA (Europe)0.991.001.001.00
CONMEBOL (South America)1.001.000.981.00
CONCACAF (North and Central America and Caribbean)0.850.880.850.88
AFC (Asia)0.850.860.850.85
CAF (Africa)0.850.860.850.85
OFC (Oceania)0.850.850.850.85

The multiplier used in the calculation is the average of the regional strength weighting of the two teams:

\text{Regional strength multiplier} = \frac{\text{Team 1 regional weighting} + \text{Team 2 regional weighting}}{2}

FIFA changed the formula used to compute the confederation weightings after the 2010 FIFA World Cup without public announcement.[37] Without this modification, UEFA's multiplier would have dropped for the first time below 1, with CONMEBOL remaining the only confederation with a multiplier of 1.[38]

The confederation weighting for AFC was increased in August 2011 from 0.85 to 0.86[39] after a computer programmer found an error in FIFA's calculations.[37]

Assessment period

Matches played over the last four years (48 months) are included in the calculation, but there is a weighting to put more emphasis on recent results. Previously an eight-year period was used. The date weighting is as follows:

Date of matchMultiplier
Within the last 12 months× 1.0
12–24 months ago× 0.5
24–36 months ago× 0.3
36–48 months ago× 0.2

If a team exceeds the assessment period without playing a match, it is temporarily removed from the rankings, and is reinstated as soon as it plays a match again. The most recent team to be temporarily absent from the rankings is São Tomé and Príncipe (reinstated in November 2011, after having been removed in December 2007).

Ranking formula

The final ranking points figure for a single match is multiplied by 100 and rounded to the nearest whole number.

\text{Ranking points} = \text{Result points} \times \text{Match status} \times \text{Opposition strength} \times \text{Regional strength}

Results for all matches played in the year are averaged together (assuming at least five matches have been played). The average ranking points for the four previous years, weighted by their multiplier mentioned above, are added together to arrive at the final ranking points.

Examples

The following examples use these hypothetical teams and confederations, and assume the games are played within the last 12 months:

A friendly match is played between Amplistan and Bestrudia. Amplistan wins 2–1.

MatchTeamResult pointsMatch statusOpposition strengthRegional strengthRanking points
Amplistan vs. Bestrudia (friendly)
Result: 2–1
Amplistan
Bestrudia
3
0
1.0
1.0
0.50
1.98
0.94
0.94
141
0

Bestrudia gets no ranking points because it lost the game, so all factors are multiplied by zero.

Amplistan's 141 ranking points are calculated like this:

More examples:

MatchTeamResult pointsMatch statusOpposition strengthRegional strengthRanking points
Amplistan vs. Bestrudia (friendly)
Result: 1–2
Amplistan
Bestrudia
0
3
1.0
1.0
0.50
1.98
0.94
0.94
0
558
Amplistan vs. Bestrudia (friendly)
Result: 1–1
Amplistan
Bestrudia
1
1
1.0
1.0
0.50
1.98
0.94
0.94
47
186
Amplistan vs. Bestrudia (World Cup finals)
Result: 2–1
Amplistan
Bestrudia
3
0
4.0
4.0
0.50
1.98
0.94
0.94
564
0
Amplistan vs. Bestrudia (World Cup finals)
Result: 1–1 (Bestrudia wins on penalties)
Amplistan
Bestrudia
1
2
4.0
4.0
0.50
1.98
0.94
0.94
188
1488
Amplistan vs. Conesto (friendly)
Result: 1–2
Amplistan
Conesto
0
3
1.0
1.0
1.61
1.98
0.99
0.99
0
588
Conesto vs. Delphiz (Continental cup qualifiers)
Result: 4–0
Conesto
Delphiz
3
0
2.5
2.5
1.70
1.61
0.96
0.96
1224
0
Conesto vs. Delphiz (Continental cup qualifiers)
Result: 0–1
Conesto
Delphiz
0
3
2.5
2.5
1.70
1.61
0.96
0.96
0
1159
Conesto vs. Amplistan (World Cup finals)
Result: 0–0 (Amplistan wins on penalties)
Conesto
Amplistan
1
2
4.0
4.0
1.98
1.61
0.99
0.99
784
1275

Conesto gets more points than Bestrudia for defeating the same team (Amplistan) because of the higher weighting of its confederation.


Awards

Each year FIFA hands out two awards to its member nations, based on their performance in the rankings. They are:

Team of the Year

Team of the Year is awarded to the team that finishes top of the FIFA World Ranking. Belgium are the Team of the Year for the first time in the 23-year history of the rankings. Brazil hold the records for most consecutive wins (seven, between 1994 and 2000) and most wins overall (twelve). The table below shows the three best teams of each year.[40]

YearFirst placeSecond placeThird place
1993 Germany Italy Brazil
1994 Brazil Spain Sweden
1995 Brazil Germany Italy
1996 Brazil Germany France
1997 Brazil Germany Czech Republic
1998 Brazil France Germany
1999 Brazil Czech Republic France
2000 Brazil France Argentina
2001 France Argentina Brazil
2002 Brazil France Spain
2003 Brazil France Spain
2004 Brazil France Argentina
2005 Brazil Czech Republic Netherlands
2006 Brazil Italy Argentina
2007 Argentina Brazil Italy
2008 Spain Germany Netherlands
2009 Spain Brazil Netherlands
2010 Spain Netherlands Germany
2011 Spain Netherlands Germany
2012 Spain Germany Argentina
2013 Spain Germany Argentina
2014 Germany Argentina Colombia
2015 Belgium Argentina Spain

Best Mover of the Year

The Best Mover of the Year was awarded to the team who made the best progress up the rankings over the course of the year. In the FIFA rankings, this is not simply the team that has risen the most places, but a calculation is performed in order to account for the fact that it becomes progressively harder to earn more points the higher up the rankings a team is.[2]

The calculation used is the number of points the team has at the end of the year (z) multiplied by the number of points it earned during the year (y). The team with the highest index on this calculation received the award. The table below shows the top three best movers from each year.[41][42]

The award has not been an official part of the awards since 2006.

YearFirst placeSecond placeThird place
1993 Colombia Portugal Morocco
1994 Croatia Brazil Uzbekistan
1995 Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago Czech Republic
1996 South Africa Paraguay Canada
1997 Yugoslavia Bosnia and Herzegovina Iran
1998 Croatia France Argentina
1999 Slovenia Cuba Uzbekistan
2000 Nigeria Honduras Cameroon
2001 Costa Rica Australia Honduras
2002 Senegal Wales Brazil
2003 Bahrain Oman Turkmenistan
2004 China PR Uzbekistan Ivory Coast
2005 Ghana Ethiopia  Switzerland
2006 Italy Germany France

While an official award has not been made for movements since 2006, FIFA has released a list of the 'Best Movers' in the rankings since 2007.[43]

An example of the informal on-going "Mover of the Year" award is the recognition made by FIFA to Colombia in 2012 in an official press release.[44] However, the calculation methodology had changed to the difference in ranking points over the course of the year (rather than the methodology used in the official award from 1993 to 2006). The results for latter years are based on a similar methodology.

YearBest moverSecond bestThird best
2007 Mozambique Norway New Caledonia
2008 Spain Montenegro Russia
2009 Brazil Algeria Slovenia
2010 Netherlands Montenegro Botswana
2011 Wales Sierra Leone Bosnia and Herzegovina
2012 Colombia Ecuador Mali
2013[45] Ukraine Armenia United States
2014[46] Germany Slovakia Belgium
2015[47] Turkey Hungary Nicaragua

Ranking schedule

Rankings are published monthly, usually on a Thursday. The deadline for the matches to be considered is usually the Thursday prior to the release date, but after major tournaments, all games up to the final are included.[48]

Rankings Schedule 2016
Release Date
7 January
4 February
3 March
7 April
5 May
2 June
14 July
11 August
15 September
20 October
24 November
22 December

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 "The FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking - Ranking Table". FIFA. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking Procedure". FIFA. Retrieved 28 March 2008.
  3. "Revised FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking". FIFA. 6 July 2006. Retrieved 28 March 2008.
  4. "Women's World Ranking Procedure". FIFA. Retrieved 28 March 2008.
  5. "Great expectations". FIFA. 17 May 2006. Retrieved 28 March 2008.
  6. "FIFA Ranking: Netherlands dethrone Spain". Football-Rankings.info. 12 August 2011. Retrieved 24 August 2011.
  7. "FIFA Organising Committee approves Final Draw procedure". FIFA. 2 December 2009. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  8. "Olympics – updated draw procedure, with teams". CAFOnline.com. Confederation of African Football. 12 April 2011. Retrieved 13 April 2011.
  9. 1 2 3 "The world rankings riddle". BBC Sport. 21 December 2000.
  10. "FIFA adapting new world rankings". Associated Press. 2 June 2006. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007.
  11. "FIFA chief praises IFA's work". The Jerusalem Post. 29 August 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2009. Blatter was also asked about Israel's unrealistic FIFA ranking. Despite failing to qualify for a major tournament in 38 years, the national team is currently ranked number 16 in the world, ahead of such team as Greece, Sweden and Denmark, and just two places below England.
  12. "Soccer: Quirky FIFA rankings system sees Israel climb to #15". The Jerusalem Post. 13 November 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2009. Israel continued its baffling rise up the FIFA rankings on Wednesday, climbing one more position to a best-ever 15th in the world. Amazingly, the national team, which hasn't reached a major tournament since the 1970 World Cup, is ahead of such teams as Greece (18), Nigeria (22), Sweden (29), Scotland (33), Denmark (34) and the Republic of Ireland (36)
  13. "The Last Word: It's time to get rid of the FIFA rankings". The Jerusalem Post. 14 November 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2009. So the news this week that Israel has risen another place to number 15 in the latest FIFA rankings, above Mexico (25), Nigeria (22), the US (24) and Colombia (40), only serves to underline the futility of the ranking system.
  14. "FIFA Ranking: November 2008 preview (II)". Football-Rankings.info. 20 October 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2009. Israel will improve (again!) their best ever ranking, climbing one place to 15th. With a win (instead of a draw) against Latvia they would have been tied for 8th place with Russia.
  15. Alistair Tweedale (13 October 2015). "Belgium rise to No1 in Fifa world rankings after they beat Israel – despite playing one tournament in 13 years". The Telegraph. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
  16. "FIFA Rankings". Travour.com. 1 June 2006.
  17. Cummings, Michael. "FIFA World Rankings Place Brazil 18th, Reinforce Flawed Nature of System". Retrieved 21 May 2013.
  18. Freitas, Paulo. "Scolari blames FIFA for Brazil's poor ranking". Retrieved 16 June 2013.
  19. 1 2 3 Burnton, Simon (17 October 2013). "With a bit of planning England could have been seeded ahead of the Swiss". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
  20. "Romania, Wales set to be surprise World Cup top seeds". USA Today. Associated Press. 23 July 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015. Romania took advice from a consultant who decoded some mysteries of a ranking system used by FIFA since 1992.
  21. Gavril, Victor (5 July 2015). "Burleanu: "Am consultat specialiști în clasamentul FIFA." Cum a urcat România în TOP 10 mondial" [Burleanu: "We have consulted FIFA ranking specialists." How Romania climbed in the World Top 10]. România Liberă (in Romanian). Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  22. "2018 FIFA World Cup: Preliminary draw pots for UEFA". Football-Rankings.info. 26 June 2015. Retrieved 29 July 2015. I've told Romanian FA officials in the spring of 2014 to avoid playing friendlies. Surprisingly, they heeded my advice.
  23. "Circular no.1324" (PDF). FIFA.com. Retrieved 20 December 2012.
  24. "FIFA Ranking: Flaw in the calculation". Football-Rankings.info. 14 September 2009. Retrieved 9 October 2009.
  25. "FIFA Ranking: November 2012 differences". Football-Rankings.info. 9 November 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  26. "FIFA Ranking: Penalty shoot-out matches". Football-Rankings.info. 2 November 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2013.
  27. Finals is used in this sense to mean the 'final tournament' (as opposed to the qualifying tournament)
  28. "FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking: In focus" (PDF). FIFA. 7 July 2006. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  29. "2006 revision of the FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking: Frequently Asked Questions About the FIFA World Ranking" (PDF). Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 21 June 2007.
  30. However, 2010 FIFA World Cup hosts South Africa competed in CAF qualifying despite automatically qualifying for the World Cup; this is because CAF chose to combine the 2010 World Cup qualifying tournament with the qualifiers for the 2010 African Cup of Nations, an event for which South Africa had to separately qualify. South Africa failed to qualify for the 2010 African Cup of Nations.
  31. http://www.football-rankings.info/2008/09/fifa-rankings-september-2008-errors-ii.html
  32. "FIFA miscalculated the rankings... or did they?". Football-rankings.info. 14 November 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  33. "Calculation FIFA Coca-Cola world ranking October 2007" (PDF). Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  34. "How are points calculated in the FIFA World Ranking?" (PDF). Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  35. http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/fifafacts/r&a-wr/52/00/97/fs-590_10e_wr-pointcalculation.pdf
  36. http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/fifafacts/r&a-wr/52/00/97/fs-590_10e_wrpoints_english.pdf
  37. 1 2 "Confederation weightings: One answer, more questions". Football-Rankings.info. 26 August 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  38. "Confederation weighting: Are the official values wrong?". Football-Rankings.info. 11 August 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2014.
  39. "Dutch dethrone Spain, Uruguay rise". FIFA. 24 August 2011. Retrieved 26 August 2011.
  40. Team of the Year Award 2010 on the FIFA website
  41. Best Mover of the Year on the FIFA website
  42. Spain on top and Wales highest climber on the FIFA website
  43. Top Team and the Best Mover of the Year on the FIFA website (PDF)
  44. Spain finish 2012 on top, Colombia in fifth. FIFA.com. Retrieved on 12 August 2013.
  45. "Spain on top, Ukraine highest climber". fifa.com. 19 December 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  46. "Germany conquer 2014, Belgium, Slovakia impress". fifa.com. 18 December 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2014.
  47. "Belgium and Turkey claim awards, Hungary return". fifa.com. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  48. FIFA/Coca-Cola World Ranking Schedule on the FIFA website

External links

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