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The FIFA Men's World Ranking is a ranking system for men's national teams in association football, led by Argentina as of December 2024. [1] The men's 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.
Rank Player Match Competition Date Points 1 Alejandro Garnacho: Everton – Manchester United: 2023–24 Premier League: 26 November 2023 26 2 Yassine Benzia: Algeria – South Africa: 2024 FIFA Series: 26 March 2024 22 3 Denis Omedi: KCCA – Kitara: 2024 Super 8 6 August 2024 16 4 Mohammed Kudus: West Ham United – SC Freiburg: 2023–24 ...
Players in bold are still active at international level. Players in italics also hold the record for most caps for their nation. Rank is a count of the 211 FIFA nations. Fourteen nations (Azerbaijan, Bermuda, Brunei, Bulgaria, Denmark, Dominican Republic, East Timor, Faroe Islands, Puerto Rico, Romania, Scotland, South Sudan, United States and U.S. Virgin Islands) have a pair of players tied ...
FIFA ranking; Current: 63 (19 December 2024) [1] Highest: 40 (November – December 1998) ... The United Arab Emirates national football team ... Rank Player Caps Goals
FIFA Men's Rankings (as of 19 December 2024) [70] OFC* FIFA +/- National Team Points 1 89 New Zealand: 1269.83 2 147: 1 Solomon Islands: 1051 3 148: 1 Fiji: 1048.48 4 152 New Caledonia: 1034.43 5 153 Tahiti: 1031.47 6 164: 1 Vanuatu: 994.22 7 172 Papua New Guinea: 963.63 8 187: 1 American Samoa: 883.17 9 190 Cook Islands: 877.53 10 192 Samoa ...
The Montenegro national football team has been present on FIFA rankings since June 2007. To date, the team's best ranking was 16th place in the world in June 2011. Below is a chronological list of Montenegro's position on the FIFA rankings for every three months, and their number of points.
This list divides national teams into three main groups: Teams that are either members of FIFA (211 teams), or have membership in a FIFA-affiliated continental confederation without being members of FIFA itself (11 teams). Teams that are not members of FIFA or any continental federation, but which represent UN member and observer states.
During the 2004 Oceania World Cup qualification/Oceania Cup the team drew 2–2 with Australia and qualified for the second leg. In the second leg, the Solomon Islands national men's team were thrashed by Australia 5–1 and 6–0 in the two matches, with Australia qualifying for the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup.