Association of Football Statisticians

Association of Football Statisticians
(AFS)
Available inEnglish
URL11v11.com
Launched1979 (1979)
Current statusActive

The Association of Football Statisticians (AFS) is an organisation which collates the historical and statistical records for domestic and international association football.[1][2] It operates the website 11v11.com.[3][4] The AFS was founded in 1979.[5] It has published all-time world ranking lists which are not based on subjective opinion or polls, but on an objective data-driven computed assessments according to career achievements.

History

The organisation is located in London. In the beginning, the AFS published a monthly newsletter under the name The Football Experts. This soon grew into a full-fledged magazine, which was published four times a year. Currently, the AFS is working on the Football Genome Project, a project that aims to bring together all match and player statistics since the inception of professional football. In addition, an extensive photo collection is also being worked on aiming at covering the entire football, while the AFS regularly publishes articles and lists based on statistical research. The publication of the World Ranking lists started in 2007.

Lists

Top-100 (2007)

In November 2007, AFS announced the Top100 players of all time making a ranking with the players receiving points according to goals scored (for midfielders and forwards), matches without conceding a goal (for defenders and goalkeepers), titles won, matches played as captain etc. The top 100 players of this ranking are listed below.

Top 20 players[6]
Rank Player Nationality
1 Pelé  Brazil
2 Ronaldo  Brazil
3 Romário  Brazil
4 Luís Figo  Portugal
5 Zinedine Zidane  France
6 Diego Maradona  Argentina
7 Lothar Matthaus  Germany
8 Gerd Müller  Germany
9 Franz Beckenbauer  Germany
10 Cafu  Brazil
11 Roberto Carlos  Brazil
12 Marco van Basten  Netherlands
13 Michel Platini  France
14 Rivaldo  Brazil
15 Paolo Maldini  Italy
16 Zico  Brazil
17 Raúl González  Spain
18 Ruud Gullit  Netherlands
19 Eusébio  Portugal
20 Ferenc Puskas  Hungary

Top-50 (2017)

The Top-50 list was first published in August 2014 as a Top-100,[7] but it is officially presented as the 2017 edition.

In the original 2014 edition the nation with the most players in the top 100 was Germany with 14, followed closely by Spain and the Netherlands with 12 each. France and Brazil both had 11, Italy 9 and England just 6. Africa had 3 players (Ivory Coast's Drogba, Eto’o from Cameroon and Kanu of Nigeria), CONCACAF 2 (Landon Donovan of USA and Mexican Rafael Marquez) and Asia one (Ali Daei of Iran).

Top 20 players[8]
Rank Player Nationality
1 Ronaldo  Brazil
2 Pelé  Brazil
3 Cafu  Brazil
4 Zinedine Zidane  France
5 Lionel Messi  Argentina
6 Lothar Matthaus  Germany
7 Roberto Carlos  Brazil
8 Xavi  Spain
9 Romario  Brazil
10 Franz Beckenbauer  Germany
11 Luis Figo  Portugal
12 Diego Maradona  Argentina
13 Gerd Muller  Germany
14 Paolo Maldini  Italy
15 Iker Casillas  Spain
16 Raúl González  Spain
17 Thierry Henry  France
18 Rivaldo  Brazil
19 Cristiano Ronaldo  Portugal
20 Marco van Basten  Netherlands

Controversy

The AFS rankings rely vastly on career achievements and trophies and not a player's impact, while international appearances are crucial. This is why some outstanding footballers, such as George Best or Eric Cantona did not make the Top100 ranking as they won few trophies and had undistinguished international careers. Modern football offers more chances for players to succeed, and the AFS lists emphasise on the achievements of relatively recent players like Pele, Beckenbauer, Lionel Messi and Maradona who remain high on the ranking.

See also

References

  1. ^ Palacios-Huerta, Ignacio (2004). "Structural changes during a century of the world's most popular sport". Statistical Methods and Applications. 13 (2): 241–258. doi:10.1007/s10260-004-0093-3.
  2. ^ Atherton, Martin (2020). "Association of Football Statisticians". In Russell, Dave; Cox, Richard; Vamplew, Wray (eds.). Encyclopedia of British Football. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-00014-414-7.
  3. ^ "About the Association of Football Statisticians (AFS)". Association of Football Statisticians. 2016. Archived from the original on 1 June 2025. Retrieved 6 June 2025.
  4. ^ "Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy". Association of Football Statisticians. 2016. Archived from the original on 1 June 2025. Retrieved 6 June 2025.
  5. ^ Statistics - 11v11.com
  6. ^ "The AFS 100 Best player ever". rsssf.org. 17 November 2007. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  7. ^ Top-100 (2014) - 11v11.com
  8. ^ "The AFS 50 Best player ever". 11v11.com. 2 November 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2021.