Senin, 27 Desember 2010

BEST TEAM 2010



Top 25 Rankings as of 15 December 2010[1]
Rank Team Points Confederation +/−
1 Spain 1887 UEFA steady
2 Netherlands 1723 UEFA steady
3 Germany 1485 UEFA increase
4 Brazil 1446 CONMEBOL decrease
5 Argentina 1338 CONMEBOL steady
6 England 1195 UEFA steady
7 Uruguay 1152 CONMEBOL steady
8 Portugal 1090 UEFA steady
9 Egypt 1078 CAF increase
10 Croatia 1075 UEFA decrease
11 Greece 1016 UEFA steady
12 Norway 995 UEFA steady
13 Russia 982 UEFA steady
14 Italy 965 UEFA steady
15 Chile 950 CONMEBOL increase
16 Ghana 908 CAF increase
17 Slovenia 903 UEFA decrease
18 United States 866 CONCACAF increase
19 France 857 UEFA increase
20 Slovakia 853 UEFA decrease
21 Côte d'Ivoire 846 CAF decrease
22 Switzerland 841 UEFA decrease
23 Serbia 837 UEFA increase
24 Paraguay 832 CONMEBOL decrease
25 Montenegro 824 UEFA increase

The FIFA World Rankings is a ranking system for men's national teams in association football, currently led by Spain. The teams of the member nations of FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association), 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 six teams (Argentina, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy and Spain) have held the top position, of which Brazil have spent longest ranked first.

A point 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. (See section Criticism).

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.

source by : www.wikipedia.org