Leagues

Discover leagues and cups in priority order: major competitions first, then the full country-by-country directory.

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Cups

All Countries

Football Leagues & Standings: Browse 200+ Competitions Worldwide

Explore SportPicker's leagues directory: a single hub to browse 200+ football leagues, cups and competitions worldwide. Jump straight from major club leagues and continental tournaments to lesser-known divisions, then open any competition for live standings, fixtures, results, top scorers and AURA's AI predictions — all free, organised by country and competition for fast navigation.

Browse 200+ Football Leagues and Competitions in One Place

Football does not begin and end with the five or six divisions that dominate the headlines. On any given weekend there are matches in hundreds of competitions across every continent, from the showpiece European leagues to second tiers, domestic cups, continental club tournaments and international windows. The leagues directory on SportPicker is built to make all of that reachable from a single screen. Instead of hunting around for the right tournament, you get an organised hub that puts the world's football leagues, cups and competitions in front of you in a sensible order, with a direct route into the standings, fixtures, results, top scorers and AI predictions for each one.

The page is deliberately structured in priority order so you spend less time scrolling and more time reading the football that matters to you. The major club leagues sit at the top, followed by the marquee cup competitions, and then a complete A-to-Z directory of countries where you can drill into every available league and tournament. That layout reflects how people actually look for football: most visitors arrive wanting a specific league table or a fixture list, while a smaller but passionate group is chasing a lesser-known division, a youth or reserve competition, or a tournament in a country they support from afar. Both journeys are catered for on the same page.

Everything is free to browse. There is no paywall on standings, no gate on fixtures and results, and no charge to read what a competition looks like before you commit your attention to it. The leagues hub is the natural starting point of the whole site: pick a competition here, and from that league page you can follow it through the entire season — every matchday, every result, every change in the table — and read AURA's probability-based predictions for the games still to come.

Why a Dedicated Leagues Directory Matters

A single home page can only ever surface a handful of competitions before it becomes cluttered. The leagues directory solves the discovery problem at scale. With more than 200 football leagues and competitions catalogued, the page acts like an index for the entire footballing world, letting you move from a broad question — 'which leagues are playing this season?' — to a specific one — 'show me the current Eredivisie standings' — in a couple of clicks. That breadth is the difference between a casual scores app and a genuine reference for the global game.

It also matters for the long tail of football interest. Fans of a promoted club in a second division, supporters following a national team through a qualifying group, neutral viewers curious about a league in a country they are visiting — these users are poorly served by apps that only carry the big leagues. By cataloguing competitions country by country, the directory gives equal footing to a top-flight giant and a modest regional cup, so the league table you want is always somewhere in the hub, not missing entirely.

How the Leagues Page Is Organised

The directory is split into three clear sections, each answering a different kind of search. Together they take you from the competitions everyone knows to the ones only the most dedicated fans look for, without ever feeling overwhelming. Understanding the layout makes navigation second nature: you always know whether to look at the top of the page, the cups block, or the country directory below.

Top Leagues: The Major Club Competitions

At the very top sit the headline domestic leagues — the divisions that fill most of the global football conversation week in, week out. These include Italy's Serie A and Serie B, Spain's LaLiga, France's Ligue 1, England's Premier League, Germany's Bundesliga and the Netherlands' Eredivisie. They are presented as quick-access cards with the competition name and country, so a single tap takes you straight to that league's standings and fixtures. Placing them first reflects search demand: terms such as 'Premier League table', 'LaLiga standings' and 'Serie A fixtures' are among the most common football queries on the planet, and the directory answers them immediately.

Each of these cards is a gateway rather than a dead end. Open one and you reach the full league page, where the live table, upcoming fixtures, recent results, the leading scorers and assist providers, and AURA's match-by-match predictions are all a tab away. The top-leagues block is therefore the fastest path for the majority of visitors, who arrive knowing exactly which competition they want to check.

Cups and Continental Tournaments

Below the league cards comes a block dedicated to knockout and continental competitions. This is where you find Europe's premier club tournaments alongside domestic cups and major international events — competitions such as the Champions League, the Europa League, the Conference League, the UEFA Nations League, domestic cups like the Coppa Italia, and the great international showpieces. Cups behave differently from leagues: they mix group stages with knockout rounds, so the way you read them changes as the competition progresses, from a group table early on to a bracket of ties later.

Separating cups from leagues is more than cosmetic. A league is a season-long marathon decided on points; a cup is a series of one-off or two-legged ties where a single result can end a campaign. Grouping them apart helps you set the right expectations for what each competition page will show — a points table and run-in for a league, a draw and qualification picture for a cup — and makes the marquee continental nights easy to find when they come around.

The Full Country-by-Country Directory

The third and largest section is the complete directory of countries, listed alphabetically. Each country is a collapsible accordion: tap it and the leagues and competitions available for that nation load underneath, each tagged as a league or a cup so you can tell domestic divisions apart from knockout tournaments at a glance. This is where the breadth of 200+ competitions truly opens up. Expand a country and you might find its top flight, its second and third tiers, its national cup, its super cup and its youth or reserve competitions, all linking through to their own dedicated pages.

The alphabetical, on-demand design keeps the page fast while still exposing everything. Nothing loads until you ask for it, so the directory stays light even though it spans the globe. For anyone chasing a lesser-known competition, this is the section to live in: it is the part of the hub that turns a simple scores app into a worldwide football encyclopaedia, where a regional league in one country sits beside a continental tournament with exactly the same access to standings, fixtures, results and AI predictions.

Fastest way to find a competition: if it is one of the major club leagues or a marquee cup, look at the top of the page first — it is one tap away. For anything else, scroll to the country directory and expand the relevant nation; the leagues load instantly and each is labelled as a league or a cup so you know what to expect before you open it.

What Each League Page Shows You

Choosing a competition from the directory takes you to its league page, and this is where the depth lives. Every league page is built around a consistent set of tabs so that once you have learned one, you have learned them all — whether you are reading a top European division or a second tier in another part of the world. The tabs cover the matchday, the standings, upcoming fixtures, recent results, the top scorers and the top assist providers, and individual matches carry AURA's AI prediction so you can see the probability picture for games still to be played.

Standings: Reading the Football Table

The standings tab is the heart of any league page and the answer to the most common request of all — 'show me the table'. It presents the full league table in the familiar format: each team's position, matches played, wins, draws and losses, goals for and goals against, goal difference and total points, plus a compact run of recent form showing the last few results as wins, draws and losses. Crucially, the qualification and relegation zones are colour-coded, so you can see at a glance which clubs sit in Champions League or Europa positions and which are in the relegation fight, without having to count rows or cross-reference the rules.

Because the table updates as matches are played, it always reflects the live state of the competition rather than a frozen snapshot. For competitions with a group stage — many cups and continental tournaments — the standings tab shows each group as its own mini-table, which is exactly what you need to track who is progressing. The table below summarises the columns you will see and what each one tells you about a team's season.

Columns in a SportPicker league standings table and what they mean
ColumnMeaningWhy it matters
PosLeague position / rankWhere a team sits today, with European and relegation zones colour-coded
PMatches playedLets you compare teams that have played a different number of games
W / D / LWon, drawn, lostThe breakdown behind the points total
GF / GAGoals for / goals againstAttacking output versus defensive solidity across the season
GDGoal differenceThe common tie-breaker when two teams are level on points
PtsPointsThe figure that decides the league — three for a win, one for a draw
FormRecent resultsA quick read on momentum from the last handful of matches

Fixtures, Results and the Current Matchday

Alongside the table, the fixtures tab lists upcoming matches so you can plan your viewing and see what is coming next in the competition, while the results tab carries recent final scores so you can catch up on anything you missed. A dedicated matchday view focuses on the current round, which is especially handy for leagues where every team plays in the same window — it lets you take in a whole gameweek at once rather than scrolling through dates. Each fixture and result links onward to its own match page, where the detail goes deeper still.

This rhythm — what just happened, what is happening this round, what is coming next — mirrors how a season actually unfolds. Together with the standings, the fixtures and results tabs let you reconstruct the full arc of a competition: how a team climbed or slipped, which results swung the table, and what the run-in looks like from here. It is the same information a dedicated follower would track manually, gathered in one place and kept current.

Top Scorers and Top Assists

Beyond the team picture, every league page carries individual leaderboards: the top scorers and the top assist providers for the season. These tabs answer a second wave of popular searches — who is leading the scoring charts in a given division, and who is creating the most chances. The scorers race is often one of the most-followed storylines of a campaign, and having it sit beside the table makes it easy to connect individual form to a team's position.

For players who appear on these leaderboards, the names link through to dedicated player pages, so a leaderboard becomes a launchpad into deeper profiles. The same is true of the standings: every club in the table links to its own team page. The league page, in other words, is a hub that connects outward to teams and players, not a single static screen.

AURA AI Predictions for Every Match

What sets the league pages apart is AURA, SportPicker's AI prediction engine. For the matches still to be played, AURA generates a probability-based view of how a game might unfold, drawn from form, results and the kind of statistical signals that show up across the league, fixture and standings data. These predictions are presented as probabilities and outlooks rather than certainties, because football is unpredictable by nature and no model can know the result in advance.

It is important to be clear about what AURA is for. The predictions are provided for information and entertainment, to add context and a talking point to the fixtures ahead — not as advice to wager and never as any kind of guaranteed outcome. AURA is probabilistic: it expresses how likely it considers different results, and reasonable people, and reality, will often disagree with it. Read that way, the AI layer enriches a league page by giving you a structured outlook on the coming round alongside the hard facts of the table and the form.

Live standings

Full league table with position, played, W-D-L, goals for and against, goal difference, points and recent form, with European and relegation zones colour-coded.

Fixtures & matchday

Upcoming matches and a focused current-round view so you can plan your viewing and follow a whole gameweek at once.

Results

Recent final scores to catch up on what you missed, each linking through to a full match page with deeper detail.

Top scorers & assists

Season-long scoring and assist leaderboards, with player names linking to dedicated profile pages.

AURA AI predictions

Probability-based outlooks for upcoming matches — information and entertainment only, never betting advice or a guaranteed result.

200+ competitions

From the major club leagues and continental cups to second tiers and lesser-known divisions, all reachable from one directory.

The country directory rewards a little technique. Because it is alphabetical and loads on demand, the quickest route to a lesser-known competition is to think first about the country, then the tier. Want a particular second division? Find its nation in the list, expand it, and scan the leagues that appear — each labelled as a league or a cup. Because everything links straight to a full competition page, you never lose the standings, fixtures, results, scorers or AI predictions just because you have wandered off the beaten track.

The major-leagues and cups blocks at the top exist precisely so you do not have to use the directory for the most common journeys. If you are after the Premier League table or the Champions League picture, those are surfaced for you. The directory is there for everything else — and 'everything else' is the larger part of world football. The list below sets out the routes that cover almost every way people look for a competition.

  • Top club leagues — use the cards at the top of the page for Serie A, LaLiga, Ligue 1, the Premier League, the Bundesliga, the Eredivisie and other headline divisions.
  • Cups and continental tournaments — use the cups block for the Champions League, Europa League, Conference League, Nations League, domestic cups and major international events.
  • Second tiers and lower divisions — open the relevant country in the directory and look for the league labelled below the top flight.
  • Domestic cups and super cups — expand the country and look for entries tagged as a cup rather than a league.
  • Lesser-known and regional competitions — browse the country accordion; the breadth of 200+ competitions means most are catalogued and link through to their own pages.

From Major Leagues to Lesser-Known Ones

One of the design goals of the directory is parity of access. A flagship European league and a modest division in a smaller footballing nation get the same page treatment: the same standings format, the same fixtures and results tabs, the same scorer and assist leaderboards, and the same per-match AURA predictions where data supports them. That consistency means there is no second-class tier of competition on the site — once you find a league in the directory, you get the full experience regardless of its profile.

This is what makes the hub genuinely useful for the curious and the committed alike. A neutral can sample a league they have never watched and immediately understand the table and the in-form teams. A diaspora supporter can follow their home-country division with the same depth that a Premier League follower enjoys. And a fan tracking a promotion push in a third tier gets a live, current table rather than a stale screenshot from elsewhere. Breadth without depth would be a phone book; breadth with depth is a reference.

League Types at a Glance

Because the directory mixes leagues and cups, it helps to know how the page treats each format. The labels in the country accordion tell you which is which, and the table below summarises what to expect from each type of competition once you open it — so you know whether you are looking at a season-long points race or a knockout path before you even tap through.

League vs cup: what each competition type shows on its page
TypeStructurePrimary viewBest for
Domestic leagueSeason-long, points-basedFull table with form, plus fixtures and resultsTracking a title race, European qualification or a relegation battle
Domestic cupKnockout, sometimes with roundsFixtures, results and the path through the roundsFollowing a single-elimination run to a final
Continental club tournamentGroup stage then knockoutGroup tables early, then ties as it progressesMarquee midweek nights and qualification pictures
International competitionQualifying groups or finals tournamentsGroup standings and fixtures by roundNational-team campaigns and major finals

Standings, Form and Reading a Season Like an Analyst

A league table looks simple, but reading it well takes a little more than glancing at who is top. The standings tab gives you every column you need to interrogate a season properly, and pairing those numbers with the form guide and the fixtures tells a richer story than points alone. The goal-difference column, for example, is the most common tie-breaker in many leagues, so two teams level on points may be separated by their attacking and defensive records — which is exactly why goals for and goals against are shown side by side.

Form matters too. A side sitting comfortably mid-table on points may be in freefall on recent results, or a team near the bottom may be climbing fast. The colour-coded zones add another dimension: when you can see at a glance who occupies the European places and who is in the relegation fight, the table stops being a list and becomes a map of the season's pressure points. Combine that with the upcoming fixtures and you can reason about the run-in — who has the kinder schedule, who faces a cluster of rivals, and where the table might move next.

This is also where AURA's predictions fit into a thoughtful reading of a competition. Used alongside the table and the form, the AI outlook is one more input — a structured, probability-based take on the coming round — rather than a substitute for your own judgement. Treating it that way, as context and entertainment, is the spirit in which it is offered. The model can be wrong, results regularly defy the probabilities, and that uncertainty is part of what makes following a league worthwhile in the first place.

A note on predictions and odds: AURA's predictions are probability-based and provided for information and entertainment only. Any odds or probability figures shown on the site are educational context to help you understand a match, not betting advice and never a promise of any result. Football is unpredictable, and no prediction is a guaranteed outcome.

Putting It All Together

The leagues directory is best thought of as the front door to the rest of the site. From the hub you pick a competition; from the competition page you reach its standings, fixtures, results and leaderboards; from there you branch into individual team and player pages and into the match pages where AURA's per-game predictions live. Every step keeps the same clean structure, so moving between a major league and an obscure one, or between a league and a cup, never means relearning where things are.

Whether you came for one specific table or you want to explore the global game, the directory is designed to get you there quickly and then keep you informed for the whole season. With 200+ football leagues and competitions catalogued, full standings and form, fixtures and results, scorer and assist charts, and AURA's probability-based AI predictions on the matches ahead, it is a single place to follow football the way you actually watch it — broad when you are curious, deep when you are committed, and free throughout.

How many football leagues and competitions can I browse?

More than 200 football leagues and competitions are catalogued, spanning major club divisions, domestic and continental cups, international tournaments, second and lower tiers, and a range of lesser-known competitions. They are organised into top leagues, cups, and a complete country-by-country directory so you can find any of them quickly.

How do I find the standings for a specific league?

If it is one of the major club leagues, tap its card at the top of the leagues page. For anything else, scroll to the country directory, expand the relevant nation and select the competition. Either route opens that league's page, where the standings tab shows the full table with position, played, wins, draws, losses, goals for and against, goal difference, points and recent form, with European and relegation zones colour-coded.

What does each league page actually show?

Every league page has consistent tabs for the current matchday, the standings, upcoming fixtures, recent results, the top scorers and the top assist providers. Individual matches also carry AURA's AI prediction. Teams in the table and players on the leaderboards link to their own dedicated pages.

Are the AI predictions a guarantee of the result?

No. AURA's predictions are probability-based and provided for information and entertainment only. They express how likely different outcomes are considered to be, not a certainty. Football is unpredictable, results often defy the probabilities, and nothing on the site is a guaranteed outcome or betting advice.

Can I follow lesser-known and lower-division competitions, not just the big leagues?

Yes. The country directory catalogues competitions of all sizes, and each gets the same treatment as a major league — full standings, fixtures, results, scorer and assist leaderboards, and AURA predictions where data supports them. A second tier or a regional competition links through to its own page just like a flagship division.

Is it free to browse the leagues, standings and fixtures?

Yes. Browsing the leagues directory and viewing standings, fixtures, results and scorer charts is free. The leagues hub is the natural starting point of the site, giving open access to the global game across all the competitions it catalogues.