About

Why this site exists

leaguetables.soccer is an independent guide to public youth soccer schedules, scores, conference standings, and team pages.

Purpose

The goal is simple: make youth soccer results easier to scan. League sites publish the source data, but schedules can be hard to compare across age groups, conferences, and teams. This site reorganizes that public data into focused pages for scores, standings, upcoming matches, and club schedules. It is meant for quick context: What has been played, what is coming up, and how the table looks inside a specific competition slice.

What this site does

This site organizes public schedules into cleaner filters, pairs standings with their conference match sets, normalizes team and league navigation, and publishes static pages designed for quick score lookup. Conference pages include recap text, compact table notes, and direct links into related teams and conferences.

The design goal is practical rather than official. A parent, player, coach, or fan should be able to land on a league page, choose an age group, open the right conference, and understand the standings without learning a new interface. Common abbreviations stay near the table, and source notes stay close to schedule data because youth soccer changes fast. For a practical walkthrough, see how to use LeagueTables.

Data source and independence

Match and standings data comes from public league schedule feeds, including MLS NEXT, ECNL Boys, and ECNL Girls sources. This site is independent and is not affiliated with MLS, MLS NEXT, ECNL, AthleteOne, Total Global Sports, or Modular11. Team names, schedules, scores, and standings remain the property of their respective owners.

If a result, venue, kickoff time, or competition ruling looks important, confirm it with the league or club. League Tables is a navigation and summarization layer over public information, not the governing authority for any match.

Updates

Data is refreshed on a rolling basis with extra attention on recent result windows so new scores can be picked up without rebuilding the entire archive every time.

Logos are handled conservatively. When a public source includes a team logo and it can be localized reliably, the site uses it to make standings easier to scan. If a logo is missing, the page keeps a neutral placeholder instead of inventing one.