Guides

How to use LeagueTables

LeagueTables helps parents, players, coaches, and fans browse youth soccer standings, schedules, recent results, and upcoming matches without digging through multiple league pages.

The site organizes public competition data into league, age-group, conference, and team views so it is easier to find the table or schedule slice you care about. Official league and club websites remain the source of truth for travel, eligibility, roster, field, and administrative decisions.

LeagueTables is an independent reference site. It is not affiliated with MLS NEXT, ECNL, US Club Soccer, U.S. Soccer, or individual clubs unless stated otherwise.

Start with a league

Pick the league your team plays in, then choose the age group from your schedule. MLS NEXT pages use labels such as U13, U14, and U15. ECNL pages often use birth-year labels such as B2010 or G2011. After you open an age group, choose the conference for your region.

League pages list age groups. Age-group pages list conferences. Conference pages show the standings and matches together. If you do not know a team's conference, use the search box in the header. Search results point to team and conference routes from the current public data.

Read a conference page

A conference page gives you the table and schedule in one place. The recap calls out recent results and upcoming matches. The standings table uses completed scores from that conference slice. Match cards show dates, teams, scores, status, venue text, and the source competition label.

Use filters to narrow a long page by league, age group, conference, team, or match status. "Jump to Today" moves you near the current schedule rows. "Clear Filters" returns the page to its starting view.

Understand the standings

Standings are calculated from completed matches in the selected league, age group, and conference. Future matches, postponed matches, canceled matches, and matches without final scores should not affect the table.

Common standings columns include wins, draws, losses, goals for, goals against, goal difference, and points. LeagueTables can make the current table easier to scan, but official leagues may use their own tiebreakers or make corrections after results are first published.

If a position, score, or total looks different from an official league page, use the official league page for decisions that matter.

Use team pages carefully

Team pages help when you want one club's schedule inside one competition slice. Check the league or club before you make travel, roster, eligibility, field, or administrative decisions. Public feeds can change, and LeagueTables may not reflect every correction immediately. Some clubs also appear under different names across age groups, seasons, or sources.

If something looks wrong, use the contact page and include the league, age group, conference, team, and the page URL. Specific reports are easier to check than broad notes like "the schedule is wrong." Screenshots help, but the page URL and source detail help most.

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