Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (2024)

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (1)

The 100 best football players of all time: 100-91

  • The 100 best football players of all time: 100-91
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 90-81
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 80-71
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 70-61
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 60-51
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 50-41
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 40-31
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 30-21
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 20-11
  • The 100 best football players of all time: 10-1

Of the 100 best football players of all time, fewer and fewer are still galloping at full tilt in the glare of the European game. In fact, two of our top 10 have left the continent in the last 12 months.

With Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo riding off into the sunset of warmer climes, it's easy to become misty-eyed about the good old days; of how we'll never see another pair quite like those again. But when they do eventually call it a day, their absence will leave no void: it's just the turning of a page. Football is cyclical: nothing is new and in a century and a half of the beautiful game, we've seen just about everything possible. The rise of dynasties, the fall of gods, the unexpected and scripts we all saw coming.

This is the complete compendium of characters who played the heroes and villains along the way. Every man who held GOAT status in the eye of any beholder: the definitive century of the greatest footballers to ever grace the grass. Don't agree? Of course, you don't!

100. Gheorghe Hagi

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (2)

With one of the odder career trajectories among modern-day greats, Hagi spent the best part of a decade as an impossibly prolific attacking midfielder in Romania’s top flight, before two hit-and-miss years at Real Madrid and later a similar spell at Barcelona.

Sandwiched between his time at the two Spanish giants was a heartwarming two years in Italy, where he was part of Mircea Lucescu’s ‘Little Romania’ contingent at Brescia. Heenduredrelegation in his first season but stayedloyal to the club despite better offers, and firedthem back into Serie A.

Aged 30 and supposedly winding down towards retirement, he joined Galatasaray, where hespent a laughably fruitful half-decade cementing living-legend status and hoovering up another 10 medals.

Career highlight: USA 94, when Romania reached the quarter-final of the World Cup (knocking out Argentina on the way), inspired by Hagi and his magical left foot.

Get the FourFourTwo Newsletter

The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week.

99. Mario Kempes

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (3)

Only four Argentines have been crowned as top scorer in La Liga, and Kempes is one of them. He was feared as a burly and effective striker for Valencia, scoring at will, especially in 1976/77 and 1977/78. Kempes also led the club to a European Cup Winners' Cup triumph in 1980.

However, he is best known for his explosive finishes during the 1978 World Cup on home soil. He nabbed six goals and was top scorer ofthe tournament.

Career highlight: How about scoring two goals in a World Cup final for a highlight? Kempes netted twice against Holland, including the all-important winner in extra time.

98. Kaka

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (4)

Kaka is the only player in the world I would pay money to watch. Some of the things I have seen him do on the pitch amaze me.

The baby of Brazil's last World Cup-winning squad without getting onto the pitch, Ricardo Izecson dos Santos Leite grew up in the shadows of samba superstars before emulating them on his own path. He won the final Ballon d'Or before the Messi-Ronaldo duopoly dominated football and dazzled with his unbelievable vision and typically South American dribbling skills.

Milan fans adored him. There was nothing that Kaka couldn't do with the ball at his feet, as he danced his way through defences and led this great club to summits. Injuries ravaged his time at Real Madrid but the mystique of this man is clear: he's simply one of the most talented footballers of the modern age, with iconic moments across his career.

Career highlight: An era-defining display against Manchester United in the Champions League semi-finals, with the whole world watching. Tearing apart one of the greatest-ever England sides singlehandedly was as shocking as it was captivating.

97. George Weah

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (5)

So far, Africa's only Ballon d'Or recipient, George Weah is now president of Liberia. He's always led from the front.

King George was a tornado of a footballer and one of the most thrilling footballers in full pelt ever to play the game. He could take on swathes of defenders and blast past them with electric pace, while his finishing, technical ability and creativity were all superb. He lit up Monaco, Paris Saint-Germain and AC Milan, winning titles and plaudits a plenty to become one of the most influential and beloved African footballers ever to play the game.

Career highlight: A fabulous solo goal against Verona in which Weah barely looked like he was breaking a sweat while frolicking through the entire opposition backline. It typified his class, bluster and frightening individual ability: do you know how difficult that was to do in 1990s Italy?

96. Javier Zanetti

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (6)

If he's not the finest right-back the world has seen, he may have remained a world-class performer for longer than any other individual on this list.

During 19 years at Inter, which followed his early club career in Argentina and came amid some of the Milan side’s most volatile years, he made a club-record 858 appearances and won 16 trophies before retiring aged 40. The stamina and footballing brain that made him such an outstanding full-back werecomplemented by a technical ability that meant he also later excelled in midfield.

Career highlight: Captaining Inter to the Treble in 2010, which ended their 45-year wait to regain the European Cup.

95. Djalma Santos

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (7)

Nominated by former team-mate and compatriot Pelein his list of the 125 greatest footballers, the two-time World Cup champion was the first Brazilian to collect 100 international caps. He started just one game in the 1958 World Cup but was still chosen as the best full-back of the tournament. So that must have been some display.

Along with left-back Nilton Santos, Djalma Santos rarely held back, starting the Brazilian tradition of attacking defenders and providinga template for the position's future.

Career highlight: In the final of the 1962 World Cup against Czechoslovakia, Santos set up the final goal scored by Vava for Brazil.

94. Luis Figo

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (8)

MORE ON FIGO

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (9)

ANDREW MURRAY How the 2000s saved El Clasico – and made Barcelona vs Real Madrid bigger than ever before

One of the most idolised and despised players in history – even by the same set of fans at different points in his timeline.

Luis Figo was the archetype of what a Galactico should be, so it shouldn't be a surprise that Real Madrid moved heaven, Earth and the laws of nature to acquire him. Deft, delicate and graceful, while capable of unpredictability – as England found out from his long-range stunner at Euro 2000 – Figo was a player of brilliance and consistency. His 106 assists are the second-most in La Liga history, behind Lionel Messi.

Career highlight: Landing the 2002 Champions League alongside his star-studded mates against Bayern Munich. See: paying big money for your rivals' players works.

93. Sandor Kocsis

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (10)

Arguably the greatest header of a ball ever, Kocsis scored at incredible rate. He found the net 75 times in 68 games forhis national side, winning the Olympic tournament in 1952, and averaged more than a goal-per-game in his seven seasons at Honved, winning three league championship titles.

Kocsis moved to Barcelona in 1958 and won La Liga in his first two seasons in Catalonia, although his spell there was sadly interrupted by injuries.

Career highlight: Kocsis was the top scorer with 11 goals at the 1954 World Cup, where a majestic Hungarian team should have won the trophy, but lost to West Germany in the final.

92. Peter Schmeichel

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (11)

Of all the keepers I have played against, Peter was easily the best. You can't be a great by just being a good shot stopper, you have to have it all – and he did.

Before new-fangled tactics compelled goalkeepers to dash towards the halfway line and behave as ersatz playmakers, Schmeichel was the king of the keepers, the prototypical elite-level goalie. Everything that contributed to preventing a goalhe had in abundance: size, presence, aggression and the unyielding ability to bellow his back four into shape.

Most of all, though, he was just so hard to score past. His ‘starfish’ method became famous and was responsible for countless point-blank chances going inexplicably unconverted. As well as simply being huge, his reflexes were astoundingly quick – and not just once a shot had been taken but before, too: he’d smother the ball at a striker’s feet before the player had even realised he was through on goal.

Career highlight: Hoovered up medals as a stalwart of Alex Ferguson’s first great Manchester United side, but none will have meant as much or been as spectacularly improbable as his European Championship win with a hastily assembled Denmark side in 1992.

91. Giacinto Facchetti

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (12)

In the 1970 World Cup Final, Brazil saw the future. He was playing at left-back for the opposition, whoO Canarinhowere busy beating 4-1 at the time.

Italy’s Giacinto Facchetti invented the modern full-back. Converted by Inter coach Helenio Herrera from a centre-forward into a right-footed left-back, Facchetti provided the deep-lying attacking thrust in a defence-first catenaccio system which dominated Italian football from the mid-1960s for three decades.

“Those who copied me copied me wrongly,” Herrera later said of his Inter side. “I had Picchi as a sweeper, yes, but I also had Facchetti, the first full-back to score as many goals as a forward.”

In an 18-season career comprising 629Nerazzurriappearances and 75 goals, Facchetti won four Serie A titles, two European Cups, two Intercontinental Cups and Euro 68 with Italy. Forget Carlos Alberto, Roberto Carlos or any other buccaneering Brazilian:this is where the full-back as a weapon began.

Career highlight: Being part of the first Italian side to defend the European Cup in 1965.

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (13)

Thank you for reading 5 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (14)

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10

Current page:The 100 best football players of all time: 100-91

Next Page The 100 best football players of all time: 90-81

Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (15)

Mark White

Content Editor

Mark White has been at on FourFourTwo since joining in January 2020, first as a staff writer before becoming content editor in 2023. An encyclopedia of football shirts and boots knowledge – both past and present – Mark has also represented FFT at both FA Cup and League Cup finals (though didn't receive a winners' medal on either occasion) and has written pieces for the mag ranging on subjects from Bobby Robson's season at Barcelona to Robinho's career. He has written cover features for the mag on Mikel Arteta and Martin Odegaard, and is assisted by his cat, Rosie, who has interned for the brand since lockdown.

With contributions from

  • Declan Warrington
  • Thore Haugstad
  • Michael Yokhin
  • Seb Stafford-Bloor
  • Jon Spurling
  • Andrew Murray
  • Alex Hess
  • Marcus Alves
  • Alex Reid

More about lists

Best ever Spain matchesThe best World Cup hat-tricks

Latest

'Perhaps Chelsea wouldn’t have been able to win that season had I not fulfilled my role: Eidur Gudjohnsen's honest assessment of why his Chelsea Premier League win topped Barcelona's treble
See more latest►

Most Popular
‘Bicycle kick for Chelsea against Leeds was the goal that gave me the biggest natural high in my career – even Gianfranco Zola was impressed by it’: Eidur Gudjohnsen relives magical Chelsea moment
Quiz! Can you name England's all-time appearance makers since 1990?
The curse of the Euro 2024 stadiums: why only half of the venues are now home to Bundesliga clubs
Dwight Yorke: 'I'd give Rasmus Hojlund a five or six out of 10 so far at Manchester United – he's been average'
Euro 2024 travel guide: Speed limits, essential documents and costs for driving in Germany
The Celtic 2024/25 home kit is out, and it's absolutely stunning
‘Jose Mourinho can make you feel the best or worst player in the world’ - Diogo Dalot spills beans on time working under Special One at Manchester United
Quiz! Can you name these 20 footballers from their nicknames?
How Pep Guardiola inspired a huge cultural shift in the way elite clubs select managers
The best World Cup hat-tricks
Ranked! Every Euro 2024 kit, from worst to best
Ranked! The 100 best football players of all time (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Tuan Roob DDS

Last Updated:

Views: 5753

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 85% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Tuan Roob DDS

Birthday: 1999-11-20

Address: Suite 592 642 Pfannerstill Island, South Keila, LA 74970-3076

Phone: +9617721773649

Job: Marketing Producer

Hobby: Skydiving, Flag Football, Knitting, Running, Lego building, Hunting, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Tuan Roob DDS, I am a friendly, good, energetic, faithful, fantastic, gentle, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.