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The Club Football Elo Ratings is a ranking system for men's club teams in association football. The method used to rank teams is based upon the Elo rating system method but modified to take various football-specific variables into account.
Current top Elo rated teams [1]
Rank | Club | Country | Curent Elo | Highest historical Elo | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Barcelona F.C. | Spain | 2,116 | 2,117 | 2012 |
2 | Real Madrid | Spain | 2,078 | 2,164 | 1961 [2] |
3 | Bayern Munich | Germany | 1,997 | 2,129 | 2014 |
4 | Atlético Madrid | Spain | 1,949 | 2,004 | 2014 |
5 | Juventus | Italy | 1,947 | 1,967 | 1997 |
6 | Chelsea | England | 1,905 | 2,019 | 2008 |
7 | Sevilla | Spain | 1,898 | 1,910 | 2008 |
8 | Manchester City | England | 1,890 | 1,969 | 2014 |
9 | Valencia | Italy | 1,877 | 1,966 | 1942 |
10 | Paris Saint-Germain | France | 1,875 | 1,920 | 2014 |
11 | Arsenal | England | 1,844 | 1,956 | 2004 |
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Elo Club ranking in Europe and historical ranking for each club etc.
- A different Elo ranking site for club football
- Club ranking based on last 12 month games. Gives extra weight to games importance
- UEFA club coefficient ranking. Uses only scores of UEFA Champions League and Europe League competitions. Uses only last five years data with higher weights for more recent years
- IFFHS club world ranking
Category:Association football rankings Category:Rating systems
Author | Rolf Dobelli |
---|---|
Language | English |
Subject | Decision making |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Sceptre (UK), Farrar, Straus and Giroux(USA) |
Publication date | 2013 |
Publication place | United Kingdom, United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover, ebook, Paperback) |
Pages | 384 pages |
ISBN | 978-1444759549 (UK), 9780062219688 (USA) |
The Art of Thinking Clearly is a 2013 book by bestselling [3] swiss novelist Rolf Dobelli which shortly talks on 100 common thinking and deciding mistakes. Ranging from cognitive biases to elements like envy and social distortions.
The book was originally written as weekly colimns is leading newspapers in Germany and Switzerland, and later in two German books
content
[edit]1 Why You Should Visit Cemeteries: Survivorship Bias
2 Does Harvard Make You Smarter?: Swimmer’s Body Illusion
3 Why You See Shapes in Clouds: Clustering Illusion
4 If Fifty Million People Say Something Foolish, It Is Still Foolish: Social Proof
5 Why You Should Forget the Past: Sunk Cost Fallacy
6 Don’t Accept Free Drinks: Reciprocity
7 Beware the “Special Case”: Confirmation Bias (Part 1)
8 Murder Your Darlings:Confirmation Bias (Part 2)
9 Don’t Bow to Authority: Authority Bias
10 Leave Your Supermodel Friends at Home: Contrast Effect
11 Why We Prefer a Wrong Map to None at All: Availability Bias
12 Why “No Pain, No Gain” Should Set Alarm Bells Ringing: The It’ll-Get-Worse-Before-It-Gets-Better Fallacy
13 Even True Stories Are Fairy Tales: Story Bias
14 Why You Should Keep a Diary: Hindsight Bias
15 Why You Systematically Overestimate Your Knowledge and Abilities: Overconfidence Effect
16 Don’t Take News Anchors Seriously: Chauffeur Knowledge
17 You Control Less Than You Think: Illusion of Control
18 Never Pay Your Lawyer by the Hour: Incentive Super-Response Tendency
19 The Dubious Efficacy of Doctors, Consultants, and Psychotherapists: Regression to Mean
20 Never Judge a Decision by Its Outcome: Outcome Bias
21 Less Is More: Paradox of Choice
22 You Like Me, You Really, Really Like Me: Liking Bias
23 Don’t Cling to Things: Endowment Effect
24 The Inevitability of Unlikely Events: Coincidence
25 The Calamity of Conformity: Groupthink
26 Why You’ll Soon Be Playing Megatrillions: Neglect of Probability
27 Why the Last Cookie in the Jar Makes Your Mouth Water: Scarcity Error
28 When You Hear Hoofbeats, Don’t Expect a Zebra: Base-Rate Neglect
29 Why the “Balancing Force of the Universe” Is Baloney: Gambler’s Fallacy
30 Why the Wheel of Fortune Makes Our Heads Spin: The Anchor
31 How to Relieve People of Their Millions: Induction
32 Why Evil Is More Striking Than Good: Loss Aversion
33 Why Teams Are Lazy: Social Loafing
34 Stumped by a Sheet of Paper: Exponential Growth
35 Curb Your Enthusiasm: Winner’s Curse
36 Never Ask a Writer If the Novel Is Autobiographical: Fundamental Attribution Error
37 Why You Shouldn’t Believe in the Stork: False Causality
38 Why Attractive People Climb the Career Ladder More Quickly: Halo Effect
39 Congratulations! You’ve Won Russian Roulette: Alternative Paths
40 False Prophets: Forecast Illusion
41 The Deception of Specific Cases: Conjunction Fallacy
42 It’s Not What You Say, but How You Say It: Framing
43 Why Watching and Waiting Is Torture: Action Bias
44 Why You Are Either the Solution—or the Problem: Omission Bias
45 Don’t Blame Me: Self-Serving Bias
46 Be Careful What You Wish For: Hedonic Treadmill
47 Do Not Marvel at YourExistence: Self-Selection Bias
48 Why Experience Can Damage Your Judgment: Association Bias
49 Be Wary When Things Get Off to a Great Start: Beginner’s Luck
50 Sweet Little Lies: Cognitive Dissonance
51 Live Each Day as If It Were Your Last—But Only on Sundays: Hyperbolic Discounting
52 Any Lame Excuse: “Because” Justification
53 Decide Better—Decide Less: Decision Fatigue
54 Would You Wear Hitler’s Sweater?: Contagion Bias
55 Why There Is No Such Thing as an Average War: The Problem with Averages
56 How Bonuses Destroy Motivation: Motivation Crowding
57 If You Have Nothing to Say, Say Nothing: Twaddle Tendency
58 How to Increase the Average IQ of Two States: Will Rogers Phenomeno
59 If You Have an Enemy, Give Him Information: Information Bias
60 Hurts So Good: EffortJustification
61 Why Small Things Loom Large: The Law of Small Numbers
62 Handle with Care: Expectations
63 Speed Traps Ahead!: Simple Logic
64 How to Expose a Charlatan: Forer Effect
65 Volunteer Work Is for the Birds: Volunteer’s Folly
66 Why You Are a Slave to Your Emotions: Affect Heuristic
67 Be Your Own Heretic: Introspection Illusion
68 Why You Should Set Fire to Your Ships: Inability to Close Doors
69 Disregard the Brand New: Neomania
70 Why Propaganda Works: Sleeper Effect
71 Why It’s Never Just a Two-Horse Race: Alternative Blindness
72 Why We Take Aim at Young Guns: Social Comparison Bias
73 Why First Impressions Are Deceiving: Primacy and Recency Effects
74 Why You Can’t Beat Homemade: Not-Invented-Here Syndrome
75 How to Profit from the Implausible: The Black Swan
76 Knowledge Is Nontransferrable: Domain Dependence
77 The Myth of Like-Mindedness: False-Consensus Effect
78 You Were Right All Along: Falsification of History
79 Why You Identify with Your Football Team: In-Group Out-Group Bias
80 The Difference between Risk and Uncertainty: Ambiguity Aversion
81 Why You Go with the Status Quo: Default Effect
82 Why “Last Chances” Make Us Panic: Fear of Regret
83 How Eye-Catching Details Render Us Blind: Salience Effect
84 Why Money Is Not Naked: House-Money Effect
85 Why New Year’s Resolutions Don’t Work: Procrastination
86 Build Your Own Castle: Envy
87 Why You Prefer Novels to Statistics: Personification
88 You Have No Idea What You Are Overlooking: Illusion of Attention
89 Hot Air: Strategic Misrepresentation
90 Where’s the Off Switch?: Overthinking
91 Why You Take On Too Much: Planning Fallacy
92 Those Wielding Hammers See Only Nails: Déformation Professionnelle
93 Mission Accomplished: Zeigarnik Effect
94 The Boat Matters More Than the Rowing: Illusion of Skill
95 Why Checklists Deceive You: Feature-Positive Effect
96 Drawing the Bull’s-Eye around the Arrow: Cherry Picking
97 The Stone Age Hunt for Scapegoats: Fallacy of the Single Cause
98 Why Speed Demons Appear to Be Safer Drivers: Intention-to-Treat Error
99 Why You Shouldn’t Read the News: News Illusion
Further reading
[edit]