Why we started
Football has never had more data, and rarely has it been harder to read. Headlines reduce a tournament to a single scoreline; social feeds amplify the loudest take rather than the most accurate one. We founded Mundial Metrics to do the opposite — to slow down, count carefully, and explain what the numbers really say.
Our focus is the FIFA World Cup, the richest dataset in the sport. With the 2026 tournament expanding to 48 teams across the United States, Canada and Mexico, there has never been more to measure — or more reason to measure it well.
How we work
Every figure we publish is sourced and dated. We separate description from prediction, and we are honest about uncertainty: a model is a tool for thinking, not a crystal ball. When the data surprises us — when a side like Croatia outperforms its expected goals year after year — we say so rather than smoothing it away.
We cover the contenders without fear or favour. France and Brazil get the same scrutiny as Norway, Australia or Morocco. Reputation earns no points on our tables; performance does.
Our promise is simple: context before conclusions, and the working shown every time.
What you'll find here
- Record Database — the all-time ledger of World Cup milestones.
- Interactive Tables — sortable, filterable standings and form lines.
- xG Lab — expected goals explained and applied.
- The Long Read — flagship infographic essays.
The team
Who runs the desk
Eleanor Hart
Editor-in-Chief
Former data journalist who built the desk around one rule: never publish a number you can't explain.
Rafael Andersen
Lead Analyst, xG
Builds and maintains our expected-goals model and the chance-quality work behind the xG Lab.
Priya Nair
Data & Visual Editor
Turns spreadsheets into the tables, charts and infographics you actually want to read.