The Football Leagues Behind Football Wordle — A Fan's Guide

By the Football Wordle team · March 2026 · 9 min read

Football Wordle draws its player and club names from the world's major professional football leagues. Understanding which leagues are covered — and what makes each league's names distinctive in a word puzzle — is one of the most effective ways to improve your game. This guide walks through every league in the Football Wordle word list, explains the naming conventions you'll encounter, and gives you practical tips for each.

How leagues are selected for the word list

The Football Wordle team uses three criteria when deciding which leagues to represent:

With these criteria in mind, here is a breakdown of every major league currently represented in Football Wordle.

European leagues

England

Premier League

The Premier League is the most heavily represented league in Football Wordle, for reasons of both global recognisability and squad diversity. Twenty clubs, each with up to 25 registered players, provide hundreds of candidate names from dozens of nationalities. The result is a word list that includes very short English names (RICE, SHAW, WARD) alongside long Scandinavian and West African names (HAALAND, TROSSARD, ONANA).

Spain

La Liga

La Liga produces some of the most phonetically consistent names in Football Wordle. Spanish surnames — and Portuguese surnames from players who moved to Spain — tend to follow predictable patterns: they often end in -EZ (SANCHEZ, RAMIREZ, GOMEZ), -O (MARCO, SERGIO, PEDRO), or -A (SILVA, RAMOS, COSTA). Once you recognise these endings, you can significantly narrow down candidates after just one or two confirmed letters.

Germany

Bundesliga

The Bundesliga brings German, Austrian, Swiss, and increasingly international names to Football Wordle. German surnames often include compound structures (MULLER, KROOS, NEUER) or distinctive consonant clusters (KIMMICH, GNABRY, GORETZKA). The league has also become a destination for African and South American players, adding further name diversity. The Bundesliga tends to produce medium-length names (5–7 letters) that require careful attention to consonant placement.

Italy

Serie A

Serie A is renowned for its tactical depth and for producing some of football's most elegant names. Italian surnames in Football Wordle often end in vowels — particularly -I (BONUCCI, BARELLA, PELLEGRINI) and -O (INSIGNE, IMMOBILE, FLORENZI). The league also attracts many South American players, especially from Argentina and Brazil, whose names follow different conventions. French and African players have also become increasingly common in recent seasons.

France

Ligue 1

Ligue 1 is one of the most nationally diverse leagues in world football. French football academies have produced generations of players with West African heritage, and the national league reflects this. You'll encounter names from French, Cameroonian, Senegalese, Ivorian, Algerian, and Moroccan naming traditions — often all in the same squad. Ligue 1 names can be deceptively tricky: some look short but have unusual consonant clusters (NKUNKU, MBAPPÉ becomes MBAPPE, KOLO MUANI becomes MUANI).

Netherlands

Eredivisie

The Eredivisie is a historically important league for developing talent that later moves to larger leagues. Dutch surnames in Football Wordle often include the prefixes "van", "de", or "van den", but these are typically handled by using the main surname part for the puzzle. Dutch names tend to use double vowels (AA, OO, EE) and the characteristic IJ combination, which is normalised to IJ in the puzzle. Players from Suriname, the Dutch Caribbean, and other Dutch-connected regions add further variety.

The Americas

United States & Canada

Major League Soccer (MLS)

MLS has grown significantly in profile over the past decade and now attracts players from all over the world — both rising talents and established stars finishing their careers. The result is a word list that includes American and Canadian players (often with English or Hispanic surnames), alongside big-name arrivals from Europe and South America. MLS names tend to be shorter on average than European league names, and English-language surnames are well represented.

Brazil

Brasileirão

Brazilian football has a naming tradition unlike any other: players are almost universally known by single names, nicknames, or first names rather than surnames. NEYMAR, RONALDO, VINICIUS, ENDRICK — these are all first names or nicknames used instead of the full surname. Football Wordle uses the name the player is most commonly known by, which for Brazilians almost always means the single name. This makes Brazilian players distinctive — and sometimes easy to spot — once you recognise the naming pattern.

Argentina

Argentine Liga Profesional

Argentina produces some of world football's most recognisable names and surnames. Argentine surnames often come from Italian and Spanish immigration waves, so they follow similar patterns: vowel-ending surnames, double letters, and names ending in -EZ, -O, -I. MESSI, DYBALA, DI MARIA, LAUTARO, MARTINEZ — these are the names you'll encounter most from Argentina in Football Wordle. Argentine players who moved to Europe at a young age are often listed under the league they became famous in.

International competitions

Beyond domestic leagues, Football Wordle includes players who are known primarily through international competition — UEFA Champions League, Copa América, UEFA Euros, FIFA World Cup — rather than a specific domestic league. This means players from Portugal, Croatia, Senegal, Japan, South Korea, and other nations with strong international competition records appear even if their domestic league isn't fully represented.

The key implication for gameplay: don't assume every answer comes from one of the six major European leagues. If you have confirmed letters that don't fit any European name you can think of, consider Japanese, Korean, or Eastern European names from international competition.

How to use league knowledge strategically

Once you have two or three confirmed letters, league knowledge becomes a powerful filter. Here's a quick mental framework:

The global fan advantage: Players who follow football across multiple leagues consistently outperform those who only follow one league in Football Wordle. Even casual familiarity with Bundesliga or Ligue 1 squads opens up dozens of candidate names that a single-league fan would never generate. Expanding your football watching — even just highlights — pays dividends in the game.

Leagues we plan to add

Football Wordle's word list is always growing. Leagues we are considering adding more coverage for include the Portuguese Primeira Liga, the Scottish Premiership, the Turkish Süper Lig, and the Saudi Pro League (which has attracted significant high-profile transfers in recent seasons). As these leagues increase in global recognisability — the key criterion — their players and clubs will appear more frequently in the word list.

If you follow a league that you think deserves more representation, let us know at webgames594@gmail.com. We read all feedback before each list update.

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