February 5 – As the UEFA Champions League enters its knockout rounds, the latest study from the CIES Football Observatory has offered a timely snapshot of which clubs are best equipped to dominate matches in possession.
Using data produced by performance analytics firm Impect, CIES has ranked the most “ball-friendly” teams in world football, spanning a total of 58 leagues and 915 clubs. Rather than measuring possession in isolation, the study focuses on how teams actually use the ball, combining four indicators: pass proximity, tempo of passing, duration of possessions and the share of balls received on the ground in the opponent’s final third.
At the top of the table sit Bayern Munich, who recorded the highest overall score under Vincent Kompany. Paris Saint-Germain follow closely behind under Luis Enrique, with Barcelona and Bayer Leverkusen completing a top four that reads like a blueprint for modern positional football. The common thread is not just dominance of the ball, but how efficiently and purposefully it is circulated.
Manchester City rank sixth overall, the highest-placed Premier League side, reinforcing Pep Guardiola’s enduring influence. In fact, all three clubs Guardiola has coached during his senior career feature inside the global top six – a statistical endorsement of his possession-first philosophy.
Premier League leaders Arsenal notably fail to make the top 50 of the ranking, falling behind City, Liverpool and Chelsea, though it’s no secret that many of their goals come via set pieces rather than enduring possession.
The list also highlights clubs turning possession into a competitive advantage outside of Europe’s traditional power centres. MLS champions Columbus Crew sit fifth overall, ahead of Denmark’s FC Nordsjælland and AS Saint-Étienne, despite the French club operating in Ligue 2. Norwegian champions Bodø/Glimt and Spain’s Elche also make the top 20, further evidence that structured possession models travel well across leagues and budgets.
Source: insideworldfootball.com














