โฝSoccer
Soccer, or football to roughly seven billion of the planet's eight, is the world's loudest argument. FIFA was founded in Paris in 1904 by seven European federations who wanted a single set of rules for international play. A little over a century later it now runs a World Cup watched by more than five billion people across a single month, sells media rights for tens of billions, and somehow still cannot stop a single ref from missing an obvious handball. That gap, between how huge the sport is and how messy it remains, is exactly why soccer polls thrive. Was the 2022 World Cup final the greatest match ever played, or did the Mbappe hat-trick get overshadowed because Messi finally lifted the trophy? Is Erling Haaland the future, or just the Premier League's most efficient cheat code? Should Saudi Pro League moves be respected or laughed at? Which league actually plays the best football right now: the Premier League with its money, La Liga with its skill, the Bundesliga with its atmosphere, Serie A on its slow comeback, or Ligue 1 with PSG's chaos? On moomz the world's most-played sport gets the world's fastest debate engine: drop a poll, the bar chart fills live, your group chat finally puts up or shuts up. From dream XIs to manager firings to whether VAR ruined the game forever, this is the page where soccer opinions stop being shouted at the TV and start being counted.
The World Cup is still the only trophy that matters
Club football has more money, more games, more daily drama. But the World Cup remains the only event that pulls every continent into the same conversation for a month. The 2022 final in Lusail, when Argentina beat France on penalties after a 3-3 thriller that Mbappe hat-tricked through, is widely called the greatest final ever played, and it finally gave Messi the one trophy his career was missing. The 2026 edition expands to 48 teams across the US, Canada and Mexico, which will either be the best tournament ever or the most bloated, depending on which forum you read. Either way the polls will come thick. Who lifts it. Who flames out in the group stage. Whether the host trio actually deserves co-hosting. Whether the third-place playoff should be quietly killed. Whether the golden ball should be picked before the final, ever again. Run a moomz poll the morning of every knockout match and you will know your group chat better by the end of the tournament than after years of normal conversation.
Messi or Ronaldo, the debate that refuses to die
Lionel Messi, born 1987 in Rosario, Argentina, has eight Ballons d'Or, the 2022 World Cup, and a left foot that engineers should be required to study. Cristiano Ronaldo, born 1985 in Madeira, Portugal, has 850-plus career goals, five Champions Leagues, and a work ethic so famous it has its own cottage industry of motivational TikToks. The debate is two decades old and refuses to die because every metric you pick gives a different answer. Trophies count more for one side, individual brilliance for the other, longevity for a third, World Cup wins for a fourth. Pep Guardiola once said arguing Messi versus Ronaldo is like arguing whether a Picasso is better than a Van Gogh: pointless and you should just enjoy both. He is right, and we will keep doing the polls anyway. Drop one in your group chat and watch how the votes split exactly along the lines of who grew up watching which one. That alone is more revealing than any actual ranking.
Which league actually plays the best football
Every fan thinks their league is the best, but the data is messier than the takes. The Premier League has the most money, the deepest mid-table quality, and the most globally televised drama. La Liga has the highest technical ceiling, two of the most decorated clubs in history, and a recent post-Messi identity crisis. The Bundesliga has the best atmospheres, the cheapest tickets, and Bayern's tedious monopoly. Serie A has the best tactical chess, a beautiful slow renaissance, and a stadium infrastructure problem. Ligue 1 has PSG, Marseille, and not much else above them, but it produces young talent that everyone else then buys. The Saudi Pro League has the money and the meme value. MLS has Messi now, which counts more than people admit. A moomz poll asking your friends to rank the top five leagues by entertainment value will surface the regional bias instantly. It will also produce the loudest fight your group chat has had since last transfer window.
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Frequently asked
Q.When was FIFA founded and why?+
FIFA was founded on May 21, 1904, in Paris by representatives of seven European football associations: France, Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. The goal was to unify rules and organize international matches that everyone could trust. England joined in 1905. The first FIFA World Cup followed in 1930, hosted and won by Uruguay. FIFA now governs football across 211 member associations, more than the United Nations has member states.
Q.Why is it called soccer in some countries and football in others?+
Both names trace back to England. Association football was nicknamed assoc, then soccer, by British students in the 1880s to distinguish it from rugby football. The name soccer was actively used in Britain for most of the 20th century before it fell out of fashion. Countries where another football code already existed, like the US, Canada and Australia, kept using soccer to avoid confusion. Everywhere else, it stayed football.
Q.How many Ballons d'Or do Messi and Ronaldo have?+
Lionel Messi has won eight Ballons d'Or, the most in history, with his most recent coming in 2023 after winning the 2022 World Cup with Argentina. Cristiano Ronaldo has five, tying him with Michel Platini and Johan Cruyff for second on the all-time list before they were both passed. The next active player closest to them is Karim Benzema with one, won in 2022, which tells you how dominant the duo has been for a full era.
Q.Can I run a soccer poll in a non-English group on moomz?+
Yes, moomz works in eight languages and auto-detects yours from the browser, so a French group sees French UI, a Spanish group sees Spanish, and so on. The poll question and options stay in whatever language you type them. That is perfect for soccer because the sport is global and your group chat probably already mixes English, Spanish, French and a handful of emoji. Drop a poll, share the link, the bar chart speaks every language.