Who were the best and worst Socceroos at the World Cup? Every player rated

Who were the best and worst Socceroos at the World Cup? Every player rated

Now covering more than 250 competitions globally, Flashscore's player ratings algorithm takes more than 70 different Opta player stats and combines them into one final player rating out of 10, with players rewarded and punished for excelling or failing at the role they are meant to play in the team.

Players are profiled not only for their position on the field (defender, midfielder, forward) but also their typical role (defensive, progression, playmaker, attacker), leading to a fairer rating that does not over-reward goalscoring or punish defenders for attacking errors.

For example, a ball-winning midfielder will be graded more heavily on their tackling and their interceptions than a striker will, whilst a centre back would not be as harshly downgraded for missing a big scoring chance as a centre forward would. 

The ratings are significantly shifted but not entirely influenced by what we like to refer to as 'game-changing moments' - from game-winning goals and last man tackles, to big chances missed and mistakes leading directly to a goal.

Read a detailed explanation of Flashscore's newly updated player ratings system here. 

The final standings:

7.4 - Alessandro Circati

Along with ten tackles and six blocked shots, Alessandro's 19 clearances had him just on the cusp of the top-50 for the tournament - not a bad effort for a player who didn't get past the Round of 32. 

He also accumulated the second-most accurate passes (157) of the team, behind fellow centre-back Harry Souttar.

7.3 - Patrick Beach

Beach made a total of 14 saves at the World Cup at what was the sixth-best save percentage (82.4%) and sixth fewest goals conceded per 90 minutes (0.7) at time of writing. 

7.0 - Paul Okon-Engstler

Okon-Engstler was a somewhat surprise starter against Turkey but justified his selection with two key passes and 13 accurate passes in the opposition half. 

With even better passing stats against the USA, his demotion to the bench for Australia's next two games were a bit of a head-scratcher.

Here is how the remainder of the squad rated over the course of Australia's four World Cup matches. 

6.8 - Harry Souttar, Jackson Irvine

6.7 - Aiden O'Neill

6.6 - Cristian Volpato

6.5 - Ajdin Hrustic, Nestory Irankunda, Tete Yengi, Connor Metcalfe, Jason Geria and Jacob Italiano

6.4 - Awer Mabil

6.3 - Mohamed Toure and Jordy Bos

6.2 - Cameron Burgess

6.1 - Kai Trewin, Aziz Behich and Lucas Herrington

6.0 - Nishan Velupillay

5.8 - Mathew Leckie

Sadly, Leckie's only World Cup appearance was a shocker. Nearly half of his 13 passes missed their intended target, he lost most of his individual ground duels, and then he succumbed to injury. We wish him all the best in his recovery.