What Is RubiScore? A Complete Guide to the Live Football Data Platform
RubiScore is a live football data platform that tracks real-time scores, fixtures, lineups, and in-depth statistics for matches across hundreds of competitions worldwide. Operated by RubiScore Limited from Hong Kong, the service covers every meaningful entity in football — competitions, clubs, players, stadiums, referees, and managers — and surfaces the numbers behind each of them in one place.
What does RubiScore actually do?
At its simplest level, RubiScore is a live score service. When a match kicks off anywhere in its coverage, the platform updates the score the instant a goal is scored, a card is shown, or a substitution is made. That much is what people expect from any modern football site. What sets the platform apart is what sits beneath the score: a structured layer of data about the players on the pitch, the manager picking them, the referee officiating them, and the stadium hosting them.
A user opening a match page on RubiScore can move from the live score to the starting lineups, to head-to-head history, to season-long form, to referee tendencies — all on the same screen. The intent is to remove the friction of jumping between five different sites to assemble a picture of a fixture.
Which football entities does RubiScore track?
The platform organises its data around seven core entity types. Understanding these makes the rest of the service easier to navigate:
- Match. The fixture itself, with the live score, goal events, cards, substitutions, lineups, and a running set of in-play statistics.
- Competition. The league, cup, or tournament. Standings, fixture lists, top scorers, and historical seasons are all attached here.
- Club. The team page, with squad, season form, home and away splits, and the club's record across the seasons it has been tracked.
- Player. Career history, current club, position, and the statistical profile a player has built across the seasons covered.
- Stadium. The venue, with capacity, host club, and the home record of the teams that play there.
- Referee. The official, with cards-per-game patterns, penalty-decision history, and the competitions they tend to work in.
- Manager. The head coach, with formation tendencies, lineup rotation patterns, and career win rates across clubs.
Live-score services that stop at the first three entities are doing roughly half of the job. The data appetite of modern football fans, fantasy players, and analysts has moved well beyond goals and standings.
What kinds of data does RubiScore surface for each entity?
The numbers attached to each entity are what make the platform useful for deeper football following. A non-exhaustive view of what is published:
- For a match: live score, expected goals (xG), shots, shots on target, possession percentage, pass accuracy, fouls, corners, lineups with positions, substitution timings, and a chronological event feed.
- For a competition: full league table, top scorer table, assist leaders, clean-sheet leaders, average goals per game, and historical winners.
- For a club: current squad list with positions, recent results, season form streak, home and away records, and average team statistics across the season.
- For a player: appearances, minutes, goals, assists, cards, and where relevant, more advanced numbers such as xG, xA (expected assists), key passes, and progressive carries.
- For a referee: matches officiated, yellow cards per game, red cards per game, penalties awarded, and the competitions worked in.
- For a manager: career win rate, formations used, average team form, and the clubs they have worked at.
- For a stadium: capacity, surface, the clubs that play there, and the home win rate of the resident team.
This entity-by-entity structure is the backbone of how data is exposed across the site.
Who operates RubiScore?
The platform is run by RubiScore Limited, a company registered in Hong Kong under company number 78686234. The registered office sits at Suite C, Level 7, World Trust Tower, 50 Stanley Street, Central, Hong Kong. Locating the operating entity in Hong Kong gives RubiScore a neutral base in Asia, a region where football viewership has grown sharply in the last decade.
The platform is not affiliated with any league, federation, or club. It is an independent data service, and the editorial line is to report numbers rather than promote teams.
How does RubiScore compare to other live football data services?
The live-score category is crowded. Services like SofaScore, FlashScore, FotMob, AiScore, and 365Scores have built large user bases by combining quick score updates with progressively deeper data. RubiScore sits in the same broad family, but with a clear emphasis on the secondary entities — referees, managers, and stadiums — that most competitors treat as afterthoughts.
A useful way to think about the space is by what each platform leads with. A few examples of how the category is generally read by users:
- Services that lead with the match feed and the score.
- Services that lead with player and team analytics, including xG-style numbers.
- Services that lead with fixtures and standings across many competitions.
- Services that lead with the secondary entities — referees, managers, venues.
Rubi Score's position is closer to the last camp, with a structured commitment to data for entities that fans rarely get to inspect in detail elsewhere. The intent is not to win on speed of score updates, where the category is already saturated, but on the depth of the secondary layer beneath the score.
Why does deeper football data matter in 2026?
Football is the most-followed sport in the world. The sport's governing body, FIFA, has 211 member federations, and the calendar runs continuously across continents. In a single weekend a fan might track matches from the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga, Ligue 1, the UEFA Champions League, and a dozen other competitions. The Premier League alone produces 380 matches per season, each of which is now a small data event with dozens of measurable variables.
The audience for that data has also evolved. There is a long-standing debate in football analytics, often framed as "the data versus the eye test," and the consensus has shifted. Few serious followers of the sport ignore the numbers anymore. Concepts that were once technical, like expected goals, have moved into the mainstream, and broadcasts now reference them as routinely as possession percentage. The audience that wants to inspect referee patterns, manager rotation, or stadium-level effects is no longer marginal.
A live-data platform that surfaces those numbers cleanly — without forcing users to chase down ten different sources — has a clear role in this environment. That is the role RubiScore is built for.
How to start using RubiScore
The platform is accessible at rubiscore.com. Users can browse by competition, by club, by player, or by the live fixture list of the day. There is no login wall to read scores or basic statistics. For users who want to follow specific clubs or competitions more closely, the platform structures its navigation around entities, so a single search for a team name will lead to the club's full page, the recent matches, and the related player and manager pages from there.
For fans, analysts, and anyone who follows football through the lens of data, RubiScore is one of the more comprehensive entries in the modern live-score category — and the depth of its referee, manager, and stadium coverage is what gives it a distinct shape inside a crowded field.