5v5 Comp Is Distancing Itself as FPF's Top Division
5v5 Comp Is Distancing Itself as FPF's Top Division
Spring 2026 Season — Competitive Division
Three of Comp's five teams — The Infantry, PartyCrashers, and Flag Moi L'Sac — don't field a roster in 6v6 Division 1/A at all. PartyCrashers are fresh off winning the Canadian Senior Nationals this summer. And the division's leading quarterback, Daniel Lazzara, isn't throwing a single pass anywhere outside Comp. Comp has been considered among the top two divisions in the league, alongside 6v6 Division 1/A — now it's starting to separate itself from the 6v6 format entirely.
Standings So Far
| Team | GP | W | L | PF | PA | +/- |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braves | 6 | 5 | 1 | 209 | 179 | +30 |
| The Infantry | 8 | 5 | 3 | 266 | 204 | +62 |
| Flag Moi L'Sac | 6 | 3 | 3 | 159 | 140 | +19 |
| PartyCrashers | 7 | 3 | 4 | 221 | 209 | +12 |
| Raw Dawgs | 7 | 1 | 6 | 107 | 230 | -123 |
With each team still working toward its 10-game slate, seeding is far from locked in — Flag Moi L'Sac, PartyCrashers, and Raw Dawgs in particular have games left that could reshuffle the bottom of the standings before playoff positioning is set.
The Gap Is Widening
Braves are the lone bridge between the two divisions, the only Comp team that also suits up in 6v6 Division 1/A. Everyone else in Comp — The Infantry, PartyCrashers, and Flag Moi L'Sac — plays exclusively in the 5v5 format. Three of five teams, sitting entirely outside a division that's supposed to represent the league's best.
The separation goes deeper than the standings. It shows up in who's actually throwing the ball.
The Top Five Quarterbacks in FPF Are All Playing Comp
Right now, the best quarterbacks in the league aren't spread across divisions — they're all playing 5v5 Comp.
Daniel Lazzara — The Infantry
Jeanslee Alexis — PartyCrashers
Alex Nadeau-Piuze — Flag Moi L'Sac
Daniel Lazzara has thrown for 1,878 yards and 34 touchdowns on 189 attempts across eight games, completing 73 percent of his throws. Jeanslee Alexis has 21 touchdowns on just 102 attempts. Alex Nadeau-Piuze has 14 touchdowns and a 69.7 completion percentage in four games for Flag Moi L'Sac. All three belong in that top-five conversation.
The same pattern holds at the skill positions — the receivers putting up the league's most notable numbers this season are largely playing 5v5, not 6v6.
Ask around the league and Jonathan Maheu comes up as the top quarterback in FPF, full stop. He suits up for Braves in Comp. His sample size is small this season, but what he's done across his time in this league is enough to put him at the top of that conversation.
Jonathan Maheu — Braves
It's also worth noting that Braves are the only Comp team that fields a roster in 6v6 Division 1/A — making Maheu the one name in this group who plays both formats.
Four names, four different teams, all in the same division. Lazzara, Alexis, and Nadeau-Piuze have all played 6v6 in the past, but this season they're playing exclusively in 5v5 Comp. Maheu is the exception, since Braves still field a Division 1/A roster alongside their Comp team.
PartyCrashers Bring Nationals Pedigree
Alexis's case gets another data point this summer: PartyCrashers are recent Canadian Senior Nationals winners. That result doesn't show up in the Comp standings, but it's hard to separate from the conversation about where the division's top talent actually plays.
Intermediate Adds to the Signal
Comp isn't the only 5v5 division making noise this season. Intermediate is having its strongest season to date, and that's worth paying attention to beyond the standings. If the league's top division and one of its developmental tiers are both trending upward at the same time, it raises a real question about where things are headed: is this a moment where 5v5 pulls ahead, or a sign that FPF's top talent is drifting toward the 5v5 format on a longer-term basis?
FPF used to run a third tier of 5v5 as well — a Recreational division, alongside Comp and Intermediate. With the format growing the way it has recently, and both Comp and Intermediate showing the strength they have this season, it wouldn't be a surprise to see that Recreational tier return down the line. The current trajectory of 5v5 in this league points toward continued growth, not a plateau.
Award Races: The Case So Far
With games still left on the schedule for every team, nothing here is decided — but the numbers already make for some compelling arguments.
QB of the Year
Lazzara's counting stats set the bar — 1,878 yards and 34 touchdowns is the clearest volume case in the division. Alexis and Nadeau-Piuze both have efficiency arguments worth making alongside him.
WR of the Year
Samuel Omombo — PartyCrashers
Jaylan Greaves — The Infantry
Samuel Omombo makes the touchdown-rate case: 11 scores on just 19 catches. Jaylan Greaves makes the yardage case: 341 yards on 22 catches, a 15.5 yards-per-catch average. Both have a real claim on this award depending on what matters most to you.
2-Way Player of the Year
Alexis's case here stands apart. A quarterback producing at an elite level offensively while also leading the division with four interceptions on defense is a rare combination, and right now nobody else in Comp is matching that two-way production.
Defensive Player of the Year
Carl Achy — The Infantry
Bakari Barrett — The Infantry
Carl Achy leads the division in tackles with 25. Bakari Barrett brings a more complete stat line — 22 tackles, four passes defended, and a defensive touchdown. Both are also tied for second in the division with two interceptions apiece, behind only Alexis's league-leading four. Both cases run through The Infantry, whose defense has been a real strength this season.
Sack Leader
Ethan Adrian — The Infantry
Ethan Adrian has the clearest case of any award conversation in this division — five sacks, with no one else in the division particularly close.
The Teams Behind the Talk
The Infantry
PartyCrashers
Flag Moi L'Sac
What Comes Next
Braves hold the top spot in the standings and remain the only real bridge between the two formats. The Infantry bring the league's most balanced roster on both sides of the ball. PartyCrashers arrive with a Nationals banner and a quarterback making a case as one of the league's best, with three games still to play. Whatever the final standings look like once every team hits ten games, Comp has already made its case this season — and with Intermediate rising alongside it, the 5v5 format looks less like an alternative to 6v6 Division 1/A and more like where the league's best players are heading.