Coed 1 Power Rankings

Last Updated: February 20, 2026, 18:08 UTC
Coed 1 Power Rankings

1. The Merge 2.0 (4-0)

The Merge are undefeated and basically the new Coed 1 dynasty franchise at this point. What a run they’ve been on since joining the Coed 1 mix for the first time in Winter 2025. They’re unbelievably undefeated in the playoffs and have already won three straight championships which is actually every season they’ve played since joining Coed 1. 3peat (Winter 2025 → Spring 2025 → Fall 2025) and now they’re casually starting Winter 2026 undefeated like it’s business as usual. Marc-Andre Reeves has been doing Marc-Andre Reeves things: 827 passing yards, 22 touchdowns, one interception, and only one sack taken through four games. The consistency season after season is impressive.


2. The Silly Geese (3–0)

The Silly Geese honestly look like they were built in a lab. Rachelle Vallieres deserves GM of the Year already because this roster is unfair when it comes to literally every attribute you could ask for and there isn’t a weak spot. It’s just weapons on weapons on weapons. Through three games, Kevin Wyeth has 19 touchdowns, zero interceptions, and hasn’t been sacked once so at this point the only real questions are: will anyone sack him? Will he throw a pick? Will the universe allow it? Defensively the only odd stat is that they somehow don’t have a sack yet as a team which feels impossible given their athleticism. If you had to nitpick something, it’s rusher availability. Jessica Bositampen is one of the best rushers in all of FPF but she’s only played one game so far and will need four of the final seven to qualify for playoffs. Wyeth’s favourite red-zone target is of course the GM herself Rachelle already has five touchdowns and three XP2s. Coincidence? Maybe. Strategic roster construction? Definitely. The depth is ridiculous multiple receivers already have 100+ yards and 3+ touchdowns.


3a. Lego My Flag (3–1)

3b. La Guerre des Tuques (1–3)

A 3–1 team and a 1–3 team both ranked #3? Yep Lego My Flag lands at #3a and they have an entertaining rivalry brewing right now in the division. Their two-game split with La Guerre des Tuques perfectly shows how balanced this division is. In the first matchup both Jeff Rosenblatt and Alexandre Szalipszki threw for exactly 202 yards and each had 19 completions. Fluke? La Guerre barely escaped with a 36–33 win and Eric Namts’ hat-trick performance scoring three touchdowns helped. Lego was just one drive short even though they won the conversion battle (one 1-pt and one 2-pt convert, while La Guerre had none). Then Lego came back in the rematch and basically said, “Yeah… not happening twice.” The second game was a statement 45–22 win and the difference was the defense showing up with big plays. Szalipszki went from a perfect six-touchdown, zero-interception performance in Game 1 to throwing two interceptions in Game 2. Lego flipped the momentum instead of just trading touchdowns. Rosenblatt is quietly having one of the best seasons in the division: 21 touchdowns, only one interception, and a 77% completion rate.

For La Guerre des Tuques ranked #3b the record says 1–3 but the eye test says this team is coming. La Guerre is one of the more exciting teams in the division. They play aggressive, they push tempo and they’re not afraid to turn games into shootouts. When the offense is clicking they can score with anyone but yes the mistakes are there and the turnovers have hurt. The consistency isn’t fully built yet but this is still a relatively new Coed 1 team as last season was their first after moving up from Coed 2 and they’re still adjusting. I think the ceiling is higher than the record suggests and they feel like a team that just needs more reps together.


4. Fitsquad (2–2)

This isn’t a new team figuring it out as they’ve been together for a long time now entering their 14th season since 2022 and they’re coming off a championship loss to The Merge last season Fall 2025. They’ve been there and felt the big stage so Fitsquad is a team experienced and they know how to compete. The issue this season hasn’t been talent because they can hang with anyone and they’ve proven that but being able to close games against the top teams is a different level of accomplishment. William Brouard has been playing really well and at this point he’s a true veteran in the league. He’s surrounded by playmakers too in Boudjema Saada, Frédéric Chevarie while Daryus Lattimore is producing on offense and coming down with picks on defense. Don’t sleep on Sarah Cormier bringing the pressure with 3 sacks in four games.


5. The IG Team (0–3)

The record doesn’t look great but context matters as they’ve run into Silly Geese once and Merge twice that’s a brutal way to open a season. The two losses to Merge came by a combined 90–48 score and that is a 42-point difference in just two games… talk about kryptonite. On the flip side they only fell to Silly Geese 34–31 so it’s not like they can’t compete. Defensively is where the concern kicks in: zero interceptions and just one sack in three games. With experienced names like Constance Millaire, Samuel Omombo, and Jeanslee Alexis you’d expect more production than this but the season is still young. The schedule softens from here on out and now it’s about whether their confidence will rise with it.


6. Plenty of Fish (0–4)

Plenty of Fish used to be known for offense, fast-paced and shootouts. They forced you to match them possession for possession while their identity was built around tempo and the unique playcalling driven by GM and captain Seth Galina’s offensive schemes. At their peak you weren’t beating them in a low scoring game. You had to run with them but right now they’re 0–4 and the offense hasn’t looked the same. The tempo feels slower and the big-play rhythm hasn’t consistently hit like it used to. The schemes that once created mismatches aren’t producing at the same level in a division that has evolved with faster athletes, deeper rosters, tighter defenses. They can still flash but without consistency the flashes don’t matter unfortunately and turnovers have amplified the issues that they're facing. Honestly speaking the floor has just been too low.

More articles written by Phil Featured articles More articles