VS1FC
The WFPA’s first major World Championship tournament for the best free agents on the planet to take place in 2026 in Los Angeles.
The VS1 Football Championship debuts 2026 in Los Angeles.
In the modern football landscape, talent alone doesn’t always guarantee opportunity.
Every season, over thousands of professional footballers around the world become free agents, players and goalkeepers. Hundreds of them have played in top-tier leagues, worn their national team’s crest, or trained at the most prestigious academies — only to find themselves on the outside looking in, waiting for the next contract, the next phone call, the next chance, while they wait the World Football Players’ Association is building the solution.
A new major tournament, launching in Los Angeles, that offers something different.
It’s called VS1FC — short for the VS1 Football Championship — and aims to rewrite the rulebook on what a football career can look like, by turning career threat into major opportunity.
Survival Football for the World’s Best.
A World Championship for Pro Players without clubs.
VS1FC is the first-ever global 1v1 championship for pro footballers — a high-stakes, competition where 80+ elite free agents (32 in the main event) compete in a 6 weeks league to knockout season for real prize money that rivals traditional leagues, global exposure, and the ultimate title: World Champion.
Every match is one-on-one with a keeper confined to a restricted area. Every regular season game has cash on the line. Lose — and risk elimination. Win — and take everything.
The Championship allows players to get paid during free agency, while they are in survival mode. At the of the tournament, the transfer window opens, allowing top performers to opt into club contracts or back into VS1FC. While under-performers make way for new talent.
Built for the Player, By the Player
WFP President Charly Musonda Jr. says VS1FC was designed with one mission: to give elite free agents a world-class platform to stay sharp, get seen, and get paid.
“I’ve seen what it’s like to be on the sidelines, to have your value questioned,” Musonda says. “This is about flipping that — putting the power back in the hands of players who still have so much to give.”