Distribute strong readers
Toggle ratings, mark your strongest readers as 5, weakest as 1. The snake-draft puts one strong reader in every group.
Make science-fair grouping fair. Random or skill-balanced, with a name list paste straight from your roster.
The free version does the job. The optional template pack just makes brackets look beautiful for events, classrooms and clubs.
Free forever for basic use · No signup required
Teachers grouping a class for project work who want to avoid the same friend-cliques every term. Optional balancing keeps strong readers spread across groups.
Adjust as needed.
Use CSV export.
Toggle ratings, mark your strongest readers as 5, weakest as 1. The snake-draft puts one strong reader in every group.
There's a temptation to think a sport-specific or classroom-specific tool would be 'better' than a generic generator. In practice the opposite is true: the rules of fair team-splitting are the same whether you're dividing a Year 7 PE class or a Sunday-league football squad. What changes between audiences is the framing — the language used in the guide, the typical group size, the kinds of ratings people record. The underlying maths (Fisher–Yates shuffle, snake-draft balancing) is identical. That's why this site uses one generator across many audience-specific pages: the same engine, with copy and presets tuned to the context.
If you'll regenerate teams from the same roster repeatedly — every Tuesday training, every Friday game night — paste the names once, click 'Copy as text', and save the result in a note app or a pinned message. Next session, paste it back. There's no account system to maintain and nothing to forget; the names live wherever you keep your other notes. For coaches managing multiple squads, prefix each name with a one-letter squad tag (e.g. 'A Alex', 'B Sam') and use the filter step to keep only the relevant tag before generating.
No — names live only in the open browser tab.
Yes. The generator doesn't ask for personal information, doesn't display ads inside the tool itself, and runs entirely client-side. Many teachers use it weekly. See the trust and safety page for the full position on under-16 use.
Yes — the 'Export CSV' button gives you a two-column file (team, name) that opens cleanly in Excel, Google Sheets, and Numbers. From there you can pivot, filter, or merge with attendance records.
Add their name to the textarea and regenerate. If you want to preserve the existing teams and just slot the latecomer in, use the 'Add to smallest team' shortcut instead of regenerating — it places them on whichever team currently has the fewest members.
Built for the moment you walk into the gym with 28 kids and need fair teams before the warm-up ends.
OpenStop one team carrying the whole game. Rate each player 1–5 and we'll split them into teams whose total skill is as even as possible.
OpenBuilt for teachers and PE staff who need a clean printed bracket for sports day, inter-class finals, or after-school clubs.
OpenCamp counsellors: paste your group, pick animals or colours, get four spirited teams ready for the relay.
OpenMemorable team names + balanced groups = a scavenger hunt that doesn't fall apart in the first ten minutes.
OpenFree forever for basic use. No signup required. The free version really does do the job.
Want prettier prints? See the optional template pack