لاعب كرة القدم

Adam Obert

2002 - حتى اليوم

Photo of Adam Obert

Icon of person Adam Obert

Adam Obert is a لاعب كرة القدم born in 2002 in , which is now part of modern day Bratislava, Slovakia. Adam Obert is currently 24 years old.

His biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Adam Obert is the 20,163rd most popular لاعب كرة القدم, the 466th most popular biography from Slovakia and the 127th most popular Slovak لاعب كرة القدم.

Adam Obert is a Slovak footballer born in 2002, known for playing as a midfielder. He gained recognition for his performances in youth leagues and has been involved with various Slovak national youth teams.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Adam Obert by language

Loading...

Among لاعب كرة القدم

Among لاعب كرة القدم, Adam Obert ranks 20,163 out of 21,273Before him are Dominic Matteo, Charlie Austin, Masahiro Momitani, Recio, Geoff Cameron, and Godfrey Oboabona. After him are Josh McEachran, Casey Stoney, Hugo Bueno, Yasuhiro Nomoto, Shinnosuke Nakatani, and Gyrano Kerk.

Most Popular لاعب كرة القدم in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 2002, Adam Obert ranks 268Before him are Shunsuke Mito, Elena Huelva, Kike Salas, Nathanaël Mbuku, Gabriel Veron, and Julian Dennison. After him are Hugo Bueno, Alan Velasco, Elkan Baggott, Johann Lepenant, Sakura Motoki, and Hanna Bennison.

Others Born in 2002

Go to all Rankings

In Slovakia

Among people born in Slovakia, Adam Obert ranks 466 out of 418Before him are Peter Cehlárik (1995), Zoltán Harsányi (1987), Erik Jirka (1997), Ľubomír Michalík (1983), Natália Šubrtová (1989), and Peter Čerešňák (1993). After him are Zuzana Števulová (1983), Marcel Haščák (1987), Dávid Ďuriš (1999), Marek Rodák (1996), Martin Koscelník (1995), and Jakub Hromada (1996).

Among لاعب كرة القدم In Slovakia

Among لاعب كرة القدم born in Slovakia, Adam Obert ranks 127Before him are Štefan Tarkovič (1973), Ľubomír Tupta (1998), Leo Sauer (2005), Zoltán Harsányi (1987), Erik Jirka (1997), and Ľubomír Michalík (1983). After him are Dávid Ďuriš (1999), Marek Rodák (1996), Martin Koscelník (1995), Jakub Hromada (1996), Róbert Mazáň (1994), and David Strelec (2001).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol