Fußballspieler

Daniel Fonseca

1969 - heute

DE.WIKIPEDIA PAGE VIEWS (PV)

Photo of Daniel Fonseca

Icon of person Daniel Fonseca

Daniel Fonseca Garis (* 13. September 1969 in Montevideo) ist ein ehemaliger uruguayischer Fußballspieler. Heute arbeitet er als Spielerberater. Er ist der Halbbruder der Fußballnationalspieler Juan Ramón und Jorge Curbelo. Mehr auf Wikipedia lesen

His biography is available in 29 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 27 in 2024). Daniel Fonseca is the 2,943rd most popular fußballspieler (down from 2,849th in 2024), the 157th most popular biography from Uruguay (up from 158th in 2019) and the 88th most popular Uruguayan Fußballspieler.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Daniel Fonseca by language

Loading...

Among Fußballspielers

Among fußballspielers, Daniel Fonseca ranks 2,943 out of 21,273Before him are Jesús Bermúdez, Paulo Ferreira, Wolfgang Rolff, Mario de las Casas, Batista, and Heinz Hermann. After him are Denzel Dumfries, Zoltán Beke, Tetsu Yamato, Osvaldo Héctor Cruz, Božo Broketa, and Aleksandar Petaković.

Most Popular Fußballspielers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1969, Daniel Fonseca ranks 220Before him are Juan Carlos Villamayor, Kim Raver, Danis Tanović, Spike Jonze, Muriel Barbery, and Stephen Hendry. After him are Cosmin Olăroiu, Ben Mendelsohn, Adam Riess, Erlend Loe, José Chamot, and Lucy Hawking.

Others Born in 1969

Go to all Rankings

In Uruguay

Among people born in Uruguay, Daniel Fonseca ranks 157 out of 444Before him are Ángel Cabrera (1939), Fede Álvarez (1978), Juan Masnik (1943), Víctor Espárrago (1944), Feliciano Viera (1872), and Ronald Araújo (1999). After him are Juan Arremón (1899), Javier Ambrois (1932), Juan Lindolfo Cuestas (1837), Washington Ortuño (1928), Guillermo Escalada (1936), and Carlos Blixen (1936).

Among Fußballspielers In Uruguay

Among fußballspielers born in Uruguay, Daniel Fonseca ranks 88Before him are Julio Montero Castillo (1944), Waldemar Victorino (1952), Ángel Cabrera (1939), Juan Masnik (1943), Víctor Espárrago (1944), and Ronald Araújo (1999). After him are Juan Arremón (1899), Javier Ambrois (1932), Washington Ortuño (1928), Guillermo Escalada (1936), Atilio Ancheta (1948), and Fernando Picun (1972).

العربية中文NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutschMagyarItaliano日本語PolskiPortuguêsРусскийEspañol