SOCCER PLAYER

A'ala Hubail

1982 - Today

Photo of A'ala Hubail

Icon of person A'ala Hubail

A'ala Ahmed Mohamed Hubail (Arabic: علاء أحمد محمد حبيل; born 25 June 1982) is a Bahraini former professional footballer who played as a striker. With the Bahrain national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia. A'ala Hubail is the 10,725th most popular soccer player (down from 8,512th in 2024), the 12th most popular biography from Bahrain (down from 11th in 2019) and the most popular Bahraini Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of A'ala Hubail by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, A'ala Hubail ranks 10,731 out of 21,273Before him are Brad Guzan, Nampalys Mendy, Fábio Luciano, Stephan Van Der Heyden, Alen Peternac, Tajon Buchanan, Jean Michaël Seri, Carlos Bueno, Hideaki Mori, Mario Eggimann, Hussein Abdulghani, and Doctor Khumalo.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1982, A'ala Hubail ranks 650Before him are Moïse Brou Apanga, Sabrina, Eneda Tarifa, Michael Frater, Melody, and Ulrich Robeiri. After him are Malú, Ho-Pin Tung, Martin Koch, Timmy Trumpet, Ailyn, and Tomas Vaitkus.

Others Born in 1982

Go to all Rankings

In Bahrain

Among people born in Bahrain, A'ala Hubail ranks 12 out of 24Before him are Tarafa (543), Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa (1965), May Calamawy (1986), Nawaf Shukralla (1976), Mamtha Mohandas (1984), and Jacqueline Fernandez (1985). After him are Salman Isa (1977), Houda Nonoo (1964), Frank Turner (1981), Ismail Abdullatif (1986), Sayed Mohammed Jaffer (1985), and Ali Assadalla (1993).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Bahrain

Among soccer players born in Bahrain, A'ala Hubail ranks 1After him are Salman Isa (1977), Ismail Abdullatif (1986), Sayed Mohammed Jaffer (1985), Ali Assadalla (1993), Mohamed Husain (1980), Mohamed Salmeen (1980), Abdulla Yusuf Helal (1993), Hussain Ali Baba (1982), Mohamed Hubail (1981), Waleed Al Hayam (1991), and Mohamed Marhoon (1998).