SOCCER PLAYER

Adrian Ilie

1974 - Today

Photo of Adrian Ilie

Icon of person Adrian Ilie

Bucurel Adrian Ilie (born 20 April 1974) is a Romanian former professional footballer who played as a forward. Nicknamed The Cobra, he is best known for his spell with Valencia in Spain. He played for the Romania national team in one World Cup and two European Championships. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Adrian Ilie is the 3,808th most popular soccer player (down from 2,972nd in 2019), the 425th most popular biography from Romania (down from 380th in 2019) and the 55th most popular Romanian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Adrian Ilie by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Adrian Ilie ranks 3,808 out of 21,273Before him are Carlos Scarone, Carlos Cillóniz, Eric Brook, Álex Grimaldo, Aliou Cissé, and Ernst Lörtscher. After him are Traianos Dellas, Tamaki Uchiyama, Tomonori Tsunematsu, Ali Parvin, Wataru Ota, and Luis Otero.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Adrian Ilie ranks 172Before him are Mario Frick, Kily González, Edgar Wright, Tobias Menzies, Nobuhisa Isono, and Kathryn Hahn. After him are Moon So-ri, Vanessa Blue, Johanna Sällström, Chris Sununu, Havoc, and Joachim Trier.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Romania

Among people born in Romania, Adrian Ilie ranks 425 out of 844Before him are Laura Codruța Kövesi (1973), László Németh (1901), Silviu Lung (1956), Gheorghe Mironescu (1874), Cătălin Predoiu (1968), and Ernst Lörtscher (1913). After him are Ecaterina Stahl-Iencic (1946), Lajos Keresztes (1900), Ecaterina Szabo (1967), György Kulin (1905), Vintilă Cossini (1913), and Cornel Dinu (1948).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Romania

Among soccer players born in Romania, Adrian Ilie ranks 55Before him are Alexandru Neagu (1948), Bogdan Stelea (1967), Ilie Balaci (1956), Samuel Zauber (1901), Silviu Lung (1956), and Ernst Lörtscher (1913). After him are Vintilă Cossini (1913), Cornel Dinu (1948), Michael Klein (1959), Nicolae Lupescu (1940), Ilie Dumitrescu (1969), and Emerich Dembrovschi (1945).