SOCCER PLAYER

Alberto Zapater

1985 - Today

Photo of Alberto Zapater

Icon of person Alberto Zapater

Alberto Zapater Arjol (born 13 June 1985) is a Spanish professional footballer who plays mainly as a defensive midfielder for Canadian Premier League club Atlético Ottawa. He spent most of his career with Zaragoza, appearing in 422 official games and scoring 12 goals. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Alberto Zapater is the 10,222nd most popular soccer player (down from 9,594th in 2019), the 2,502nd most popular biography from Spain (up from 2,517th in 2019) and the 631st most popular Spanish Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Alberto Zapater by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Alberto Zapater ranks 10,222 out of 21,273Before him are Moustapha Salifou, Petr Gabriel, Jean-Claude Darcheville, Tomoyoshi Ikeya, Marco Aurelio Silva Businhani, and César Martín. After him are Blas Pérez, Sojiro Ishii, So Kataoka, Angelo Carlos Pretti, Eddie Clamp, and Maxime Gonalons.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Alberto Zapater ranks 549Before him are Mutya Buena, Anders Jacobsen, Víctor Cáceres, Sergey Khachatryan, François Arnaud, and Mandy Minella. After him are Mirza Teletović, Bănel Nicoliță, Manuel Fettner, Mirko Alilović, Sol Bamba, and Annalisa.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Alberto Zapater ranks 2,502 out of 3,355Before him are Dafne Keen (2005), Mario Suárez (1987), Hugo Silva (1977), Iñigo Landaluze (1977), Itzan Escamilla (1997), and César Martín (1977). After him are Fernando Sánchez (1971), Óscar Hernández (1978), Estrella Morente (1980), Marc Muniesa (1992), Javi López (1986), and Sergi Escobar (1974).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Spain

Among soccer players born in Spain, Alberto Zapater ranks 631Before him are Francisco Puñal (1975), Xisco (1980), Carles Pérez (1998), Marc Crosas (1988), Mario Suárez (1987), and César Martín (1977). After him are Fernando Sánchez (1971), Marc Muniesa (1992), Javi López (1986), Aitor Ocio (1976), Juan Velasco Damas (1977), and Stefan Bajcetic (2004).