SOCCER PLAYER

Aleksandar Ignjovski

1991 - Today

Photo of Aleksandar Ignjovski

Icon of person Aleksandar Ignjovski

Aleksandar Ignjovski (Serbian Cyrillic: Александар Игњовски; born 27 January 1991) is a Serbian retired footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder or right-back. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 23 different languages on Wikipedia. Aleksandar Ignjovski is the 13,534th most popular soccer player (down from 13,350th in 2024), the 574th most popular biography from Serbia (down from 563rd in 2019) and the 194th most popular Serbian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Aleksandar Ignjovski by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Aleksandar Ignjovski ranks 13,534 out of 21,273Before him are Milad Mohammadi, Takayuki Seto, Masato Fue, Josemi, Shigeo Onoue, and Christian Gyan. After him are Linda Sällström, Nobuhiro Maeda, Javier Delgado, Ernestas Šetkus, Felipe Gutiérrez, and Evgeni Aldonin.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1991, Aleksandar Ignjovski ranks 612Before him are Helen Maroulis, Nabil Bahoui, Fellipe Bertoldo, Lee Sung-yeol, Marieke Lucas Rijneveld, and Matt Bennett. After him are Jota, Junshirō Kobayashi, Kévin Malcuit, Alex Florea, Sardor Rashidov, and Do Ji-han.

Others Born in 1991

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Aleksandar Ignjovski ranks 574 out of 661Before him are Duško Pijetlović (1985), Denis Šefik (1976), Nikola Drinčić (1984), Stevan Jelovac (1989), Miloš Bajalica (1981), and Nemanja Pejčinović (1987). After him are Novica Veličković (1986), Neško Milovanović (1974), Aleksandra Ivošev (1974), Mina Popović (1994), Ana Bjelica (1992), and Uroš Matić (1990).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Serbia

Among soccer players born in Serbia, Aleksandar Ignjovski ranks 194Before him are Luka Milivojević (1991), Milan Gajić (1986), Vladimir Dišljenković (1981), Nikola Drinčić (1984), Miloš Bajalica (1981), and Nemanja Pejčinović (1987). After him are Neško Milovanović (1974), Uroš Matić (1990), Darko Brašanac (1992), Marko Lomić (1983), Saša Lukić (1996), and Nenad Kovačević (1980).