SOCCER PLAYER

Aleksandr Borodyuk

1962 - Today

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Aleksandr Genrikhovich Borodyuk (Russian: Александр Генрихович Бородюк; born 30 November 1962) is a Russian football coach and former international player for USSR (playing one match in 1990 FIFA World Cup) and Russia (appearing twice in the 1994 edition). Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 26 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 25 in 2024). Aleksandr Borodyuk is the 6,111th most popular soccer player (down from 5,489th in 2024), the 2,495th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,443rd in 2019) and the 79th most popular Russian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Aleksandr Borodyuk ranks 6,111 out of 21,273Before him are Sven Bender, Aruna Dindane, Guy Saint-Vil, Oceano Cruz, Hernán Medford, and Kyohei Suzaki. After him are Philippe Albert, Giorgi Sichinava, Gert Engels, Wilfried Bony, Rayan Cherki, and Guillermo Páez.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1962, Aleksandr Borodyuk ranks 538Before him are Rob Morrow, Jáchym Topol, Elizaveta Glinka, Stuart Pearce, Tim Guinee, and Oceano Cruz. After him are Katarzyna Figura, Bruno Thiry, Dominik Moll, Eamonn Walker, Mike Bordin, and Chris Christie.

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Aleksandr Borodyuk ranks 2,495 out of 3,761Before him are Ivan Artobolevsky (1905), Alexey Dreev (1969), Svetlana Masterkova (1968), Zakhar Prilepin (1975), Tatyana Lebedeva (1976), and Jeanna Friske (1974). After him are Natalia Bestemianova (1960), Fyodor Simashev (1945), Lyudmyla Denisova (1960), Sergei Fedorov (1969), Yelizaveta Bagryantseva (1929), and Isa Munayev (1965).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Aleksandr Borodyuk ranks 79Before him are Aleksandr Lenyov (1944), Yuri Falin (1937), Evgeny Lovchev (1949), Gennady Yevryuzhikhin (1944), Viktor Shustikov (1939), and Leonid Slutsky (1971). After him are Nikolai Tishchenko (1926), Oleg Kopayev (1937), Aleksandr Uvarov (1960), Oleg Pashinin (1974), Alan Dzagoev (1990), and Dmitri Kharine (1968).