SOCCER PLAYER

Aleksandr Uvarov

1960 - Today

Photo of Aleksandr Uvarov

Icon of person Aleksandr Uvarov

Aleksandr Viktorovich Uvarov (Russian: Александр Викторович Уваров; born 13 January 1960) is a Russian and Israeli (since 2003) former football player. He is current goalkeeping coach of Maccabi Tel Aviv. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Aleksandr Uvarov is the 6,254th most popular soccer player (down from 5,588th in 2019), the 2,513th most popular biography from Russia (down from 2,461st in 2019) and the 82nd most popular Russian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Aleksandr Uvarov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Aleksandr Uvarov ranks 6,254 out of 21,273Before him are Demis Nikolaidis, Danny Welbeck, Denis Zakaria, Toshihiro Yamaguchi, José Serrizuela, and Javier de Pedro. After him are Taye Taiwo, Jackie Blanchflower, Santiago Benítez, Hitoshi Nakata, Ladislav Vízek, and Sam Hutchinson.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1960, Aleksandr Uvarov ranks 534Before him are Rosario Fiorello, Ioan Andone, Kaz Hirai, Kenny Garrett, Charles Ng, and Henry Worsley. After him are Bill Johnson, Michel Faber, Dean Malenko, Claudio Langes, Tomás Reñones, and Oliver Parker.

Others Born in 1960

Go to all Rankings

In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Aleksandr Uvarov ranks 2,513 out of 3,761Before him are Sergei Treshchov (1958), Oleg Kopayev (1937), Ivan Udodov (1924), Vladimir Dezhurov (1962), Alfred Kuchevsky (1931), and Nina Rocheva (1948). After him are Kristina Orbakaitė (1971), Andrei Cherkasov (1970), Vladimir Jurowski (1972), Anfisa Reztsova (1964), Sergei Ivanov (1975), and Yuri Balashov (1949).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Russia

Among soccer players born in Russia, Aleksandr Uvarov ranks 82Before him are Gennady Yevryuzhikhin (1944), Viktor Shustikov (1939), Leonid Slutsky (1971), Aleksandr Borodyuk (1962), Nikolai Tishchenko (1926), and Oleg Kopayev (1937). After him are Oleg Pashinin (1974), Alan Dzagoev (1990), Dmitri Kharine (1968), Aleksandr Golovin (1996), Konstantin Zyryanov (1977), and Alexei Guryshev (1925).