SOCCER PLAYER

Aleksandrs Starkovs

1955 - Today

Photo of Aleksandrs Starkovs

Icon of person Aleksandrs Starkovs

Aleksandrs Starkovs (born 26 July 1955) is a Latvian football coach and a former footballer who played as a forward. Most recently he coached FK Liepāja. Starkovs has managed clubs such as Spartak Moscow in Russia, FK Baku in Azerbaijan and Skonto FC in Latvia. He had three stints with the Latvia national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 20 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 19 in 2024). Aleksandrs Starkovs is the 5,478th most popular soccer player (down from 4,816th in 2024), the 191st most popular biography from Latvia (down from 186th in 2019) and the 3rd most popular Latvian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Aleksandrs Starkovs by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Aleksandrs Starkovs ranks 5,476 out of 21,273Before him are Alvin Ceccoli, Eric Dier, Takashi Maeda, and Rafael Amador. After him are Hideaki Hagino, Stoyan Yordanov, Dietmar Danner, Baba Rahman, Moise Kean, Krunoslav Jurčić, Zetti, and Roberto Acuña.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1955, Aleksandrs Starkovs ranks 492Before him are Melody Anderson, Tony Miles, Alberta Watson, Stephen Walt, Ali Bencheikh, and Frank Hoste. After him are Roma Maffia, Stéphane Dion, Ken Salazar, Eddie Jobson, Leslie Jordan, and Aleksandr Bashirov.

Others Born in 1955

Go to all Rankings

In Latvia

Among people born in Latvia, Aleksandrs Starkovs ranks 191 out of 323Before him are Valdis Muižnieks (1935), Cēzars Ozers (1937), Aigars Fadejevs (1975), Emīls Dārziņš (1875), Solvita Āboltiņa (1963), and Valdis Valters (1957). After him are Artūrs Irbe (1967), John Konrads (1942), Māris Gailis (1951), Jānis Akuraters (1876), Roberts Zīle (1958), and Nikolai Ekk (1902).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Latvia

Among soccer players born in Latvia, Aleksandrs Starkovs ranks 3Before him are Leonid Ostrovski (1936), and Māris Verpakovskis (1979). After him are Andrejs Prohorenkovs (1977), Vitālijs Astafjevs (1971), Aleksandrs Koļinko (1975), Artjoms Rudņevs (1988), Andrejs Rubins (1978), Mihails Zemļinskis (1969), Andris Vaņins (1980), Vīts Rimkus (1973), and Dzintars Zirnis (1977).