SOCCER PLAYER

Alessandro Buongiorno

1999 - Today

Photo of Alessandro Buongiorno

Icon of person Alessandro Buongiorno

Alessandro Buongiorno (born 6 June 1999) is an Italian professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Serie A club Napoli and the Italy national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Alessandro Buongiorno is the 11,169th most popular soccer player (up from 12,893rd in 2019), the 4,709th most popular biography from Italy (up from 4,884th in 2019) and the 481st most popular Italian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Alessandro Buongiorno by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Alessandro Buongiorno ranks 11,169 out of 21,273Before him are Maynor Figueroa, Damian Mori, Nikolče Noveski, Hannes Reinmayr, Marcão, and Shuji Kusano. After him are Takeshi Mizuuchi, Marc Albrighton, Chérif Touré Mamam, Dylan Bronn, Daniela Iraschko-Stolz, and Patrick Paauwe.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1999, Alessandro Buongiorno ranks 182Before him are Michaël Cuisance, Ismail Jakobs, Miray Daner, Jens Petter Hauge, Ferran Jutglà, and Frida Karlsson. After him are Evgenia Medvedeva, Lucas Wong, Chuu, Miomir Kecmanović, Hiroki Abe, and Loena Hendrickx.

Others Born in 1999

Go to all Rankings

In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Alessandro Buongiorno ranks 4,710 out of 5,161Before him are Roberto Gagliardini (1994), Fabiana Luperini (1974), Roberto Di Donna (1968), Marco Fabbri (1988), Lorenzo De Silvestri (1988), and Davide Gualtieri (1971). After him are Daniele Bracciali (1978), Anna Tatangelo (1987), Danilo Petrucci (1990), Andrea Iannone (1989), Andrea Minguzzi (1982), and Denis Marconato (1975).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Italy

Among soccer players born in Italy, Alessandro Buongiorno ranks 481Before him are Giuseppe Sculli (1981), Cesare Bovo (1983), Marco Andreolli (1986), Roberto Gagliardini (1994), Lorenzo De Silvestri (1988), and Davide Gualtieri (1971). After him are Alessandro Pistone (1975), Mattia Caldara (1994), Pierluigi Gollini (1995), Francesco Tavano (1979), Giuseppe Biava (1977), and Andrea Cossu (1980).