SOCCER PLAYER

Alexandru Mățel

1989 - Today

Photo of Alexandru Mățel

Icon of person Alexandru Mățel

Alexandru Mățel (born 17 October 1989) is a Romanian former professional footballer who played mainly as a right back and currently the chief scout of Liga I club Farul Constanța. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Alexandru Mățel is the 13,171st most popular soccer player (down from 13,167th in 2019), the 766th most popular biography from Romania (up from 773rd in 2019) and the 161st most popular Romanian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Alexandru Mățel by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Alexandru Mățel ranks 13,171 out of 21,273Before him are Sayed Mohammed Jaffer, Babanco, Omar Alderete, Luis Ibáñez, Jorrit Hendrix, and Naomichi Ueda. After him are Nobuyuki Zaizen, Junji Nishizawa, Mohammed Al-Breik, Darío Figueroa, Hiroki Yamada, and Arkadiusz Bąk.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1989, Alexandru Mățel ranks 711Before him are Alan Kardec, Frank Stäbler, Hugh Mitchell, Frederick Lau, Paraskevi Papachristou, and Jurij Tepeš. After him are Tessa Worley, Vania King, Hassan Whiteside, Victor Muffat-Jeandet, David Miller, and Matías Aguirregaray.

Others Born in 1989

Go to all Rankings

In Romania

Among people born in Romania, Alexandru Mățel ranks 766 out of 844Before him are Aurelia Dobre (1972), Simona Gherman (1985), Alexandra Dulgheru (1989), Loredana Dinu (1984), Alex Florea (1991), and Andrei Ursu (1993). After him are Ester Peony (1993), Ovidiu Petre (1982), Roxen (2000), Bogdan Mara (1977), Roberta Anastase (1976), and Valerică Găman (1989).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Romania

Among soccer players born in Romania, Alexandru Mățel ranks 161Before him are Marius Popa (1978), Sorin Ghionea (1979), Laurențiu Roșu (1975), Alexandru Chipciu (1989), Dragoș Grigore (1986), and Iasmin Latovlevici (1986). After him are Ovidiu Petre (1982), Bogdan Mara (1977), Valerică Găman (1989), Nicolae Mitea (1985), Adrian Cristea (1983), and Eduard Stăncioiu (1981).