SOCCER PLAYER

Ami Sugita

1992 - Today

Photo of Ami Sugita

Icon of person Ami Sugita

Ami Sugita (杉田 亜未, Sugita Ami; born March 14, 1992) is a Japanese football player. She plays for Nojima Stella in Japans WE League. She played for Japan national team. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Ami Sugita is the 15,174th most popular soccer player (up from 17,933rd in 2019), the 3,986th most popular biography from Japan (up from 4,155th in 2019) and the 2,036th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Ami Sugita by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Ami Sugita ranks 15,174 out of 21,273Before her are Jun Aoyama, Christian Schwegler, Shuichi Mase, Ben Olsen, Oliver Burke, and Andrija Kaluđerović. After her are Tom De Sutter, Dion Cools, Rodrigo Souto, Gastón Silva, Geyse, and Marvin Zeegelaar.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1992, Ami Sugita ranks 771Before her are Laurent Jans, Malcolm Brogdon, André Ramalho, Sun Yanan, Maxime Loïc Feudjou, and Albin Lagergren. After her are Chen Ruolin, Petr Vakoč, Maryia Mamashuk, Sandi Morris, Laura Benkarth, and Emre Akbaba.

Others Born in 1992

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Ami Sugita ranks 3,999 out of 6,245Before her are Chiaki Omigawa (1989), Riki Nakaya (1989), Ayumi Oya (1994), Mayu Ikejiri (1996), Jun Aoyama (1988), and Shuichi Mase (1973). After her are Takayuki Komine (1974), Keiji Yoshimura (1979), Hideto Inoue (1982), Hiromichi Katano (1982), Tomoyoshi Tsurumi (1979), and Shogo Tokihisa (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Ami Sugita ranks 2,049Before her are Tatsuya Furuhashi (1980), Yusuke Sato (1977), Ayumi Oya (1994), Mayu Ikejiri (1996), Jun Aoyama (1988), and Shuichi Mase (1973). After her are Takayuki Komine (1974), Keiji Yoshimura (1979), Hideto Inoue (1982), Hiromichi Katano (1982), Tomoyoshi Tsurumi (1979), and Shogo Tokihisa (1984).