SOCCER PLAYER

Andrei Karyaka

1978 - Today

Photo of Andrei Karyaka

Icon of person Andrei Karyaka

Andrei Konstantinovich Karyaka (Russian: Андрей Константинович Каряка; born 1 April 1978) is a Ukrainian and Russian football coach and a former player who played as a midfielder. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia (down from 17 in 2024). Andrei Karyaka is the 15,198th most popular soccer player (down from 13,228th in 2024), the 1,389th most popular biography from Ukraine (down from 1,277th in 2019) and the 122nd most popular Ukrainian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andrei Karyaka by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Andrei Karyaka ranks 15,198 out of 21,273Before him are Jacobo Ramón, Roberto Torres, Dennis Oliech, Yasin Öztekin, Nathan Tella, and Naoto Matsuo. After him are Wilson Eduardo, Jun Muramatsu, Jordan Lotomba, Raúl Baena, Nedim Bajrami, and Pietro Pellegri.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1978, Andrei Karyaka ranks 1,199Before him are Ömer Onan, Tetyana Shynkarenko, Kalpana Patowary, Shingo Suzuki, Adam Kinzinger, and Lu Andrade. After him are Hideki Sahara, Vijay Sethupathi, Gao Yao, Trina, Stephen Jackson, and Olga Brusnikina.

Others Born in 1978

Go to all Rankings

In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Andrei Karyaka ranks 1,389 out of 1,365Before him are Michel Bampély (1974), Oleksandr Serdyuk (1978), Tetyana Shynkarenko (1978), Nataliya Synyshyn (1985), Oleksandr Yarmak (1991), and Anastasiia Pidpalova (1982). After him are Tanya Malyarchuk (1983), Igor Radivilov (1992), Denys Kostyuk (1982), Oleksy Lukashevych (1977), Kateryna Tarasenko (1987), and Joel Bolomboy (1994).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Ukraine

Among soccer players born in Ukraine, Andrei Karyaka ranks 122Before him are Oleksandr Yatsenko (1985), Bohdan Butko (1991), Oleksiy Hai (1982), Denys Oliynyk (1987), Serhiy Rybalka (1990), and Andriy Dykan (1977). After him are Vladyslav Vanat (2002), Oleksandr Hladkyy (1987), Ivan Ordets (1992), Taras Romanczuk (1991), Danylo Sikan (2001), and Mykola Morozyuk (1988).