SOCCER PLAYER

Andrija Kaluđerović

1987 - Today

Photo of Andrija Kaluđerović

Icon of person Andrija Kaluđerović

Andrija Kaluđerović (Serbian Cyrillic: Андрија Калуђеровић; born 5 July 1987) is a Serbian former professional footballer who played as a striker. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Andrija Kaluđerović is the 15,173rd most popular soccer player (up from 16,142nd in 2019), the 596th most popular biography from Serbia (up from 627th in 2019) and the 213th most popular Serbian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andrija Kaluđerović by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Andrija Kaluđerović ranks 15,173 out of 21,273Before her are Youssouf Mulumbu, Jun Aoyama, Christian Schwegler, Shuichi Mase, Ben Olsen, and Oliver Burke. After her are Ami Sugita, Tom De Sutter, Dion Cools, Rodrigo Souto, Gastón Silva, and Geyse.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1987, Andrija Kaluđerović ranks 1,061Before her are Sergey Kamenskiy, Sara Petersen, Evandro Silva do Nascimento, Martin Hollstein, Pau Ribas, and Youssouf Mulumbu. After her are Manuel Medrano, Giorgia Bordignon, Elena Satine, Tim Tebow, Ben Gastauer, and Alexander Salák.

Others Born in 1987

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Andrija Kaluđerović ranks 596 out of 661Before her are Dejan Stefanović (1974), Nikola Rađen (1985), Ivan Šaponjić (1997), Dajana Butulija (1986), Nađa Higl (1987), and Dejan Lekić (1985). After her are Angelina Topić (2005), Tijana Malešević (1991), Aleksandar Jovanović (1992), Marko Simić (1987), Nemanja Rnić (1984), and Bojana Milenković (1997).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Serbia

Among soccer players born in Serbia, Andrija Kaluđerović ranks 213Before her are Nenad Erić (1982), Veljko Birmančević (1998), Dejan Milovanović (1984), Dejan Stefanović (1974), Ivan Šaponjić (1997), and Dejan Lekić (1985). After her are Aleksandar Jovanović (1992), Marko Simić (1987), Nemanja Rnić (1984), Danel Sinani (1997), Aleksa Terzić (1999), and Damir Kahriman (1984).