SOCCER PLAYER

Andrés Chávez

1991 - Today

Photo of Andrés Chávez

Icon of person Andrés Chávez

Andrés Eliseo Chávez (born 21 March 1991) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a forward, who plays for Greek Super League club Lamia. He is nicknamed Comandante, after Venezuelan former President Hugo Chávez. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Andrés Chávez is the 16,947th most popular soccer player (down from 14,229th in 2019), the 1,114th most popular biography from Argentina (down from 1,063rd in 2019) and the 615th most popular Argentinean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andrés Chávez by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Andrés Chávez ranks 16,947 out of 21,273Before him are Carlos Cáceda, Toshitaka Tsurumi, Rafidine Abdullah, Amad Al-Hosni, Renaud Cohade, and Yasuhiro Tominaga. After him are Stopira, Adam Federici, Takumu Kawamura, Jérémy Pied, Jack Rodwell, and Nikki Havenaar.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1991, Andrés Chávez ranks 956Before him are Ilya Zakharov, Kenny Elissonde, Daniel Ginczek, Ángela Ponce, Garrett Clayton, and Carlos Cáceda. After him are Jack Rodwell, Ondřej Palát, Kent Robin Tønnesen, Minori Sato, Thomas Robinson, and Florian Jozefzoon.

Others Born in 1991

Go to all Rankings

In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Andrés Chávez ranks 1,114 out of 1,154Before him are Silvina D'Elía (1986), Federico Grabich (1990), Lucas Vila (1986), Mariano Julio Izco (1983), Axel Werner (1996), and Paula Ormaechea (1992). After him are Delfina Merino (1989), Sole Jaimes (1989), Sofía Maccari (1984), Alejo Véliz (2003), Emiliano Armenteros (1986), and Julio Arca (1981).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Argentina

Among soccer players born in Argentina, Andrés Chávez ranks 615Before him are Pablo Pérez (1985), Cristian Darío Álvarez (1985), Emmanuel Gigliotti (1987), Lautaro Giannetti (1993), Mariano Julio Izco (1983), and Axel Werner (1996). After him are Sole Jaimes (1989), Alejo Véliz (2003), Emiliano Armenteros (1986), Julio Arca (1981), Damián Lizio (1989), and Santiago Ascacíbar (1997).