SOCCER PLAYER

Andrés Fleurquin

1975 - Today

Photo of Andrés Fleurquin

Icon of person Andrés Fleurquin

Andrés José Fleurquin Rubio (born 8 February 1975) is a Uruguayan retired footballer who played as a defensive midfielder. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Andrés Fleurquin is the 10,579th most popular soccer player (down from 9,611th in 2019), the 352nd most popular biography from Uruguay (up from 358th in 2019) and the 229th most popular Uruguayan Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andrés Fleurquin by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Andrés Fleurquin ranks 10,579 out of 21,273Before him are Zé Carlos, Ana Maria Marković, Anja Mittag, Milos Kerkez, Jason Cunliffe, and Minoru Kushibiki. After him are Boniek García, Yoshiyuki Shinoda, Valentin Stocker, Fozil Musaev, Takeyuki Okamoto, and Tor Hogne Aarøy.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1975, Andrés Fleurquin ranks 697Before him are Olga Budina, Mia Love, Clarence Acuña, Fábio Luciano, Robert Lopez, and Zoltán Sebescen. After him are Mengke Bateer, Spasoje Bulajič, Jordi Cuixart, Sergiy Matveyev, Eka Kurniawan, and Pretinha.

Others Born in 1975

Go to all Rankings

In Uruguay

Among people born in Uruguay, Andrés Fleurquin ranks 352 out of 444Before him are Maxi Gómez (1996), Gustavo Varela (1978), Gustavo Munúa (1978), Ruben Pereira (1968), Mathías Olivera (1997), and Carlos Bueno (1980). After him are Rodrigo Muñoz (1982), Fabián Canobbio (1980), Alexander Medina (1978), Matías Viña (1997), Fernando Correa (1974), and Bruno Silva (1980).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Uruguay

Among soccer players born in Uruguay, Andrés Fleurquin ranks 229Before him are Maxi Gómez (1996), Gustavo Varela (1978), Gustavo Munúa (1978), Ruben Pereira (1968), Mathías Olivera (1997), and Carlos Bueno (1980). After him are Rodrigo Muñoz (1982), Fabián Canobbio (1980), Alexander Medina (1978), Matías Viña (1997), Fernando Correa (1974), and Bruno Silva (1980).