SOCCER PLAYER

Arley Dinas

1974 - Today

Photo of Arley Dinas

Icon of person Arley Dinas

José Arley Dinas Rodríguez, or simply known as Arley Dinas (born May 16, 1974) is a former Colombian football player. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Arley Dinas is the 7,759th most popular soccer player (up from 8,359th in 2019), the 177th most popular biography from Colombia (up from 202nd in 2019) and the 59th most popular Colombian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Arley Dinas by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Arley Dinas ranks 7,759 out of 21,273Before him are Javier Portillo, Sergey Rodionov, Takuya Yamada, Víctor Rangel, Kenji Moriyama, and Karim Bellarabi. After him are Rubinho, Mustapha Kouici, Wilbert Suvrijn, Zoran Pavlović, Michael Umaña, and Moanes Dabbur.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Arley Dinas ranks 472Before him are J Dilla, Magnus Carlsson, Javier Otxoa, Tarik Oulida, Twinkle Khanna, and Takuya Yamada. After him are Tamala Jones, Ary Abittan, Leandro Simioni, Toranosuke Takagi, Joaquin Castro, and AR Murugadoss.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Colombia

Among people born in Colombia, Arley Dinas ranks 177 out of 356Before him are Miguel Calero (1971), Carlos Valdes (1989), Hámilton Ricard (1974), Antony de Ávila (1962), Ernesto Díaz (1952), and Adrián Ramos (1986). After him are Gabriel Jaime Gómez Jaramillo (1959), Juan Fernando Quintero (1993), Julián Estiven Vélez (1982), Edwin Congo (1976), Santiago Botero (1972), and Bernardo Redín (1963).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Colombia

Among soccer players born in Colombia, Arley Dinas ranks 59Before him are Santiago Arias (1992), Miguel Calero (1971), Hámilton Ricard (1974), Antony de Ávila (1962), Ernesto Díaz (1952), and Adrián Ramos (1986). After him are Gabriel Jaime Gómez Jaramillo (1959), Juan Fernando Quintero (1993), Julián Estiven Vélez (1982), Edwin Congo (1976), Bernardo Redín (1963), and Luis Fernando Herrera (1962).