SOCCER PLAYER

Bashar Resan

1996 - Today

Photo of Bashar Resan

Icon of person Bashar Resan

Bashar Resan Bonyan Albu-Mohammed (Arabic: بشار رسن بنيان; born 22 December 1996) is an Iraqi professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Pakhtakor, and the Iraq national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 16 in 2024). Bashar Resan is the 19,307th most popular soccer player (down from 13,543rd in 2024), the 388th most popular biography from Iraq (down from 371st in 2019) and the 32nd most popular Iraqi Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Bashar Resan by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Bashar Resan ranks 19,307 out of 21,273Before him are Lina Nilsson, Brian Maisonneuve, Đorđe Lazić, Robin Hack, Koji Hashimoto, and Toru Chishima. After him are Amjad Attwan, Willem Geubbels, Felipe Pardo, Maxime Dupé, Armando Vajushi, and Kota Fukatsu.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Bashar Resan ranks 766Before him are Katharina Truppe, Ingrid Oliveira, Ákos Kecskés, Michelle Kroppen, Cho Yu-min, and Nina Stojanović. After him are İpek Soylu, Dinara Saduakassova, Callum Scotson, Álvaro Hodeg, Denis Spitsov, and Lisa Mayer.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Iraq

Among people born in Iraq, Bashar Resan ranks 388 out of 384Before him are Mahdi Karim (1983), Dana Hussain (1986), Humam Tariq (1996), Ali Faez (1994), Karrar Jassim (1987), and Rebin Sulaka (1992). After him are Amjad Attwan (1997), Ameen Al-Dakhil (2002), Ibrahim Bayesh (2000), Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf (1992), Mohammed Hameed Farhan (1993), and Yaser Kasim (1991).

Others born in Iraq

Go to all Rankings

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Iraq

Among soccer players born in Iraq, Bashar Resan ranks 32Before him are Mohammed Waad (1999), Mahdi Karim (1983), Humam Tariq (1996), Ali Faez (1994), Karrar Jassim (1987), and Rebin Sulaka (1992). After him are Amjad Attwan (1997), Ameen Al-Dakhil (2002), Ibrahim Bayesh (2000), Ahmed Ibrahim Khalaf (1992), Mohammed Hameed Farhan (1993), and Yaser Kasim (1991).