SOCCER PLAYER

Bilal Mohammed

1986 - Today

Photo of Bilal Mohammed

Icon of person Bilal Mohammed

Bilal Mohammed Rajab (Arabic: بلال محمد رجب; born 2 June 1986) is a Qatari footballer who plays as a defender. He was a long-time captain of the Qatari national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 16 different languages on Wikipedia. Bilal Mohammed is the 19,192nd most popular soccer player (down from 14,423rd in 2024), the 40th most popular biography from Qatar (down from 34th in 2019) and the 21st most popular Qatari Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Bilal Mohammed by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Bilal Mohammed ranks 19,192 out of 21,273Before him are Jeremy Brockie, Kristoffer Ajer, Matthew Jurman, Josue Souza Santos, Amido Baldé, and Jérémy Berthod. After him are Fabian Bredlow, David Carmo, Wang Dalei, Linda Caicedo, Yoshihito Fujita, and Kota Sugawara.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1986, Bilal Mohammed ranks 1,649Before him are Vadzim Straltsou, Muhannad Assiri, Alejandro Faurlín, Anne-Caroline Graffe, Hernán Bernardello, and Vassiliki Vougiouka. After him are Takahiro Ohara, Kentaro Seki, Konstantinos Filippidis, Molly Ephraim, Marcos García, and Mike Frantz.

Others Born in 1986

Go to all Rankings

In Qatar

Among people born in Qatar, Bilal Mohammed ranks 40 out of 41Before him are Assim Madibo (1996), Tarek Salman (1997), Khalid Muftah (1992), Mohammed Musa (1986), Mostafa Meshaal (2001), and Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar (1992). After him are Khalid Muneer (1998), Ahmed Moein (1995), Naif Al-Hadhrami (2001), Jassem Gaber (2002), Yusuf Abdurisag (1999), and Jorge Cárdenas (null).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Qatar

Among soccer players born in Qatar, Bilal Mohammed ranks 21Before him are Assim Madibo (1996), Tarek Salman (1997), Khalid Muftah (1992), Mohammed Musa (1986), Mostafa Meshaal (2001), and Al-Mahdi Ali Mukhtar (1992). After him are Khalid Muneer (1998), Ahmed Moein (1995), Naif Al-Hadhrami (2001), Jassem Gaber (2002), and Yusuf Abdurisag (1999).