SOCCER PLAYER

Boban Babunski

1968 - Today

Photo of Boban Babunski

Icon of person Boban Babunski

Boban Babunski (Macedonian: Бобан Бабунски; born 5 May 1968) is a Macedonian retired footballer who played as a central defender, and a coach. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Boban Babunski is the 1,925th most popular soccer player (up from 2,283rd in 2019), the 40th most popular biography from North Macedonia (up from 43rd in 2019) and the 3rd most popular Macedonian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Boban Babunski by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Boban Babunski ranks 1,925 out of 21,273Before him are Ignacio Eizaguirre, Víctor Morales, Mayumi Kaji, Paulinho de Almeida, Jude Bellingham, and Mateja Kežman. After him are Heleno de Freitas, Norberto Alonso, Zdeněk Zikán, Emre Belözoğlu, Ernst Albrecht, and Yumi Watanabe.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1968, Boban Babunski ranks 137Before him are Stephanie Seymour, Jorja Fox, Maria Grazia Cucinotta, Iñaki Urdangarin, Petr Korda, and Kelly Hu. After him are Casper Van Dien, Dragana Mirković, David Gray, Alan Cox, Billy Crudup, and Michael Cole.

Others Born in 1968

Go to all Rankings

In North Macedonia

Among people born in North Macedonia, Boban Babunski ranks 40 out of 156Before him are Grigor Parlichev (1830), Toše Proeski (1981), Georgi Pulevski (1817), Vlado Goreski (1958), Milka Babović (1928), and Kočo Racin (1908). After him are Goran Pandev (1983), Parashqevi Qiriazi (1880), Dušan Džamonja (1928), Yahya Kemal Beyatlı (1884), Nikola Kljusev (1927), and Talat Xhaferi (1962).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In North Macedonia

Among soccer players born in North Macedonia, Boban Babunski ranks 3Before him are Dragoslav Šekularac (1937), and Darko Pančev (1965). After him are Goran Pandev (1983), Boško Gjurovski (1961), Gjoko Hadžievski (1955), Kiril Dojčinovski (1943), Goce Sedloski (1974), Blazhe Ilijoski (1984), Ivan Trichkovski (1987), Milko Djurovski (1963), and Admir Mehmedi (1991).