SOCCER PLAYER

Carlos Cuéllar

1981 - Today

Photo of Carlos Cuéllar

Icon of person Carlos Cuéllar

Carlos Javier Cuéllar Jiménez (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkaɾlos ˈkweʎaɾ]; born 23 August 1981) is a Spanish former professional footballer. Mainly a central defender, he could also operate as a right-back. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Carlos Cuéllar is the 11,468th most popular soccer player (down from 11,034th in 2019), the 2,655th most popular biography from Spain (up from 2,691st in 2019) and the 705th most popular Spanish Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Carlos Cuéllar by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Carlos Cuéllar ranks 11,468 out of 21,273Before him are Alexander Baumjohann, Gonçalo Paciência, Mikael Ishak, Jungo Fujimoto, Jesús Lucendo, and Dele Aiyenugba. After him are James Angulo, Marco Estrada, Simone Verdi, Fyodor Kudryashov, Darren Anderton, and Dmitri Kombarov.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1981, Carlos Cuéllar ranks 811Before him are Xie Xingfang, Emanuele Birarelli, Jerrika Hinton, LeToya Luckett, Jenova Chen, and Adam Hansen. After him are Marjan Marković, Hicham Aboucherouane, Fiona Dourif, Ryan Hansen, Anthony West, and Emmanuel Pappoe.

Others Born in 1981

Go to all Rankings

In Spain

Among people born in Spain, Carlos Cuéllar ranks 2,655 out of 3,355Before him are Marcos Serrano (1972), Verónica Cuadrado (1979), Osmar (1988), Ricardo Rodríguez (1974), Óliver Torres (1994), and Jesús Lucendo (1970). After him are Albert Rocas (1982), Salva Sevilla (1984), Dani Abalo (1987), Héctor Faubel (1983), María Isabel (1995), and Iñigo Idiakez (1973).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Spain

Among soccer players born in Spain, Carlos Cuéllar ranks 705Before him are Ferran Corominas (1983), Sergio Escudero (1989), Jorge Molina Vidal (1982), Osmar (1988), Óliver Torres (1994), and Jesús Lucendo (1970). After him are Salva Sevilla (1984), Dani Abalo (1987), Toni Velamazán (1977), Javier Casquero (1976), Ibai Gómez (1989), and Toni Doblas (1980).