SOCCER PLAYER

Carsten Jancker

1974 - Today

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Carsten Jancker (born 28 August 1974) is a German football coach and former player. He played as a striker for various teams between 1993 and 2009, including FC Köln, Rapid Wien, FC Bayern Munich, Udinese Calcio, FC Kaiserslautern, Shanghai Shenhua F.C., and SV Mattersburg, as well as the Germany national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Carsten Jancker is the 3,050th most popular soccer player (down from 2,425th in 2019), the 4,676th most popular biography from Germany (down from 4,365th in 2019) and the 210th most popular German Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Carsten Jancker ranks 3,050 out of 21,273Before him are Shinji Okazaki, Erik Persson, Emiliano Sala, Maurice Lafont, Mihoko Iwaya, and Giovanni Lodetti. After him are Tore André Flo, Tibor Kemény, Bengt Berndtsson, Aymeric Laporte, Sabino Bilbao, and Mao Kobayashi.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Carsten Jancker ranks 134Before him are Joe Abercrombie, Parov Stelar, Thure Lindhardt, Lin Chi-ling, Jasmila Žbanić, and Ed Helms. After him are Henry Jackman, Sol Campbell, Nobuyuki Oishi, Sávio, Gary Hall Jr., and Vampeta.

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In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Carsten Jancker ranks 4,679 out of 7,253Before him are Otto Winzer (1902), Heinrich XIX, Prince Reuss of Greiz (1790), Heinrich Gerber (1832), Haim Katz (1947), Hanna Maron (1923), and Fritz-Hubert Gräser (1888). After him are Michael Gwisdek (1942), LeVar Burton (1957), Marieluise Fleißer (1901), Hans Nowak (1937), Klaus Ludwig (1949), and Ralph Siegel (1945).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Germany

Among soccer players born in Germany, Carsten Jancker ranks 210Before him are Helmut Kremers (1949), Wolfgang Rolff (1959), Sigmund Haringer (1908), Emmanuel Scheffer (1924), Georg Stollenwerk (1930), and Norbert Eder (1955). After him are Hans Nowak (1937), Friedhelm Konietzka (1938), Fritz Herkenrath (1928), Birgit Prinz (1977), Jürgen Heinsch (1940), and Rudi Hoffmann (1935).