SOCCER PLAYER

Dalibor Stevanović

1984 - Today

Photo of Dalibor Stevanović

Icon of person Dalibor Stevanović

Dalibor Stevanović (born 27 September 1984) is a Slovenian professional football coach and former player. He is coach the Swiss Challenge League club Stade Lausanne Ouchy. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Dalibor Stevanović is the 9,215th most popular soccer player (up from 9,332nd in 2019), the 196th most popular biography from Slovenia (up from 211th in 2019) and the 38th most popular Slovene Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dalibor Stevanović by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Dalibor Stevanović ranks 9,215 out of 21,273Before him are Efraín Juárez, Reinaldo da Cruz Oliveira, Antonio Sanabria, Nicolas Ouédec, Dedryck Boyata, and Max Tonetto. After him are Alessia Russo, Pedro Massacessi, Kazuo Shimizu, Mohamed Chaïb, Alioum Boukar, and Marlon Santos.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Dalibor Stevanović ranks 455Before him are Cosmin Moți, Carlos Sánchez, Milorad Čavić, Nery Castillo, Divyanka Tripathi, and Anna Tsuchiya. After him are Steve Darcis, Stewart Downing, Ayila Yussuf, Gottfrid Svartholm, Rune Jarstein, and Anders Lindegaard.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Slovenia

Among people born in Slovenia, Dalibor Stevanović ranks 196 out of 340Before him are Anamarija Lampič (1995), Sani Bečirovič (1981), Alenka Zupančič (1966), Mladen Rudonja (1971), Urška Žolnir (1981), and Nuša Derenda (1969). After him are Benjamin Šeško (2003), Borut Božič (1980), Tina Trstenjak (1990), Ana Soklič (1984), Aleksander Šeliga (1980), and Andraž Kirm (1984).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Slovenia

Among soccer players born in Slovenia, Dalibor Stevanović ranks 38Before him are Marko Šuler (1983), Benjamin Verbič (1993), Miran Pavlin (1971), Ermin Šiljak (1973), Darko Milanič (1967), and Mladen Rudonja (1971). After him are Benjamin Šeško (2003), Aleksander Šeliga (1980), Andraž Kirm (1984), Zlatan Ljubijankić (1983), Saša Gajser (1974), and Robert Koren (1980).