BASKETBALL PLAYER

Damir Mulaomerović

1974 - Today

Photo of Damir Mulaomerović

Icon of person Damir Mulaomerović

Damir Mulaomerović (born 19 September 1974) is a Croatian professional basketball coach and former player who is the current coach of KK Dinamo Zagreb. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Damir Mulaomerović is the 587th most popular basketball player (down from 577th in 2019), the 272nd most popular biography from Bosnia and Herzegovina (down from 270th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Bosnian, Herzegovinian Basketball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Damir Mulaomerović by language

Loading...

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS

Among basketball players, Damir Mulaomerović ranks 587 out of 1,757Before him are RJ Barrett, Zelmo Beaty, Luigi Datome, Bobby Portis, Nate Robinson, and Ersan İlyasova. After him are Bill Bridges, Yi Jianlian, Elfrid Payton, Pablo Prigioni, Larry Nance Jr., and Darko Miličić.

Most Popular Basketball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1974, Damir Mulaomerović ranks 633Before him are Wasabi Mizuta, Gus Hansen, Kim Chambers, Yuta Abe, Scarlet Ortiz, and César Aparecido Rodrigues. After him are Fernando Sanz, Karina Aznavourian, René Bolf, Vasyl Slipak, ICS Vortex, and Saša Gajser.

Others Born in 1974

Go to all Rankings

In Bosnia and Herzegovina

Among people born in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Damir Mulaomerović ranks 272 out of 375Before him are Senijad Ibričić (1985), Bojan Bogdanović (1989), Venio Losert (1976), Mario Tokić (1975), Edin Višća (1990), and Brankica Mihajlović (1991). After him are Marija Šestić (1987), Zoran Mikulić (1965), Tomo Miličević (1979), Božidar Jović (1972), Saša Stanišić (1978), and Mladen Bojinović (1977).

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS In Bosnia and Herzegovina

Among basketball players born in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Damir Mulaomerović ranks 12Before him are Zoran Savić (1966), Sabit Hadžić (1957), Emir Mutapčić (1960), Razija Mujanović (1967), Franjo Arapović (1965), and Bojan Bogdanović (1989). After him are Džanan Musa (1999), Mirza Teletović (1985), Vladimir Radmanović (1980), Jusuf Nurkić (1994), Ivica Zubac (1997), and Nihad Đedović (1990).