SOCCER PLAYER

Dieter Kühn

1956 - Today

Photo of Dieter Kühn

Icon of person Dieter Kühn

Dieter Kühn (born 4 July 1956) is a German former association footballer who won the silver medal with the East Germany national team at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, Soviet Union and obtained a total of thirteen caps scoring five goals. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Dieter Kühn is the 6,535th most popular soccer player (up from 6,655th in 2019), the 5,741st most popular biography from Germany (up from 5,801st in 2019) and the 401st most popular German Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dieter Kühn by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Dieter Kühn ranks 6,535 out of 21,273Before him are Elivélton, Reto Ziegler, Fernando Cáceres, Nelson Gutiérrez, Aleksandar Radosavljević, and Daichi Kamada. After him are Alfredo Quesada, Loïc Rémy, Ricardinho, Cyril Domoraud, Slobodan Komljenović, and Foto Strakosha.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1956, Dieter Kühn ranks 597Before him are Fernando Quirarte, Ursula Plassnik, Larry Myricks, Christof Koch, Blanche Baker, and Peter Caruana. After him are Maneka Gandhi, Manuel Vicente, Sheryl Lee Ralph, Włodzimierz Ciołek, Paramanga Ernest Yonli, and Paige O'Hara.

Others Born in 1956

Go to all Rankings

In Germany

Among people born in Germany, Dieter Kühn ranks 5,744 out of 7,253Before him are Katja Seizinger (1972), Maren Ade (1976), Deniz Undav (1996), Ulrich Walter (1954), Alexander Goehr (1932), and Harry Groener (1951). After him are Theodor Leupold (null), Ludger Beerbaum (1963), Slobodan Komljenović (1971), Elyas M'Barek (1982), Lutz Heilmann (1966), and Haha (1979).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Germany

Among soccer players born in Germany, Dieter Kühn ranks 401Before him are Robert Huth (1984), Marko Rehmer (1972), Heiko Herrlich (1971), Simon Rolfes (1982), Cédric Soares (1991), and Deniz Undav (1996). After him are Slobodan Komljenović (1971), Thilo Kehrer (1996), Yann Aurel Bisseck (2000), Oliver Reck (1965), Nico Schlotterbeck (1999), and Willi Orban (1992).