SOCCER PLAYER

Dimitar Rangelov

1983 - Today

Photo of Dimitar Rangelov

Icon of person Dimitar Rangelov

Dimitar Rangelov (Bulgarian: Димитър Рангелов; born 9 February 1983) is a Bulgarian former professional footballer who played as a second striker. He made his debut for Bulgaria in 2004. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 23 different languages on Wikipedia. Dimitar Rangelov is the 9,805th most popular soccer player (down from 8,834th in 2024), the 353rd most popular biography from Bulgaria (down from 335th in 2019) and the 62nd most popular Bulgarian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dimitar Rangelov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Dimitar Rangelov ranks 9,805 out of 21,273Before him are Sergei Pareiko, Alexandru Maxim, Florentin Petre, Ángel López, Mouctar Diakhaby, and Bart Verbruggen. After him are Osama Hawsawi, Kazuo Uchida, Szilárd Németh, Hiroya Iwakabe, Renato Steffen, and Alberto Lopo.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1983, Dimitar Rangelov ranks 502Before him are Rafe Spall, André Bahia, Michael Turner, Katia Winter, Carlos Corberán, and Aditi Sharma. After him are Ana Lucía Domínguez, Nithiin, Shinya Aoki, Marc Burns, Gwilym Lee, and Mitsuru Nagata.

Others Born in 1983

Go to all Rankings

In Bulgaria

Among people born in Bulgaria, Dimitar Rangelov ranks 353 out of 415Before him are Ognyana Petrova (1964), Georgi Dimitrov (1959), Bratan Tsenov (1964), Rumyana Neykova (1973), Ivan Tsonov (1966), and Vasil Spasov (1971). After him are Petar Hubchev (1964), Rumiana Jeleva (1969), Miroslav Kostadinov (1976), Bozhidar Iskrenov (1962), Korneliya Ninova (1969), and Nadezhda Neynsky (1962).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Bulgaria

Among soccer players born in Bulgaria, Dimitar Rangelov ranks 62Before him are Zdravko Zdravkov (1970), Ilian Stoyanov (1977), Ivaylo Andonov (1967), Ayan Sadakov (1961), Georgi Yordanov (1963), and Georgi Dimitrov (1959). After him are Petar Hubchev (1964), Bozhidar Iskrenov (1962), Stanislav Manolev (1985), Emil Kremenliev (1969), Tsanko Tsvetanov (1970), and Marian Hristov (1973).