BASKETBALL PLAYER

Dragan Šakota

1952 - Today

Photo of Dragan Šakota

Icon of person Dragan Šakota

Dragan Šakota (Serbian Cyrillic: Драган Шакота, Greek: Ντράγκαν Σάκοτα; born June 16, 1952) is a Serbian and Greek professional basketball coach, currently coaching AEK Athens of the Greek Basketball League (GBL). Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Dragan Šakota is the 163rd most popular basketball player (down from 104th in 2019), the 288th most popular biography from Serbia (down from 242nd in 2019) and the 9th most popular Serbian Basketball Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Dragan Šakota by language

Loading...

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS

Among basketball players, Dragan Šakota ranks 163 out of 1,757Before him are Nate Archibald, Gary Payton, John Wall, Doug Christie, Joe Bryant, and Brian Shaw. After him are Panagiotis Giannakis, Kiki VanDeWeghe, Mike D'Antoni, John Wooden, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Andro Knego.

Most Popular Basketball Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1952, Dragan Šakota ranks 436Before him are Ricardo Villa, Mokhtar Hasni, Joe Alaskey, Jiichiro Date, Stanislav Seman, and Kama Sywor Kamanda. After him are John L. Hennessy, Vittorio Sgarbi, Rosemarie Trockel, Brigitte Engerer, Didier Raoult, and Dave Loebsack.

Others Born in 1952

Go to all Rankings

In Serbia

Among people born in Serbia, Dragan Šakota ranks 288 out of 661Before him are Milunka Lazarević (1932), Zoran Živković (1945), Luka Lipošinović (1933), Svetlana Velmar-Janković (1933), Goran Karan (1964), and László Szabados (1911). After him are Ivan Jovanović (1962), Mihailo Petrović (1957), Milorad Arsenijević (1906), Zoran Živković (1960), Slaviša Žungul (1954), and Milinko Pantić (1966).

Among BASKETBALL PLAYERS In Serbia

Among basketball players born in Serbia, Dragan Šakota ranks 9Before him are Nikola Jokić (1995), Svetislav Pešić (1949), Dragan Kićanović (1953), Aleksandar Đorđević (1967), Dejan Bodiroga (1973), and Zoran Slavnić (1949). After him are Saša Obradović (1969), Miloš Teodosić (1987), Željko Rebrača (1972), Marko Jarić (1978), Boban Marjanović (1988), and Mirsad Türkcan (1976).