SOCCER PLAYER

Emiliano Alfaro

1988 - Today

Photo of Emiliano Alfaro

Icon of person Emiliano Alfaro

Emiliano Alfaro Toscano (born 28 April 1988) is a Uruguayan football manager and former player who played as a striker. Apart from his native country, Alfaro also played club football in India, UAE, Argentina, Italy, and Thailand. He is nicknamed as El Picaro, meaning The Thief in Spanish language. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Emiliano Alfaro is the 13,259th most popular soccer player (down from 13,038th in 2019), the 385th most popular biography from Uruguay (up from 396th in 2019) and the 261st most popular Uruguayan Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Emiliano Alfaro by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Emiliano Alfaro ranks 13,259 out of 21,273Before him are Carlos Aranda, Yasuhide Ihara, Casper Nielsen, Fatmire Alushi, Robert Malm, and Angel Gomes. After him are Matías Soulé, Hiroshi Moriyasu, Danny da Costa, Peer Kluge, Diego Souza, and Ronan Le Crom.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1988, Emiliano Alfaro ranks 779Before him are Érika, Luka Mezgec, Andrés Molteni, Lisa Brennauer, Adrien Moerman, and Fatmire Alushi. After him are Rhys Wakefield, Abdou Traoré, Irene Escolar, Lotte Friis, Stephen Strasburg, and Dominik Kaiser.

Others Born in 1988

Go to all Rankings

In Uruguay

Among people born in Uruguay, Emiliano Alfaro ranks 385 out of 444Before him are Mauro Goicoechea (1988), Jonathan Urretaviscaya (1990), Facundo Torres (2000), Iván Alonso (1979), Gastón Pereiro (1995), and Mathías Cardaccio (1987). After him are Marcelo Andrés Silva Fernández (1989), Jorge Andrés Martínez (1983), Esteban Batista (1983), Sebastián Fernández (1985), Juan Ángel Albín (1986), and Mauricio Lemos (1995).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Uruguay

Among soccer players born in Uruguay, Emiliano Alfaro ranks 261Before him are Mauro Goicoechea (1988), Jonathan Urretaviscaya (1990), Facundo Torres (2000), Iván Alonso (1979), Gastón Pereiro (1995), and Mathías Cardaccio (1987). After him are Marcelo Andrés Silva Fernández (1989), Jorge Andrés Martínez (1983), Sebastián Fernández (1985), Juan Ángel Albín (1986), Mauricio Lemos (1995), and Chory Castro (1984).