SOCCER PLAYER

Fernando Moner

1967 - Today

Photo of Fernando Moner

Icon of person Fernando Moner

Fernando Daniel Moner (born 30 December 1967) is a retired Argentine football player. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Fernando Moner is the 8,842nd most popular soccer player (up from 9,861st in 2019), the 803rd most popular biography from Argentina (up from 899th in 2019) and the 411th most popular Argentinean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Fernando Moner by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Fernando Moner ranks 8,842 out of 21,273Before her are Michel Miyazawa, Igor Pamić, Filip Bradarić, José Pilar Reyes, Gonzalo Sorondo, and Oleksandr Aliyev. After her are Romeo Castelen, Alberto Belsué, Aaron Wan-Bissaka, Tatsuki Noda, Tatsuhiko Kubo, and Mauricio Solís.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1967, Fernando Moner ranks 649Before her are David Herman, Seo Hyang-soon, Javier Valdez Cárdenas, Heidi Mohr, Kristen Skjeldal, and Claus Christiansen. After her are Mona Eltahawy, Jeroen Boere, Darko Milanič, Antonio Pettigrew, Ike Shorunmu, and Franck Silvestre.

Others Born in 1967

Go to all Rankings

In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Fernando Moner ranks 803 out of 1,154Before her are Emiliano Insúa (1989), Germán Lux (1982), Matías Emilio Delgado (1982), Javier Frana (1966), Franco Vázquez (1989), and Mariano González (1981). After her are Lucas Martínez Quarta (1996), Belén Rodríguez (1984), Paulo Gazzaniga (1992), Carlos Mayor (1965), Hernán Barcos (1984), and Luciana Aymar (1977).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Argentina

Among soccer players born in Argentina, Fernando Moner ranks 411Before her are Raúl Bobadilla (1987), Emiliano Insúa (1989), Germán Lux (1982), Matías Emilio Delgado (1982), Franco Vázquez (1989), and Mariano González (1981). After her are Lucas Martínez Quarta (1996), Paulo Gazzaniga (1992), Carlos Mayor (1965), Hernán Barcos (1984), Jesús Dátolo (1984), and Mauro Rosales (1981).