SOCCER PLAYER

Franco Zuculini

1990 - Today

Photo of Franco Zuculini

Icon of person Franco Zuculini

Franco Zuculini (born 5 September 1990) is an Argentine footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 21 different languages on Wikipedia. Franco Zuculini is the 14,602nd most popular soccer player (down from 12,314th in 2024), the 1,075th most popular biography from Argentina (down from 993rd in 2019) and the 572nd most popular Argentinean Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Franco Zuculini by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Franco Zuculini ranks 14,605 out of 21,273Before him are Elijah Adebayo, Ignasi Miquel, Francesco Magnanelli, Cesare Natali, Jesús Molina, Joseph Dosu, Niklas Hult, Ruben van Bommel, and Juvenal Edjogo-Owono. After him are Christian Fassnacht, Marco Pašalić, and Fahed Attal.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1990, Franco Zuculini ranks 830Before him are Abdelhamid El Kaoutari, Sherida Spitse, Tatsuya Sakai, He Zi, Sara Björk Gunnarsdóttir, and Niklas Hult. After him are Oleg Shatov, Kento Hayashi, Xu Jing, Sébastien Corchia, Nela Pocisková, and Ona Carbonell.

Others Born in 1990

Go to all Rankings

In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Franco Zuculini ranks 1,075 out of 1,154Before him are Luciano Acosta (1994), Magdalena Aicega (1973), Nicolás Medina (1982), Sebastián Domínguez (1980), Lucas Romero (1994), and Thelma Fardin (1992). After him are Carlos Bossio (1973), Julián Speroni (1979), Fernando Nicolas Oliva (1971), Diana Sacayán (1975), Matías Lequi (1981), and Diego Junqueira (1980).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Argentina

Among soccer players born in Argentina, Franco Zuculini ranks 572Before him are Damián Escudero (1987), Diego Valeri (1986), Luciano Acosta (1994), Nicolás Medina (1982), Sebastián Domínguez (1980), and Lucas Romero (1994). After him are Julián Speroni (1979), Fernando Nicolas Oliva (1971), Matías Lequi (1981), Claudio Yacob (1987), Santiago Castro (2004), and Nehuén Pérez (2000).