SOCCER PLAYER

Gerard Plessers

1959 - Today

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Gerard Plessers (born 30 March 1959) is a retired Belgian footballer. During his career he played for R. Standard de Liège, Hamburger SV, KV Kortrijk, KRC Genk and KVV Overpelt Fabriek. He earned 13 caps for the Belgium national football team, and participated in the UEFA Euro 1980 and the 1982 FIFA World Cup. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Gerard Plessers is the 5,714th most popular soccer player (up from 5,731st in 2019), the 807th most popular biography from Belgium (up from 828th in 2019) and the 107th most popular Belgian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Gerard Plessers ranks 5,714 out of 21,273Before him are Angelo Colombo, Raúl Sánchez, Sergey Gotsmanov, Yoichi Kajiyama, Ljubinko Drulović, and Nicolás Fuentes. After him are Daisuke Tanaka, Gabriel Martinelli, Viktor Zvyahintsev, Túlio Maravilha, Michel Stievenard, and Mazarópi.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1959, Gerard Plessers ranks 482Before him are Said Seyam, Tomomi Inada, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, Chris Hadfield, Angelo Scuri, and Sergey Gotsmanov. After him are Cherif Mohamed Aly Aidara, Lorella Stefanelli, Per-Mathias Høgmo, Omar Hakim, Steve Bauer, and David Hyde Pierce.

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In Belgium

Among people born in Belgium, Gerard Plessers ranks 807 out of 1,190Before him are Philippe Adams (1969), Petra De Sutter (1963), Paolo Ferrari (1929), Nico Claesen (1962), Joseph Van Ingelgem (1912), and Hadise (1985). After him are Koen Casteels (1992), Tia Hellebaut (1978), Vital Borkelmans (1963), Roger Laurent (1913), Greg Van Avermaet (1985), and Rudy Dhaenens (1961).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Belgium

Among soccer players born in Belgium, Gerard Plessers ranks 107Before him are Jean Brichaut (1911), Jean Capelle (1913), Marc Baecke (1956), Michel De Wolf (1958), Nico Claesen (1962), and Joseph Van Ingelgem (1912). After him are Koen Casteels (1992), Vital Borkelmans (1963), André Saeys (1911), Patrick Vervoort (1965), Leandro Trossard (1994), and Philippe Albert (1967).