SOCCER PLAYER

Gevorg Kasparov

1980 - Today

Photo of Gevorg Kasparov

Icon of person Gevorg Kasparov

Gevorg Kasparov (Armenian: Գևորգ Կասպարով, born 25 July 1980) is an Armenian Goalkeeping coach (UEFA B Licence) and former professional goalkeeper. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Gevorg Kasparov is the 15,416th most popular soccer player (down from 13,619th in 2019), the 150th most popular biography from Armenia (down from 141st in 2019) and the 16th most popular Armenian Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Gevorg Kasparov by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Gevorg Kasparov ranks 15,416 out of 21,273Before her are Ferhan Hasani, Karlo Bručić, Adil Hermach, Makoto Kakuda, Merle Frohms, and Dominik Kohr. After her are Cédric Barbosa, Yoshiaki Ota, Antonio Čolak, Pedro Benítez, Andrea Gasbarroni, and Aleksejs Višņakovs.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1980, Gevorg Kasparov ranks 1,172Before her are Simon Gagné, Greg Cipes, Steve Coast, Mickaël Bourgain, Michał Jeliński, and Bahri Tanrıkulu. After her are Hiroyuki Tomita, Mervana Jugić-Salkić, Celeste Ng, Pua Magasiva, Elvin Beqiri, and Tony Romo.

Others Born in 1980

Go to all Rankings

In Armenia

Among people born in Armenia, Gevorg Kasparov ranks 150 out of 163Before her are Maléna (2007), Andranik Hakobyan (1981), Gor Sujyan (1987), Robert Arzumanyan (1985), Sargis Adamyan (1993), and Tigran Barseghyan (1993). After her are Karlen Mkrtchyan (1988), Simon Martirosyan (1997), Hrachik Javakhyan (1984), Levon Hayrapetyan (1989), Malkhas Amoyan (1999), and Robert Abajyan (1996).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Armenia

Among soccer players born in Armenia, Gevorg Kasparov ranks 16Before her are Gevorg Ghazaryan (1988), Varazdat Haroyan (1992), Levon Pachajyan (1983), Robert Arzumanyan (1985), Sargis Adamyan (1993), and Tigran Barseghyan (1993). After her are Karlen Mkrtchyan (1988), Levon Hayrapetyan (1989), Artur Yedigaryan (1987), Vahan Bichakhchyan (1999), and Hrayr Mkoyan (1986).