SOCCER PLAYER

Giuseppe Biava

1977 - Today

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Giuseppe Biava (born 8 May 1977) is an Italian football coach and former player who played as a centre back. Throughout his career he played for Italian clubs Albinese, AlbinoLeffe, Biellese, Palermo, Genoa, Lazio, and Atalanta; he won a Coppa Italia with Lazio in 2013. He is currently in charge as assistant coach of Atalanta Under-23. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Giuseppe Biava is the 11,358th most popular soccer player (down from 10,820th in 2019), the 4,727th most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,724th in 2019) and the 486th most popular Italian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Giuseppe Biava ranks 11,358 out of 21,273Before him are Adam Matuszczyk, Satoshi Okura, Modibo Maïga, Oliver Kirch, Kaspars Gorkšs, and Ljubomir Fejsa. After him are Heberty Fernandes de Andrade, Winston Parks, Carlos Muñoz, Milaim Rama, Bobby Decordova-Reid, and Lukáš Haraslín.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1977, Giuseppe Biava ranks 780Before him are Julien Pillet, Bianca Kajlich, Douglas Sequeira, Leire Olaberria, Claus Jensen, and Steve Francis. After him are Alexandra Holden, Ville Nieminen, Ime Udoka, Michael Gladis, Rudolf Kraj, and Ariel Ze'evi.

Others Born in 1977

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In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Giuseppe Biava ranks 4,728 out of 5,161Before him are Nathalie Moellhausen (1985), Manfred Mölgg (1982), Pierluigi Gollini (1995), Andrea Baldini (1985), Francesco Tavano (1979), and Fabio Basile (1994). After him are Andrea Cossu (1980), Mauro Esposito (1979), Luigi Mastrangelo (1975), Alberto Paloschi (1990), Marianna Longa (1979), and Stefano Gross (1986).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Italy

Among soccer players born in Italy, Giuseppe Biava ranks 486Before him are Davide Gualtieri (1971), Alessandro Buongiorno (1999), Alessandro Pistone (1975), Mattia Caldara (1994), Pierluigi Gollini (1995), and Francesco Tavano (1979). After him are Andrea Cossu (1980), Mauro Esposito (1979), Alberto Paloschi (1990), Simone Verdi (1992), Gianluca Curci (1985), and Roberto Colombo (1975).