SOCCER PLAYER

Hatem Trabelsi

1977 - Today

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Hatem Trabelsi (Arabic: حَاتِم الطَّرَابُلْسِيّ, romanized: Ḥātim Aṭ-Ṭarābulsiyy; born 25 January 1977) is a Tunisian former professional footballer who played as a right-back for CS Sfaxien, Ajax and Manchester City At international level, he played for the Tunisia national team in three World Cups, gaining a total of 66 caps before retiring from international football in 2006. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hatem Trabelsi is the 4,477th most popular soccer player (down from 3,341st in 2019), the 109th most popular biography from Tunisia (down from 101st in 2019) and the 7th most popular Tunisian Soccer Player.

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Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Hatem Trabelsi ranks 4,477 out of 21,273Before him are Rob Witschge, Enzo Trossero, Stan Mortensen, Yvon Le Roux, Pipo Rodríguez, and Roman Pavlyuchenko. After him are Krzysztof Warzycha, João Carlos dos Santos, Gösta Sandberg, Ante Covic, Jiří Feureisl, and Fábio.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1977, Hatem Trabelsi ranks 175Before him are Cadel Evans, Fabrício Werdum, Lynn Collins, Takamasa Watanabe, Luis Rubiales, and Jyothika. After him are Marjan Šarec, Jeff Hardy, Marek Heinz, Joe Bonamassa, Saša Ilić, and Ivan Basso.

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In Tunisia

Among people born in Tunisia, Hatem Trabelsi ranks 109 out of 210Before him are Férid Boughedir (1944), Hédi Annabi (1943), Pierre Darmon (1934), Elsa Cayat (1960), Youssef Rzouga (1957), and Amina Annabi (1962). After him are Latifa (1961), Mohamed Brahmi (1955), Témime Lahzami (1949), Mohamed Ben Rehaiem (1951), Ali Boumnijel (1966), and Mokhtar Naili (1953).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Tunisia

Among soccer players born in Tunisia, Hatem Trabelsi ranks 7Before him are Sadok Sassi (1945), Abdelmajid Chetali (1939), Ziad Tlemçani (1963), Mohamed Akid (1949), Tarak Dhiab (1954), and Mokhtar Hasni (1952). After him are Témime Lahzami (1949), Mohamed Ben Rehaiem (1951), Ali Boumnijel (1966), Mokhtar Naili (1953), Faouzi Mansouri (1956), and Abderraouf Ben Aziza (1953).