SOCCER PLAYER

Hiroto Arai

1996 - Today

Photo of Hiroto Arai

Icon of person Hiroto Arai

Hiroto Arai is a soccer player born in 1996 in , which is now part of modern day Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. Hiroto Arai is currently 29 years old.

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hiroto Arai is the 8,975th most popular soccer player (up from 20,952nd in 2019), the 2,703rd most popular biography from Japan (up from 6,043rd in 2019) and the 1,104th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hiroto Arai by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Hiroto Arai ranks 8,975 out of 21,273Before him are Bashar Abdullah, Mitsuhiro Misaki, Robert Verbeek, Jesús Dátolo, Jaba Kankava, and Marta Torrejón. After him are Anatoliy Trubin, Ibrahima Bakayoko, Marek Suchý, Jefferson, Shota Saito, and Doug Livingstone.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1996, Hiroto Arai ranks 180Before him are Sasha Pieterse, Lucas Martínez Quarta, Tallon Griekspoor, Milot Rashica, Ivan Toney, and Lukas Klostermann. After him are Pietro Fittipaldi, Pablo Fornals, Princess Maria-Olympia of Greece and Denmark, Beatriz Haddad Maia, Ivo Grbić, and Yuki Onishi.

Others Born in 1996

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hiroto Arai ranks 2,703 out of 6,245Before him are Yushi Ozaki (1969), Shuji Fujimoto (1988), Shinji Kobayashi (1960), Takuya Hashiguchi (1994), Mitsuhiro Misaki (1970), and Ami Koshimizu (1986). After him are Maki Goto (1985), Shota Saito (1994), Kazuhisa Irii (1970), Yutaka Azuma (1967), Tomoaki Sano (1968), and Shiro Kikuhara (1969).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Hiroto Arai ranks 1,104Before him are Yuji Hashimoto (1970), Yushi Ozaki (1969), Shuji Fujimoto (1988), Shinji Kobayashi (1960), Takuya Hashiguchi (1994), and Mitsuhiro Misaki (1970). After him are Shota Saito (1994), Kazuhisa Irii (1970), Yutaka Azuma (1967), Tomoaki Sano (1968), Shiro Kikuhara (1969), and Takuya Jinno (1970).