SOCCER PLAYER

Hisashi Kaneko

1959 - Today

Photo of Hisashi Kaneko

Icon of person Hisashi Kaneko

Hisashi Kaneko (金子 久, Kaneko Hisashi; born September 12, 1959) is a former Japanese football player. He played for Japan national team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Hisashi Kaneko is the 2,648th most popular soccer player (up from 4,996th in 2019), the 1,257th most popular biography from Japan (up from 1,584th in 2019) and the 290th most popular Japanese Soccer Player.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Hisashi Kaneko by language

Loading...

Among SOCCER PLAYERS

Among soccer players, Hisashi Kaneko ranks 2,648 out of 21,273Before him are Radivoje Ognjanović, Edinho, Fred Pentland, Renato Portaluppi, Mehmed Baždarević, and Néstor Gonçalves. After him are Jesús Castro, Tijani Babangida, Jimmy Ross, Humberto Tozzi, Joël Bats, and Igor Cvitanović.

Most Popular Soccer Players in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1959, Hisashi Kaneko ranks 247Before him are Aleksandar Petrović, Christian Bach, Janusz Kamiński, Viktoria Mullova, Victoire Tomegah Dogbé, and Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani. After him are Anne Fontaine, Steven Knight, John Hawkes, Phil Brown, D. H. Peligro, and Steve Stevens.

Others Born in 1959

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hisashi Kaneko ranks 1,257 out of 6,245Before him are Kenjiro Takayanagi (1899), Ryūsei Nakao (1951), Hisashi Kimura (1870), Yukio Ozaki (1858), Noboru Terada (1917), and Sanpei Shirato (1932). After him are Gozo Shioda (1915), Tadashi Imai (1912), Saneatsu Mushanokōji (1885), Fumio Hayasaka (1914), Kiichiro Higuchi (1888), and Unshō Ishizuka (1951).

Among SOCCER PLAYERS In Japan

Among soccer players born in Japan, Hisashi Kaneko ranks 290Before him are Shinichi Kawano (1969), Shinji Kagawa (1989), Kazuo Ozaki (1960), Nobuyuki Kato (1920), Yutaka Ikeuchi (1961), and Noriko Ishibashi (1970). After him are Yasuharu Kurata (1963), Masatada Ishii (1967), Yasuhiro Toyoda (1976), Yasuhito Endō (1980), Kenichi Serada (1973), and Atsushi Uchiyama (1959).